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  #1  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 4:25 PM
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Toronto: Tea Party mayor on the rocks

Toronto: Tea Party mayor on the rocks


November 9, 2011



Read More: http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/...111108/toronto-tea-party-mayor-the-rocks

Quote:
Watching politicians implode is never a pretty sight. All the more so when the politician is a gruff, 300-plus-pounder who flips the finger to voters, swears at 911 operators and has a strained relationship with the truth. It has been a year since Rob Ford was overwhelmingly elected as Toronto’s mayor, and the honeymoon is over. It’s hard to blame Ford for the falling out. He never pretended to be more than an unexceptional city councilor with anger-management issues. What’s stunning is how readily he was embraced by a city that thinks of itself as the most sophisticated in the country.

- By vowing to slash “waste” in Toronto’s $9.2 billion operating budget, and proclaiming the supremacy of the car, Ford tapped into the city’s latent conservatism and became a kind of Tea-Party mayor. His tenure unraveled into farce. The apex came at the end of October, when one of Canada’s foremost satirists, Mary Walsh, tried to co-opt Ford into a skit for the long-running TV comedy show, This Hour Has 22 Minutes. Dressed as her alter-ego, a plastic sword-bearing “warrior princess” named Marg Delahunty, Walsh tried to interview Ford in his suburban driveway as he got into his minivan to go to work.

- Liberal US political commenter, Keith Olbermann, referred to the episode on his Current TV show last week to dub Ford the “effing worst person in the effing world.” Ford’s version of events might have had more credibility if he didn’t have a record of being less-than-truthful. In 2006, a couple attending a Toronto Maple Leafs hockey game accused Ford of being drunk, shouting obscenities and telling the woman to “go to Iran and get raped and shot.” Ford was eventually escorted out of the arena by security guards. When confronted about the incident by a reporter, Ford claimed he was never at the game. Later, he admitted he lied, and apologized for his behavior. Then, in 2008, he was charged with uttering a death threat to his wife. The charges were eventually dropped.

- In June, Ford became the first mayor since 1994 to snub all events at Pride Week, a celebration of the city’s large gay community, which includes a parade that attracts a half million people. Then came the story of Ottilie Mason, a woman who, while driving with her 6-year-old daughter and a babysitter, happened to pull up next to Ford at a major intersection in downtown Toronto. She says she saw Ford behind the wheel of his minivan talking on his cellphone, an act that breaks provincial law.

- Mason gave Ford the thumbs down and told him to stop talking on the phone. Ford responded, she says, by raising his middle finger. Ford later released a statement acknowledging he was on his cell phone, but described the finger allegation as “not accurate.” He said it was “unfortunate this misunderstanding occurred.” When asked in a TV interview, “What happened with flipping the bird?” Ford laughed for a full ten seconds and said, “That’s funny,” before his press secretary ended the interview.

- On policy, Ford scrapped an $8 billion transit plan that the previous administration spent years negotiating with higher levels of government. It would have provided streetcar service to some of the city’s poorest suburbs. He removed the right to strike for public-transit workers and contracted out garbage pick-up in the western half of the city. He also scrapped a $60 vehicle-registration fee, which had brought in $64 million a year. Motorists were happy, but for a city facing what Ford says is a $774 million budget shortfall, the loss of revenue hurt. Elected on the slogan, “Stop the gravy train,” Ford found little waste to cut. He did, however, end free snacks at meetings for the city’s 44 councilors.

- He caused a public outcry by considered the closing of libraries. When Margaret Atwood criticized the move, Ford’s brother and de-facto deputy mayor treated the internationally acclaimed writer as a nobody: “I don’t even know her,” Doug Ford said. “If she walked by me I wouldn’t have a clue who she is.”

- Ford’s support on city council started crumbling when he and his brother announced they would replace a waterfront revitalization housing project, which was years in the planning, with a tourist-focused one that included a monorail, Ferris wheel and giant shopping mall. Some of his staunchest supporters forced him to back down. By September, opinion polls showed his popularity plummeting. But Ford wasn’t done yet.

- Last month, the Toronto Star newspaper revealed that he outsourced the printing of his business cards to his family’s company. The $1,579 bill was up to four times higher than the cost of business cards ordered from the city printer. For a mayor who crusades on ending “perks and waste,” it smacked of an embarrassing conflict of interest. There are three more years left in Ford’s mandate, plenty more time for the mayor to hold up an unflattering mirror to a city that thinks of itself as so haughtily different.

.....



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  #2  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 4:46 PM
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How the hell did this guy get voted in?
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  #3  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 4:50 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drew View Post
How the hell did this guy get voted in?
Suburban voters.
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  #4  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 4:56 PM
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because canada isn't always what the media class pretends it is. there are a great many people who live, work and vote, and yet resemble, say, pierre trudeau to no noticeable degree.
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 5:09 PM
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Could be another example of Torontonians trying prove that they're good little wannabe Americians ,what better way to do so by electing a tea party windbag (Canadian version)
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  #6  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 5:14 PM
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The old City Of Toronto didn't vote him in but the other wards did.
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  #7  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 5:15 PM
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i don't think torontonians are wannabe americans. i think that's a myth.
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 5:41 PM
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  #9  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 5:54 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drew View Post
How the hell did this guy get voted in?
Lots of reasons. Suburban people felt left out (felt Miller had too much of a downtown focus). People felt that spending was out of control and taxes too high (which wasn't really the case). Rob Ford came in at the perfect time - a fiscal conservative (in a race with no real other right-wing option) promising to cut the non-existant gravy train, cut unpopular taxes (land transfer, car registration), and stand up for the little guy... He's essentially our version of Herman Cain - a straight-talker everyman with no clue how things actually work...
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 5:59 PM
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Originally Posted by MrOilers View Post
Looks like he is about to pass a lot of gas. The guy is less useful (and a great deal less intelligent) than a bag of fart.
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:01 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bdog View Post
Lots of reasons. Suburban people felt left out (felt Miller had too much of a downtown focus). People felt that spending was out of control and taxes too high (which wasn't really the case). Rob Ford came in at the perfect time - a fiscal conservative (in a race with no real other right-wing option) promising to cut the non-existant gravy train, cut unpopular taxes (land transfer, car registration), and stand up for the little guy... He's essentially our version of Herman Cain - a straight-talker everyman with no clue how things actually work...

yup
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  #12  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:01 PM
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Originally Posted by kool maudit View Post
i don't think torontonians are wannabe americans. i think that's a myth.
Wasn't their last mayor an American? what other major Canadian city ever elected an American born mayor? didn't they have a recent NFL game at Mr.Roger's stadium? doesn't their film festival feature nothing but American films.... American American American god bless America,PS this lard ass is probably named after the Ford motor company which is afterall American
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:05 PM
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I'm taking great pleasure in watching this guy implode.

It would be more hilarious, however, if this wasn't so real and he didn't have the ability to do damage to Toronto by doing so.
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drew View Post
How the hell did this guy get voted in?
1) Largest campaign budget by far. (money buys elections)

2) Backing of the Conservative Party Machine to make inroads into the GTA.

3) Splintered left wing with multiple candidates

4) The region coming out of a recession and was hooked into promises of lowering taxes and getting rid of "lifetime guaranteed" jobs.

5) Garbage list of candidates anyways.
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  #15  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:21 PM
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Re: teaparty - Canada was actually at the forefront of this sort of movement in the 90s

it was just called the Reform Party.

People assume Canadians are taking their cues from an American movement but in reality it's just addled memories and media saturation.

either way they're just branch arms of elitists masquerading as populists.

As for Ford, I'm actually surprised how fast the tide turned against him. He and his handlers really misjudged his popularity and the reasons for his election -namely poor alternative candidates. Miller would have won again had he run.
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:23 PM
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this should be in toronto section!
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  #17  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mr.John View Post
Wasn't their last mayor an American? what other major Canadian city ever elected an American born mayor? didn't they have a recent NFL game at Mr.Roger's stadium? doesn't their film festival feature nothing but American films.... American American American god bless America,PS this lard ass is probably named after the Ford motor company which is afterall American
David Miller was born in the United States, but immigrated to Canada (after a stint in the UK) in 1967. Harvard undergrad time notwithstanding he has been in Toronto pretty much ever since. Yes, the Bill's play one regular season game a year in Toronto. TIFF films may be largely American as reflective of the overall market, but do show many Canadian and international movies.

I'm not sure how this all adds up.


As to the question at hand others have summed it up nicely. I'd also like to stress the unsuitability of the other candidates by the time of the election. Really there weren't any decent choices, though I would say Ford was the worst.
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mr.John View Post
Wasn't their last mayor an American? what other major Canadian city ever elected an American born mayor? didn't they have a recent NFL game at Mr.Roger's stadium? doesn't their film festival feature nothing but American films.... American American American god bless America,PS this lard ass is probably named after the Ford motor company which is afterall American
I am somewhat in between you and Kool. A lot of the evidence cited above is dubious/tenuous at best.

On the other hand, although I would agree with Kool that labelling Torontonians as wannabe Americans is excessive, there is something peculiar about their relationship with the U.S.

Certainly the U.S. and its culture hold an extremely powerful allure there (well, in most parts of Canada, but in Toronto it sometimes seems overwhelming), and when you are there you certainly sense that Toronto is *drawn* to the U.S., without ever really crossing the line and embracing "Americanness" fully though.
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Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:29 PM
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the american thing just doesn't seem like something that is part of the torontonian self-ideal. i don't find the city's demeanour or character to be very american, even as its physical environment, to some degree, is. america and americans are louder and warmer. toronto is commonwealth high-capitalist, an example of convergent evolution.

other canadian cities feel more american to me, or at least like they could be more plausibly stitched into the american nation. halifax, oddly enough, is one.
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  #20  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2011, 6:31 PM
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In all seriousness how does the so-called financial capital of Canada, the largest city in the country, manage to rack up a $774 million budget shortfall,aren't people living in those massive condo towers paying property taxes? where is the money going?
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