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Toronto Mayor Rob Ford

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I hate to keep reminding everyone, but Doug came in second with a very respectable vote total, Rob won his election and another Ford was also elected to a trustee position.

"Mayor of all the people" is a nice title, something like "Admiral of the Ocean Sea", but politicians need to find a compelling narrative and sell it to more people than any of the competition. Ontario's Liberal party and their union allies managed to totally clean everyone else's clock (including the taxpayers) by fear mongering, transferring people's attention from the very real scandals, massive debt and inept economic performance of the last decade to their narrative of what *might* happen under a PCPO government, demonstrating the principle in action.

The Fords have chosen a populist narrative standing against the political establishment (yes, you constantly remind us the Fords are a rich and connected family as well), and used it well. How well it can translate outside of Toronto is something that has to be tested, but I suspect Doug has been putting out feelers already and seems to like what he has seen, otherwise he would never have started talking about provincial politics.
 
Thucydides said:
I hate to keep reminding everyone, but Doug came in second with a very respectable vote total, Rob won his election and another Ford was also elected to a trustee position.

Good luck to Doug in out of town politics, or back at Deco labels in Chicago. Either way, he's finished in Ward 2.

Rob and Mikey are contained in Ward 2. That's just one ward out of 44 in the city, and just one vote ( only Rob can vote, Mikey can't ) out of 45.





 
 
Thucydides said:
I hate to keep reminding everyone, but Doug came in second with a very respectable vote total, Rob won his election and another Ford was also elected to a trustee position.

"Mayor of all the people" is a nice title, something like "Admiral of the Ocean Sea", but politicians need to find a compelling narrative and sell it to more people than any of the competition. Ontario's Liberal party and their union allies managed to totally clean everyone else's clock (including the taxpayers) by fear mongering, transferring people's attention from the very real scandals, massive debt and inept economic performance of the last decade to their narrative of what *might* happen under a PCPO government, demonstrating the principle in action.


The Fords have chosen a populist narrative standing against the political establishment (yes, you constantly remind us the Fords are a rich and connected family as well), and used it well. How well it can translate outside of Toronto is something that has to be tested, but I suspect Doug has been putting out feelers already and seems to like what he has seen, otherwise he would never have started talking about provincial politics.


Populism can, and does work, as the old CCF showed in the 1930s, 40s and 50s, as Preston Manning showed, again, in 1993, when he, effectively, destroyed the old PC Party of Canada and led 50+ Reform MPs onto Parliament Hill, and as the Fords have shown, in Toronto, in past decade.
 
E.R. Campbell said:
<snip> and as the Fords have shown, in Toronto, in past decade.

Globe and Mail:

"In desperation, Doug Ford stoops to populist pandering":
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/in-desperation-doug-ford-stoops-to-populist-pandering/article20818078/

"Not even under his brother Rob has Toronto seen a display of populism as crude as the one being put on by candidate Doug Ford."

Doug handing out $20 bills to constituents:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ckIcOiJyH4



 
And yet another demonstration of inflation....

Used to cost $2,  along with a horse or a hooker.
 
Politics aside, as a matter of public safety, it was one year ago ( Nov 15, 2013 )  that council voted to take away Rob's power during a State of Emergency and transfer it to Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly.

The vote was 41-2. Rob and Doug were the two who voted "No".

A State of Emergency would place Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly in control. Kelly, not Ford, would exercise all authority normally delegated to council for up to 30 days after the emergency declaration.

This order remains in effect until November 30, 2014, when Rob's term expires.

This is the Emergency Plan:
http://www1.toronto.ca/City%20Of%20Toronto/Office%20of%20Emergency%20Management/Files/pdf/E/emergency_plan.pdf

One-third of Canada"s population is located within a 160 km radius of Toronto.








 
I took a look at the statistics from previous city elections in comparison to this one.

Ford got 34% ( 33.73% to be exact ). David Miller and Mel Lastman both won re-election with 57% and 80% respectively.

Ford was lower than Smitherman ( 36% ) in the 2010 mayoral election, and lower than John Tory ( 38% ) in the 2003 mayoral election.

The Fords were the incumbents. With the exception of one, every incumbent councillor who ran for re-election got voted back in.

The Fords lost with a lesser second place showing in percentage of vote than George Smitherman, David Miller or John Tory ( when he lost the 2003 mayoral election to Mayor Miller ), Mel Lastman, Barbara Hall or June Rowlands

before her.

Ford got the lowest percentage of vote for any administration losing their attempt for a second term since at least the 1980s ( that was as far back as I bothered to look ).

Global News:
"One major change since the 2010 election is income: Four years ago, there wasn’t a major correlation between income and Ford support. This year Ford voters were much more likely to have lower incomes than others."
http://globalnews.ca/news/1652571/ford-nation-2014-15-things-demographics-tell-us-about-toronto-voters/

18 Jul 2014
Nick Kouvalis:
"Rob Ford will run & win in Ward 2 - Doug Ford will run & lose the Mayor's race.  You heard it here 1st."
https://twitter.com/NickKouvalis/status/490243024547348480

Nick Kouvalis was the campaign manager in 2010 for Rob Ford. In the 2014 election, he supported John Tory.








 
Thucydides said:
How well it can translate outside of Toronto is something that has to be tested, but I suspect Doug has been putting out feelers already and seems to like what he has seen, otherwise he would never have started talking about provincial politics.

Doug called a press conference today at Deco to announce he will not be running for the Ontario PC Leadership.





 
Update on medical condition,

National Post
March 17, 2016

"Rob Ford’s office refutes online rumours of his death"
http://news.nationalpost.com/toronto/rob-ford-is-still-alive-former-mayors-office-refutes-online-rumours

CP24
March 18, 2016
Rob Ford under 24-hour medical supervision after chemo fails
"Toronto city councillor and former mayor Rob Ford is under 24-hour medical supervision after a recent chemotherapy treatment did not work, a source tells CP24.
Ford’s family has been summoned to be by his side at Mt. Sinai Hospital, and doctors are working to determine if the 46-year-old is healthy enough to undergo more treatment.
Ford was admitted to Mt. Sinai Hospital in late February for continued treatment of several tumours located on his bladder."
http://www.cp24.com/news/rob-ford-under-24-hour-medical-supervision-after-chemo-fails-1.2822767


 
I had no idea that he was this ill. I pray for him and his family.
 
jollyjacktar said:
Not a Ford fan, but I do wish him well in this.


Exactly. It must be possible to disagree, even vehemently, with someone but, at the same time, wish them well when they fight a dreadful disease. Get well soon, Mr Ford.  :salute:
 
Rob Ford has passed away

http://www.cp24.com/former-mayor-rob-ford-dead-at-age-46-1.2827463

RIP
 
A very nice piece written by a former staffer.....

http://www.torontosun.com/2016/03/22/rob-ford-gave-his-all-to-toronto

Rob Ford gave his all to Toronto 
By Adrienne Batra , Toronto Sun 


Rob Ford, 1969-2016
You either loved Rob Ford, or you hated him.

On some days, I did both.
When I was his director of communications during the 2010 election, and subsequently his press secretary until December 2011, there were days when I wanted to wring his girthsome neck with my tiny little hands.
And others when I wanted to give him a big hug.

That was Rob. That was how he lived.
That was how he governed as mayor of Toronto from 2010 to 2014.
He was never shy about attracting controversy – as the whole world eventually came to know.

But what a lot of people don’t know – or don’t want to remember – is that Rob Ford, first as a councillor and then as mayor, gave everything he had to his constituents when they asked for his help.
The mom who couldn’t get a pothole fixed outsider her house had a friend in Rob Ford. Ditto the dad who called in to complain his garbage hadn’t been picked up.
Ford, first as a councillor, and later as mayor, would assemble the necessary staff to fix the problem — which often drove the staff crazy — and get it done.

It all sounds so simple, but these are the things that matter to ordinary people in their daily lives.
And because it mattered to them, it mattered to Ford, who wanted to matter to the people who elected him.
It was from their ranks that Ford’s mayoral campaign was able to muster a 3,000-strong volunteer army, when no one from Toronto’s Conservative establishment would step up to help.

Governing Toronto wasn’t easy – because Rob didn’t want it to be.
He wanted to poke his finger in the eye of the establishment, including many of his fellow councillors, whom Ford viewed as derelict in their duties and complacent in their jobs.
He was determined to hold staff and politicians accountable.

The media, and many politicians, made fun of Ford for answering his own phone – because apparently politicians don’t do that.
He was berated for never spending his taxpayer allocated office allowance.
He was mocked for taking calls from – and helping – the constituents of his fellow councillors.

Ford didn’t care. Whenever his colleagues would drop the ball on what Ford considered to be the most important part of their job — providing services to taxpayers — he picked it up and ran with it down the field.
That’s why so many people — “the Ford nation” — were so loyal to him.
It was the deciding factor in his 2010 mayoral victory.

Ford has his personal demons — drug and alcohol addiction — and they eventually overwhelmed him.
But anyone who has worked in politics, knows even the most savvy and polished politicians have skeletons in their closets.
None of us is perfect and heaven knows Rob wasn’t perfect, which made working for him a white-knuckle job, not for the faint of heart.
On any given day, we were accused of unsuccessfully trying to cover up the fact he was out of his depth, or of being the most brilliant and diabolical political minds of our generation.

What we really did was to work hard, which on some days meant trying to run the city with an absentee mayor.
We counted the votes before we went to council on any big issue. We consulted city executive.
Rob knew in advance what the vote would be on any major issue at council, win or lose.

He had many accomplishments. Killing the car tax, outsourcing garbage collection west of Yonge St., four-year labour deals with the city’s unions, without a garbage strike. Ford saved taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.
He’s been called a lot of things -- a populist, a conservative, a radical – and he was all of them in part.

But ultimately, Ford was a political pragmatist who simply didn’t give a damn
what anyone thought about him other than his constituents.

It was that gumption that endeared him to hundreds of thousands of Torontonians.
There will always be those who refuse to see Ford as anything more than an addict, a liar, a racist, a homophobe and a bully.
But none of that accurately describes Rob Ford.

He was the only councillor that held town hall meeting for Toronto Community Housing Corp. residents.
The only one who went into their apartments to see for himself the often horrible conditions they were living in.
The only one who listened to their concerns and tried to help, whether it meant getting repairs done or finding them a new home.
He cared about people. He once gave me $20 for cab fare when we were at a campaign event on the other side of the city because I’d left everything at the office, saying he didn’t think, “any young lady in Toronto should be without some way of getting home.”

Rob Ford was often the only politician on council who really gave a damn about how the public’s money was being spent.
He was deeply flawed. He lied about his drug and alcohol addictions, picked fights when he didn’t have to and destroyed his political effectiveness through his outrageous personal behaviour.
But he loved Toronto. Even when we was hurting himself, he never stopped thinking and caring about the people of this city.

As controversial as he was was in life, let him now rest, in peace.

 
I voted for him.

Politics aside, I must admit to feeling a sense of relief when they took away his power to govern the city during a state of emergency.

RIP



 
Posted in the Politics in 2016 thread before seeing this one:

http://spectator.org/blog/65854/rob-ford-rip

Rob Ford, R.I.P.
By Aaron Goldstein on 3.22.16 | 12:46PM
Video of PZT-idGEJ3U

Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has succumbed to cancer at the age of 46.

Elected mayor of Canada's largest city in 2010, you were either part of Ford Nation or you were not. Ford was rough around the edges and his conservative politics made him a target of liberal elites, but at the same time he remembered people's names, personally returned phone calls of his constituents and more often than not got things done. This resulted in a great deal of goodwill.

Unfortunately for Ford he would become an international figure of ridicule in 2013 when a cell phone video showed him smoking crack cocaine. At first, he denied it, but once the video was revealed his public behavior disintegrated and Toronto City Council stripped him of many of his powers.

Nevertheless, it appeared Ford would be re-elected in 2014 when he was diagnosed with cancer that fall. The diagnosis forced Ford to withdraw from the race and opted instead to run for his old seat on Toronto City Council in the city's west end neighborhood of Etobicoke which he won easily (having served there for a decade before running for mayor). Ford's older brother Doug ran for mayor in his stead, but was defeated by former Ontario Conservative Party leader John Tory.

The video above shows Ezra Levant's take on Ford's passing.
 
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