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Rob Ford's Toronto

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Another drive by smear by Hume. That's not news, it's just his weekly diatribe on how evil Ford is. The real story is why did Ford have to intervene in this minor issue in the first place. The city put out an RFP, but didn't like who won. The real issue is why wasn't the RFP more specific on healthy and diverse food? It was incompetance of the people who produced the RFP that's the real story.
 
The real story is why did Ford have to intervene in this minor issue in the first place.

From what I understand, minor things are what he prefers it get involved with. Got a pothole on your road? Call the mayor, he'll deal with it directly.
 
We need this guy to run an Anti-Ford campaign for us:

[video=youtube;jU7fhIO7DG0]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jU7fhIO7DG0[/video]

Most relevant line, "Who on Earth would support such a dummy, and WHY!?" (0:46)
 
No, he's doing the same straight-talking, simple truths for honest folk, populist thing that bounced Rob Ford into the Mayor's chair. Although maybe if someone cut from the same fabric as Ford is the one to call an idiot an idiot, then people who buy this kind of act will be able to see Ford more clearly without being able to dismiss the message as coming from snotty left-wing downtown elitists.
 
No, he's doing the same straight-talking, simple truths for honest folk, populist thing that bounced Rob Ford into the Mayor's chair.

This is one of the big issues liberals have. They have a tendency to want to justify EVERYTHING with logic, statistics and research. Unfortunately most people are not interested in reading 40 page studies to come to an informed decision. They're more interested in rhetoric. This is why during the LRT vs. Subway debate of yesteryear, Ford's imaginary "subway" plan still won public support even when everybody who was knowledgeable about public transit agreed that the LRT plan was better. Saying, "LRTs are just another weapon that pinko libtards are using in the War on Cars" will always get you much more support than referring to a 40 page long report regarding the capacity issues along the Eglinton corridor.

If a left of centre candidate wants to be successful next election, they're going to have to leave all their literature at the door and do some Dale Peterson straight talking to the people of Toronto.
 
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Another drive by smear by Hume. That's not news, it's just his weekly diatribe on how evil Ford is. The real story is why did Ford have to intervene in this minor issue in the first place. The city put out an RFP, but didn't like who won. The real issue is why wasn't the RFP more specific on healthy and diverse food? It was incompetance of the people who produced the RFP that's the real story.

If you're one to knock Hume's "drive by smears" of Ford, you'd be one to knock so-called Hume-style "drive by smears" of architecture--this (albeit not by Hume) being a case in point.
 
From The Onion:

80_zpsa7f0befc.jpg
 
I proposed earlier in this thread a campaign to unseat Ford with the tag "Toronto, you're smarter than this". Something that flat-out portrays Ford as too crude, stupid, dishonest and lazy to be in any way representative of most of the people in this city. Problem is, any such attack smells of the negative political ads that we associate with the America culture and that we here pretend to be above. Plus it might just feed the bizarre feedback loop that seems to buttress Ford, where everyone who loves their car, their big backyard, their sports or their beer sees Ford as their champion, and takes any criticism of him as an attack of themselves by the smarmy CBC-employed chattering class.
 
I proposed earlier in this thread a campaign to unseat Ford with the tag "Toronto, you're smarter than this". Something that flat-out portrays Ford as too crude, stupid, dishonest and lazy to be in any way representative of most of the people in this city. Problem is, any such attack smells of the negative political ads that we associate with the America culture and that we here pretend to be above. Plus it might just feed the bizarre feedback loop that seems to buttress Ford, where everyone who loves their car, their big backyard, their sports or their beer sees Ford as their champion, and takes any criticism of him as an attack of themselves by the smarmy CBC-employed chattering class.

I agree that if your clever "Toronto you're smarter than this" ad were to come from an opposing candidate it might backfire. If it came from a non-partisan group (UTers?) and did not offer a 'smarter alternative" (easy though that would be if you excluded rocks) it might make a few people think. (Of course if one were to vote for Ford again you may be beyond reasoning with and your thought processes may be as limited as those of Mr Ford himself.)
 
Rob Ford's popularity on the rise: Poll

BY DON PEAT,CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF
FIRST POSTED: FRIDAY, APRIL 05, 2013 08:50 PM EDT | UPDATED: SATURDAY, APRIL 06, 2013 08:00 AM EDT

TORONTO - Mayor Rob Ford's popularity got a boost from recent controversies, results of a new poll suggested Friday.

The Forum Research poll pegs Ford’s job approval rating at 49% — up almost 10% from two weeks ago.

The boost comes after a week of controversy swirling around whether or not the mayor of Canada’s largest city is battling a drinking problem and was allegedly asked to leave a military gala for being intoxicated.

Ford himself has vehemently denied the original Toronto Star story on the drinking allegations while Councillor Paul Ainslie has stood by his claim he asked the mayor’s chief of staff to remove him from the event.

Almost half ( 49%) of the Forum poll respondents said they approve of the job Ford is doing as mayor while 50% disapprove and 1% said they don’t know.

“The mayor’s on a roll,” Forum president Lorne Bozinoff told the Toronto Sun Friday. “It’s high for him but things have been sort of breaking his way lately.”

Bozinoff said Ford’s fumbles don’t seem to sack his approval ratings.

“It seems to be unless it is really related to city business, I don’t think people care,” he said. “People have been very forgiving.”

He pointed out Ford’s message of efficiencies and keeping taxes in line is on the rise across the country.

“There is a lot of feeling that taxes are too high and government is not delivering the services for the money,” Bozinoff said.

Ford made headlines earlier this week when he pretended to vomit at the mention of Metrolinx’s short list of 11 possible taxes and tolls to fund transit.

“That’s how people are reacting to some of those ideas,” Bozinoff said. “(Ford) comes right out and tells you where he stands, he doesn’t have to think about it — just right off the bat he reacted to that Metrolinx stuff.”

Bozinoff said within the 49% who approve of the job Ford is doing there is a “small group” who have said they won’t vote for him again in the 2014 election.

“It’s a few percentage points but he’s going to start off (in 2014) with 40% of the vote right off the bat,” he said. “If there were two people running, he’d need 50% ... he’s not that far away.”

But another controversy hit Friday when CBC News revealed the mayor’s parking habits at City Hall — obtained through a Freedom of Information request — show between December 2010 and mid-2012 he only spent four hours at the building on weekdays he showed up at the office.

Councillor Michael Thompson shrugged off the report and stressed Ford is out meeting with residents regularly including those in his own ward.

“What I know of the mayor, he’s working hard ... the mayor is the people’s mayor,” Thompson said.

Thompson, a member of Ford’s executive committee, agreed the mayor should make his schedule public.

“I would encourage the mayor to certainly provide more information on his schedule,” he said.

Councillor Doug Ford defended his brother’s work ethic.

“I didn’t see eye to eye with David Miller at all, that guy worked his ass off and Rob works his ass off,” Ford said. “You can’t not work, you just can’t not work, you have no choice.”

The telephone poll was conducted by interactive voice response and surveyed 484 Toronto residents. Forum considers the results accurate +/- 4%, 19 times out of 20.

http://www.torontosun.com/2013/04/05/rob-fords-popularity-on-the-rise-poll

It's fascinating how the Sun and Ford have managed to spin his fumbles into percieved attacks by the left.
 
We won't have a functioning democracy in Toronto while we remain amalgamated. We haven't since amalgamation, and we won't in the future.

Let me put it this way, if we amalgamated Mississauga into the mix, Mississaugans would vote en masse for whoever promises a subway to Square One. They don't because they know they can't realistically afford it, but if they were a part of Toronto they'd lose sight of that fact and count on us to subsidise it.

Posters here and reporters at The Star keep hoping that Ford's complete incompetence will convince people he's not up to the task. In reality the vast majority of those who voted him in didn't care in the slightest about whether he was competent or not. They feel entitled to things they can't afford (like highways and subways) and will vote for whoever promises those things to them.

People will vote for a better candidate eventually, but it won't be the result of enlightenment. It will most likely be a combination of name recognition and desire for change. That candidate will likely have to promise subsidies to the suburbs, too.
 
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