Rob Ford is the new mayor of Toronto. He is a fiscal conservative who wants to cut taxes, reduce the size of city council and execute councillors who
spend their allowances frivolously. He undoubtely intends to cut services and is one of those party poopers who believes that cities shouldn't be
spending money they don't have . . . and then piling on the taxes to make up for budget shortfalls. In a nutshell he doesn't seem to go along with the
time honoured practice of the "bait and switch" election platform.
The Toronto Star, embodiment of all things great and good and earnest and high minded and resolutely Canadian and dimpled and apple cheeked and nicey
nice and nannied-up-the-wazoo in Toronto, is maintaining it's dignity post election. Pre-election they were scorning Ford and his "angry man campaign"
and didn't give him a peanut's chance on an elephant's dinner table of winning the election.
They attempted a tabloid-style takeout of Mr. Ford a couple of times during the campaign by reporting on a ten year old arrest for pot posession in
Florida and by suckering Mr. Ford into a fake conversation with a "drug addict", who was asking Mr. Ford to get him some sort of drug and who was so
persistent that Ford, a guy who prides himself on actually taking calls from constituents, in an unguarded moment of impatience, suggested that the
guy try to get the drugs "on the street", in order to get rid of him.
Unfortunately, the schizoid Star, acting a little like Huckleberry Finn trying to stampede Toronto's proper Aunt Pollys into burying Ford at the
polls, was unmasked and the whole prank widely viewed as a journalistic pratfall.
They should have contracted an editor from the National Enquirer to pull off a caper like that, instead of going all amateur hour with it under the
impression that there is no skill involved in press assassination and that it can be done by anybody in the cucumber sandwich set.
However, though ruffled, they are unbowed and seem to have adjusted to the new reality.
I have to say I was shocked when I looked at the ballot. There were forty people running for mayor at least thirty of whom I'd never heard of.
Ford got roughly 48% of the vote while Smitherman and Pantalone (the closest rivals) together took 49% roughly. The latter two represented the
pre-Ford, "how I spend your money is none of your business" era. Unfortunately for their supporters, they couldn't agree on a "stop Ford" strategy
that would see one throwing his support to the other.
Mr. Ford's first term is going to be very interesting.
edit on 27-10-2010 by ipsedixit because: Style.