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|    Message 89,899 of 90,757    |
|    brewnoser2@gmail.com to All    |
|    Doug Ford apes Mike Harris    |
|    29 Jul 18 16:55:43    |
       Globe and Mail                     Doug Ford follows the Mike Harris playbook with fast and furious decisions                     Doug Ford was 30 when Mike Harris became Ontario’s premier in June, 1995. It       appears the young man took notes.              Mr. Harris moved so fast, on so many fronts, that opponents simply couldn’t       keep up. Photo radar: gone. Employment equity rules: gone. The new Eglinton       West subway line: cancelled. Welfare rates: slashed by more than 20 per       cent. All within the        first month of taking office.              And the Harris Tories never let up. Not for one minute. Not for four years.        They took on provincial public servants in a province-wide strike, and beat       them. They took on the teachers in a province-wide strike, and beat them.              They slashed spending and cut taxes. They closed and amalgamated hospitals.       They raised university tuition. They amalgamated school boards, even as they       stripped them of their power over taxation and curriculum. They forced       amalgamation on Toronto,        Hamilton, Ottawa and other municipalities despite furious local opposition.        They downloaded responsibilities to local governments that local governments       didn’t want.              On and on and on it went: First came the announcement, then the rage that       greeted the announcement – the demonstrations, the strikes, the editorials.        But the government didn’t bend and another bill became law. And then came       the next announcement.              In 1999, the Harris Conservatives won another big majority government. Why?       Because they knew that the key to success for conservatives in Ontario lay in       keeping both rural and suburban voters happy.               And one great way to keep them both happy was to demonize progressive voters       living in the downtowns.              Doug Ford is doing exactly the same thing, and although it’s early days yet,       odds are good he will be equally successful.              The Ford government is moving with incredible speed on multiple fronts, just       as the Harris government did. In its first month, this government has       cancelled energy contracts, turfed Hydro One’s CEO and board, scrapped the       cap-and-trade carbon tax,        scotched the sex-ed curriculum.              And this week, we learned the government is privatizing the sale of cannabis       and slashing the number of Toronto city councillors, even though the municipal       elections and the on-sale date for legal marijuana are less than three months       away.              As a reporter, Adam Vaughan covered the Harris government. He then became a       downtown Toronto councillor, and today is a Liberal MP representing       Spadina-Fort York.              “Ford’s move on Toronto is vindictive destruction, arrogant and       thoughtless,” Mr. Vaughan tweeted when news of changes to city council       broke. “It’s absolutely not about good governance. We must fight it.”       These words are music to Doug Ford’       s ears.              Privatizing marijuana sales will also appeal to Ford Nation, both because it       emphasizes private enterprise over government bureaucracy, and because there       will be more stores selling marijuana. Question: If marijuana is sold by the       private sector, then        why is alcohol in Ontario still controlled by a public monopoly? Does Mr.       Ford have plans for the LCBO?              If the Ford government truly intends to imitate the Harris government, then       Ontario residents should brace themselves.               The more opposition the Conservatives face from school teachers, public       servants, environmentalists, social activists and columnists, the more       determined the Conservatives will become, the farther they will go, and the       happier their partisans will be.              The Harris government also took on the federal Liberals in Ottawa, demanding       increased funding for health care with no strings attached, and battling over       compensation for people who contracted hepatitis C through the blood supply.              The Ford government has already sent the Trudeau government a $200-million       bill for the costs of accommodating refugee claimants, and vows to fight the       carbon tax Ottawa will impose on Ontario now that cap-and-trade is no more.              How will this play out over the next four years?              As long as middle-class suburban commuters in Oakville and Oshawa and Vaughan       and Scarborough believe the Conservatives are governing in their interest,       Doug Ford will remain popular.              Eventually, the Harris Tories lost energy and focus. When that happened,       suburban voters abandoned their rural cousins and made common cause with       downtown voters, leading to 15 years of Liberal government at Queen’s Park.              If Mr. Ford missteps, those suburban voters will turn on him too.              But for now, if you live in Ontario, hang onto your hat.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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