Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"
|    ont.politics    |    Ontario politics    |    90,757 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 90,440 of 90,757    |
|    brewnoser to All    |
|    Doug Ford - no less a deceiver than Rod     |
|    01 Jan 21 07:30:36    |
      From: brewnoser2@gmail.com              He was just as much a liar to the people of Ontario as was his Finance       minister.              If Phillips now finds himself under the wheels of the bus, Premier Doug Ford       has no business sitting in that driver's seat. His lie is bigger than that of       Phillips.       ______________________________       thestar.com Thu., Dec. 31, 2020              As outrage grows, Finance Minister Rod Phillips resigns over secret Caribbean       vacation              Rod Phillips has lost his job as Ontario finance minister after it was       revealed he ignored provincial pandemic guidelines and went on a Caribbean       holiday over the Christmas break.              Premier Doug Ford made the announcement Thursday afternoon, saying he had       accepted Phillips’ resignation after speaking to the Ajax MPP, who had       returned to Canada just hours earlier.              “At a time when the people of Ontario have sacrificed so much, today’s       resignation is a demonstration that our government takes seriously our       obligation to hold ourselves to a higher standard,” Ford said in a statement.       [- - -]              As finance minister, Phillips was among the most powerful figures at Queen’s       Park. He left the country on Dec. 13 as COVID-19 cases surged and Ford’s       government lectured Ontarians about the need to stay home over the holidays to       fight the pandemic.              News of his trip to St. Barts, a small island about 180 km east of the U.S.       Virgin Islands — whose expensive resorts are popular with global celebrities       — provoked outrage from the public and opposition members after it became       public Tuesday.              It also made headlines around the world, with the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper       and U.S. gossip site TooFab.com picking up the story.              Sources told the Star Ford had been feeling pressure from caucus and cabinet       members who were angry to learn about Phillips’ trip and concerned it could       undermine the province’s pandemic efforts.              They felt strongly that he had to go and told the premier so, sources said.              Speaking to reporters after landing at Pearson Airport Thursday morning,       Phillips said he had made “a dumb, dumb mistake” but at that time had not       offered Ford his resignation.              “I think there is very important work that needs to be done, and I’d like       to continue to be a part of that,” he said, while acknowledging it’s up to       the premier to decide who serves in cabinet.              After Ford announced Phillips was out of cabinet, the MPP released a statement       saying he had stepped down.              “Travelling over the holidays was the wrong decision, and I once again offer       my unreserved apology,” he said.              On Thursday morning, Phillips went straight from Pearson to his condo in Ajax,       where he will quarantine for the next two weeks as required for international       travellers.              While Phillips was in the Caribbean, videos and photos posted to his social       media accounts appeared to show him at home and in his riding. In a fireside       video posted to Twitter on Christmas Eve, Phillips sat next to a gingerbread       house and sipped eggnog        while praising Ontarians for “what we are doing to protect our most       vulnerable.”              The opposition said the posts were evidence Phillips tried to cover up his       trip, but he denied he intended to deceive the public.              “I understand why some people believe that’s the case. It is not,” he       said after arriving at Pearson Airport. “Many politicians, I would almost       say most politicians, pre-program and pre-record a lot of their social media       content.”              Pressed on why he planned a vacation as Ford and provincial public health       officials told Ontarians to only leave home if necessary, Phillips had no       explanation. “I’ve been asking myself the same thing over the last number       of days,” he said.              Phillips said he hadn’t given the premier advance notice he was leaving the       country because Ford “has far more important things to do than worry about       the travel of his ministers or the people who work for him.”              The premier’s office said Tuesday that Ford only learned about Phillips’       tropical vacation after he left. The premier said in a statement the same day       the trip was “unacceptable” and he had asked Phillips to return       “immediately.”              On Wednesday, the premier clarified that he spoke to Phillips “shortly       after” he arrived in the Caribbean two weeks ago and regretted not ordering       him at that time to come back.              Phillips’ office has also confirmed he took a separate, personal trip to       Switzerland in August, even though federal officials had advised against all       non-essential travel abroad.              Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the minister’s resignation doesn’t       absolve the premier.              “Doug Ford knew about Rod Phillips’ trip to St. Barts two weeks ago,”       she said in a written statement. “Not only did Ford not fire him then, he       helped him keep the trip a secret. Phillips’ resignation from cabinet today       is not because of        Phillips’ vacation, it’s because they got caught.”              Mike Schreiner, Leader of the Green Party of Ontario, said Phillips “did the       right thing by resigning” but he worried the scandal would distract from the       crucial work of getting a handle on the worsening pandemic.              “I’m sad and angry that this is the headline” when the province hit a       one-day record of new COVID-19 cases, intensive care units are        overflowing,” and long-term-care residents “are facing a humanitarian       crisis,” Schreiner said in a        statement.              Mayor John Tory, who is friends with Phillips, said as minister Phillips       “was a good, supportive partner for the City of Toronto but, as he has       acknowledged, his recent regrettable actions were wrong and require this level       of accountability.”              Phillips, 55, was first elected in 2018, and quickly rose through the ranks to       become finance minister in June 2019. Before entering politics he held jobs as       the president of the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Commission and chair of       Postmedia.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca