The Welland Tribune

Premier will cut Toronto council to 25

‘It’s like a comedy show down at city hall:’ Ford defends moves to slash council

- ROBERT BENZIE, DAVID RIDER AND JENNIFER PAGLIARO

TORONTO — There’s a new sheriff in town.

Brandishin­g his political clout, recently elected Premier Doug Ford is unilateral­ly slashing the number of councillor­s at Toronto city hall and cancelling democratic elections for regional chairs in Peel, York, Niagara and Muskoka.

Ford’s disruption of civic elections on Friday triggered an eruption in municipal politics across the GTHA. In one surprise developmen­t, Jennifer Keesmaat, Toronto’s outspoken former chief planner, entered the city’s mayoral race and will take on John Tory.

Tory, for his part, is calling for a referendum on the size of Toronto’s city council.

As first disclosed by the Toronto Star, Ford will cut council from 47 members to 25 and is dealing a body blow to a political enemy, Patrick Brown, his predecesso­r as Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader, who was a front-runner for the Peel post.

Those hopes dashed, Brown immediatel­y registered to run for mayor of Brampton against Linda Jeffrey.

But Ford, who never discussed his plans during the June 7 election campaign, signalled that he is more powerful than any municipal leader and suggested civic government­s could effectivel­y be run from Queen’s Park.

“We’re going to get things done. We’re going to run city hall a lot more efficientl­y than before,” the premier told reporters 12 hours after the Star revealed his sweeping changes.

“No one has ever said to me: ‘Doug, we need more politician­s,’” said Ford.

“In fact, it’s the opposite. People tell me that we have too many politician­s making it harder to get things done, making it harder to get things built, making it harder to deal with the real problems we face,” he said.

Ford, a one-term Toronto councillor while his late brother, Rob Ford, was mayor from 2010 to 2014, said he was fed up with the “hours and hours of endless debate ... all of it taking place on the taxpayer’s dime.”

“It’s clear that the size of government is just too large.”

City wards will mirror provincial and federal riding boundaries if the legislatio­n, which will be tabled Monday, is passed.

But Ford, whose Tories toppled former premier Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals, danced around questions about why he never once told voters during the campaign that he would make such dramatic moves.

“Very clearly I did. I … I was very clear when I said, ‘We’re going to reduce the size and cost of government,’” he stammered when asked repeatedly why he did not disclose the scheme to voters.

“This is something I fought for while I was at city hall and something I continue to believe.”

The premier denied that he was settling political scores with rivals like Brown and Tory, who defeated him in the 2014 election.

“People don’t care about politician­s. They care about getting things done. The last thing the families, businesses and municipal leaders in these regions need is another layer of politician­s,” he said.

Until Brown’s surprise resignatio­n on Jan. 24, Ford was planning on running for mayor against Tory, again, this Oct. 22.

“It’s like a comedy show down at city hall,” he said, referring to the unwieldy meetings and stalled initiative­s such as public transit. “For too long, the people of Toronto have watched city council go around in circles and fail to act on the critical issues facing the city and as a result infrastruc­ture crumbles, housing backlogs grow, and transit isn’t built.”

Ford warned “it will only get worse if Toronto city council grows from 44 to 47 councillor­s.”

“More politician­s is not the answer — no matter who the mayor is,” he said.

While the deadline for candidates entering the Toronto race was Friday, that will be reopened and extended until Sept. 14.

Mayor Tory was unimpresse­d. “It is my job to stand up for the people of Toronto,” Tory said. “You don’t change the rules in the middle of the game. That is not right and that is not fair.”

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath blasted Ford for acting without any consultati­on.

“It appears that Doug Ford cooked up a backroom plot to use his new power to meddle in municipal elections. He didn’t campaign on it. He didn’t consult people on it,” Horwath said.

“It’s clear that Mr. Ford wants a smaller number of councillor­s to have more power, fewer checks and balances, and less accountabi­lity. This is obviously a move to make it easier for the premier to control Toronto city hall,” she said.

“The actions ... Mr. Ford plans to take not only mean less accountabi­lity and transparen­cy at city hall, but that each Torontonia­n will have less help and less access to their city councillor.”

Horwath also expressed outrage at Ford for targeting Brown in Peel and former Liberal cabinet minister Steven Del Duca, the front-runner in York.

“Cancelling elections in which his political enemies are running — elections for the chairs of the York and Peel regions — (is) deeply chilling.”

Municipal Affairs Minister Steve Clark, who is pushing the so-called Better Local Government Act stressed “when it comes to the regional government­s in York, Peel, Niagara and Muskoka — we are ... taking a pause.”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced at Queen's Park in Toronto on Friday that he will significan­tly reduce the number of Toronto city councillor­s just months before the fall municipal election.
CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced at Queen's Park in Toronto on Friday that he will significan­tly reduce the number of Toronto city councillor­s just months before the fall municipal election.

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