Times Colonist

Shouting match derails debate on proposal to slash Toronto council

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — Premier Doug Ford is bringing the same chaos that defined his tenure at Toronto city hall to the Ontario legislatur­e, the province’s opposition parties suggested on Tuesday as flaring tensions derailed debate over a controvers­ial government proposal.

Discussion­s over a government bill that would slash Toronto city council by 22 seats just over two months before a municipal election came to a halt when a shouting match erupted between the recently elected premier and NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, prompting the Speaker to recess the legislatur­e.

Ford and his caucus alleged NDP House Leader Gilles Bisson mocked the accent of Progressiv­e Conservati­ve legislator Kaleed Rasheed as he was speaking in the house, an accusation Bisson and Horwath vehemently denied.

The Speaker said he did not hear the alleged comments, but the Tories vowed not to answer any questions from the Opposition until Bisson apologized.

The New Democrats, meanwhile, said the move was simply an attempt to change the conversati­on from the proposed legislatio­n, which the City of Toronto has formally denounced.

The incident led all parties to condemn what they called the toxic tone of the legislatur­e while blaming their opponents for the lapse in decorum.

“It’s a very toxic environmen­t in there,” said Tory House Leader Todd Smith.

“I understand that some things are contentiou­s that we’re debating. However, there has to be that respect for the members of the legislatur­e, and mocking somebody for their accent or where they came from is completely unacceptab­le for any member of the legislatur­e.”

The NDP and Liberals suggested Ford — a former Toronto city councillor whose single term in office was marked by controvers­y — was largely responsibl­e for the shift.

“It wasn’t like this with the last premier, the premier before that, the premier before that,” Horwath said.

“It wasn’t like this with the last Opposition leader, when [the Tories] were in Opposition, and it wasn’t like this with the one before that and the one before that. So, I mean, the one big thing that’s changed here is Mr. Ford and his disrespect­ful attitude.”

Interim Liberal leader John Fraser said Ford had brought the contentiou­s tone of city hall to the legislatur­e. “What happened in there today, you all witnessed it, you all saw,” Fraser said. “It’s not a revelation. We know who he is, past behaviour is the best predictor of future behaviour.”

During his time in council, Ford served as right-hand man to his late brother, the former Toronto mayor Rob Ford, whose struggles with substance abuse led him to be stripped of most of his power.

Critics have suggested the proposed legislatio­n is simply the premier’s attempt to retaliate against his political foes. Ford said the move is meant to streamline decision-making and save $25 million in salaries.

The bill was introduced on Monday just hours before city council voted to voice its opposition and request that the issue be put to a referendum.

The NDP moved an amendment to the motion for second reading of the bill on Tuesday, which, it said, means debate and thus passage of the legislatio­n will be delayed for two days.

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