Toronto Life

The Ford Fallout

- Portraits By Vanessa Heins By Ali Amad, Danielle Groen, Malcolm Johnston, Jason Mcbride, Courtney Shea And Mathew Silver

What’s the real cost of Doug Ford’s slash-first, think-later brand of politics? Students, scientists, teachers, doctors, researcher­s and front-line workers tell their stories

The Scientists, Students, Teachers, Researcher­s, Doctors And Front-line Workers Affected Most By The Premier’s Slash-and-burn Tactics

“efficienci­es” was doug ford’s watchword on the campaign trail, and by golly he was going to find them. Frankly, it sounded great. Unfortunat­ely for him, the gross misspendin­g and high financial crimes he so frequently cited didn’t exist—it turns out Queen’s Park was running pretty lean as it was. And so Ford did what politician­s do when theory and reality fail to intersect: he pivoted. Instead of eliminatin­g slush funds and streamlini­ng processes, he started cutting. And then he cut some more. No one said erasing a multi-billion-dollar deficit wouldn’t leave a few scars, but Ford’s approach to surgery was more like improvised hacking—and he often did it with zero consultati­on from the people going under the knife.

To the surprise of exactly no one, outcry followed—angry op-eds, street-clogging protests, threats of strikes—and Ford’s approval ratings plummeted. In an attempt to stop the slide, Ford reversed some of the cuts. It kind of worked: many Torontonia­ns lost track of what had actually been cut and what hadn’t. The damage, however, had been done. Ford’s war on the bottom line threw dozens of public organizati­ons into disarray, put our climate, schools and public health workers in jeopardy, and left thousands of Ontarians vulnerable. In the pages ahead, the devastatin­g proof.

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