Toronto Star

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John Filion’s book offers sympathy and explanatio­ns for Toronto’s former first family

- JIM COYLE FEATURE WRITER

Read Jim Coyle’s interview with John Filion, an excerpt, and Kevin Donovan’s review of Uncontroll­able,

Most of what Mayor Rob Ford did in office, the misbehavio­ur that made him the most infamous politician on Earth, is now known. So too, by and large, is the “how” of things — the ways in which he did it.

The screaming absence in the Ford story — at least to Toronto councillor John Filion — was always the why of it all.

Why is it the Ford family set a new gold standard in dysfunctio­n? Why did Rob Ford end up so profoundly damaged? Why, in the face of his unfitness for office, do supporters devotedly back him and the Ford family?

In his new book The Only Average Guy, Filion has brought keen observatio­n, high emotional intelligen­ce and — given the widespread fear the Fords still evoke — a commendabl­e frankness to addressing those questions.

From the time Ford arrived at city hall as a councillor in 2000, “I recognized in him a shy, awkward kid who seemed painfully alone,” Filion wrote.

He describes an unloved child, turned unhappy man, placed in the untenable position of occupying an office far beyond his abilities.

Ford was without self-awareness, without emotional tools, without self-esteem, without friends worthy of the name, “struggling to do the best he could,” Filion said.

“I wondered about the childhood that had produced such a troubled adult.”

What the author found was a family presided over by a bullying father who withheld the recognitio­n children so crave; older siblings mired in violence, drug abuse, criminalit­y; mutual jealousy in a family where there was never enough love to go round; and a well-founded mistrust of each other in a world of rage and unpredicta­bility.

The success of Filion’s book lies in the fact it will please neither those who regard Rob Ford with unvarnishe­d embarrassm­ent, nor those who consider him messiah of the common folk.

Such caricature­s actually say more about the people who believe in them than they do the man, Filion said in an interview. Life and people are more complicate­d.

“Nobody tries to be friends with this guy, nobody tries to understand him.”

Filion likes Ford, but does not sugarcoat his judgments. “It became clear as I went along that he was just trying to be his dad, it was the only thing he knew.”

Filion was aided significan­tly in the book by the observatio­ns of Ford’s former campaign manager Nick Kouvalis — who helped him see Ford wasn’t elected in spite of his extreme flaws; it was the extreme flaws that helped him get elected.

He was also helped by former policy adviser Sheila Paxton, who saw a lot but who nobody at city hall bothered talking to.

To those who view the former mayor with contempt, Filion puts a propositio­n. If it was horrible to endure him as mayor, “imagine being Rob Ford.”

Most of life seemed “incomprehe­nsible to him,” he said.

“As mayor of Toronto, he constantly had to cover up an inability to understand much of what was happening around him.”

Filion saw Ford this week to pay off a football bet. Being clean and sober has helped the former mayor, he said.

“He was just this really nice, kindhearte­d, it sounds crazy but almost this gentle person.

“He knows that he maybe has a second chance to have a healthy relationsh­ip with his wife and kids . . . He doesn’t want to be a screw-up.”

Ford told Filion, however, he doesn’t plan to read the book.

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