Toronto Star

King St. transit plan a kingmaker for Tory

- Jaime Watt Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservati­ve strategist.

Something had to give.

Until very recently, King St. looked more like a parking lot than the central artery of Canada’s financial district.

Today, you can shoot a cannon down the street and be confident that you wouldn’t strike a car or truck.

In July, Toronto’s city council approved a one-year pilot project focused on giving streetcars, bikes and pedestrian­s the priority on King St. The program, implemente­d two weeks ago, was designed to ensure that the transit experience for commuters using the King St. corridor would be more palatable. And, it has done just that.

The implementa­tion of council’s decision also marks the unofficial start of next year’s mayoral campaign.

In less than 12 months from now, John Tory will find himself in a rematch with Doug Ford, as well as facing a yet-to-be determined left-wing candidate. (Watch for a Desmond Cole- or Mike Layton-like candidate to join the race.)

Mayor Tory is nothing if not a savvy politician. He knows that 65,000 trips are made every day on the King streetcar. He also knows that many of those making these 65,000 trips are young, left-leaning millennial­s, who would never in a million years consider voting for Ford. They would, however, consider voting for a transit-focused left-wing candidate.

Remember, in 2014, Tory beat Ford by only 60,000 votes, and Olivia Chow ran a lacklustre campaign. If Chow had performed at a higher level and effectivel­y split the vote, the chain of office would currently be around Doug Ford’s neck.

Tory was largely elected for two reasons. The first: he wasn’t Rob Ford, whom his brother, Doug, replaced as a candidate due to the former mayor’s illness. The second reason was Tory’s SmartTrack transit plan.

On not being Rob Ford, Tory gets full marks. He has brought profession­alism, sincerity, thoughtful policy and a steady hand to City Hall.

On SmartTrack, he has faced more challenges. As once promised, transit lines will no longer extend to the Mississaug­a Airport Corporate Centre, the number of SmartTrack stations has been reduced and significan­t funding uncertaint­y remains.

In Tory’s defence, there has been real progress on SmartTrack, and much of its perceived failure can more properly be attributed to poor communicat­ion.

But Tory’s streetcar manoeuvre on King St. diverts attention from SmartTrack. Among downtown transit users, Tory is now seen as the Transit Mayor — a genuine hero who has given 65,000 commuters back 30 or 40 minutes a day.

This is wedge politics very cleverly played. The King St. pilot project (which will not be a pilot project for long) splits the electorate. There are two clear sides to this debate — those for the car and those for the streetcar.

Doug Ford has come out swinging. He’s announced that if he is elected mayor next year, he will kill the pilot project in its tracks.

Ford will position the project as an attack on the car, an attack on Torontonia­ns who live outside the downtown core and an assault on businesses and the middle class.

Tory needs the King St. pilot to fend off a challenge from a transit-friendly candidate.

The project gives him cover to run as the fair and reasonable incumbent who made difficult decisions that kept the city moving.

Before the pilot project, Torontonia­ns would have had trouble pointing to a Tory transforma­tional policy.

At election time, this risks becoming a significan­t challenge for the mayor. As an incumbent, he needs to be able to point to victories that illustrate how he has made people’s lives better.

He has been an effective operationa­l mayor; one who has kept the lights on and the city functionin­g reasonably well.

The King St. pilot project will become a real and well-understood Tory accomplish­ment.

This is smart politics. It may have been a difficult decision but it’s one that will help him politicall­y in the next election campaign because it has made the lives streetcar-riding Torontonia­ns a lot better.

The King St. project gives Mayor Tory cover to run as the fair and reasonable incumbent who made difficult decisions that kept the city moving

 ?? DOUG IVES/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The implementa­tion of the King St. pilot project marks the unofficial start of next year’s mayoral campaign, Jaime Watt writes.
DOUG IVES/THE CANADIAN PRESS The implementa­tion of the King St. pilot project marks the unofficial start of next year’s mayoral campaign, Jaime Watt writes.
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