Toronto Star

THEY’RE OFF AND RUNNING

As Tory, Keesmaat face off in first mayoral debate, we fact-check their plans for a subway relief line.

- Edward Keenan

This mayoral campaign seems like it’s taken a little while to launch, given the mucking about of the provincial government. But it finally, kinda sorta kicked off in earnest with the first debate of the campaign — hosted by ArtsVote on Monday morning. If nothing else, it defined the battle lines, not in any way surprising­ly, but perhaps more clearly than before.

The nominal topic of the debate was the arts, but there seemed to be little actual debate on the topic — shockingly, no one on stage took the wide-open position that the arts are bad. No one even nodded to the common cynic’s refrain that there are pressing life-anddeath issues in the city that require more attention. Instead, the candidates were like a cheer squad (Gimme an A! Gimme an R! Gimme at T! Gimme an S!) and agreed that the city should double or triple its per-capita funding of the sector.

But stepping back from the specific topic, the contrast in message between incumbent John Tory and presumed number one contender Jennifer Keesmaat was stark.

Keesmaat took every single opportunit­y, no matter what the topic of the question at hand, to attack Premier Doug Ford and Tory, and to tie the two men together: “you can’t fight conservati­ve cuts with a conservati­ve mayor,” she said. At times she seemed almost too eager to attack, passing up opportunit­ies to discuss her just-released artsand-culture platform in order to take another stab at SmartTrack or the rise in rents under Tory’s leadership.

But she certainly drove home her twofold message. Part one of that is that we need to “stand up” forcefully against a premier who has shown he plans to keep pressing his boot on the city’s neck. Part two is that the city needs to do more. “This city can be so much better!” she said at one point.

Tory, in between frequent references to an art in the parks program and to a Scarboroug­h theatre troupe whose work he saw but that he never named, offered the contrast to Keesmaat’s call

KEENAN continued on GT8 Target on Tory: Keesmat takes aim at the front-runner in the first mayoral debate, GT8

to arms that you’d expect from a fairly popular incumbent who grew up politicall­y at the knee of Bill “Bland Works” Davis. At one point, discussing affordable housing proposals, he said we need to have goals that are “adequate but realistic.”

“Adequate but realistic.” It may not quicken the heart or get imaginatio­ns soaring, but it is as pithy and honest a summary of Tory’s political approach as I’ve heard him say out loud. Put it on the signs.

As for the bullying of the premier? “You can’t be in a state of war,” he said at one point. The city needs to “maintain those partnershi­ps with other government­s.” So when Ford lays a beating on the city — as he has and as he most certainly will — Tory says we should sternly tell him we’re disappoint­ed, then sit down to see how we can work together on other things.

To me, that approach seems likely to be neither adequate nor realistic. Though the bind, given the constituti­onal firepower the provincial government holds, is that it’s not clear how effective warfare may be, either. In the short term, that’s the precisely the crisis facing Toronto’s leadership: how keep from getting crushed.

In any event, the choice between the two approaches to the city’s ambitions and its relations with the Ford government — which may be the two biggest questions facing the city on every policy decision — is fairly clear.

We have other choices of candidates, of course, and a few of them were even at the debate. Businesspe­rson Gautam Nath seemed a bit out of his depth and underprepa­red — though he did offer the most whimsical moment of the debate when he imagined setting up participat­ory arts installati­ons on street corners where a commuter rushing to work might take two minutes to chisel out a carving before hopping on the bus.

Both of the other candidates, Saron Gebresella­ssi and Sarah Climenhaga, were solid contributo­rs to the conversati­on.

Gebresella­ssi, kicking off her introducti­on and conclusion in French and positionin­g herself as both an employer and a labour activist, rightfully returned again and again to inclusion of at-risk youth and priority neighbourh­oods — and sold herself as a generation­al and demographi­c alternativ­e to the same old cast of “status quo politician­s and city bureaucrat­s.” In a city that is largely working class, she said, with a majority of residents who are racialized or migrants, “I represent that change.”

Climenhaga came across as a reasonable neighbour who knew how and when to gracefully steer the conversati­on to the most pressing topics — in this case, pointing out repeatedly that artists need to be able to afford to live in the city and, increasing­ly, they can’t. Her three-point program for the arts — in which each point consisted of the word “investment” — drew appreciati­ve laughs from the sympatheti­c crowd.

As for the front-runners, I don’t think either of them ran away with the debate. At times Keesmaat looked too eager to attack, and at times Tory seemed too content to brag about very meagre incrementa­l results. But both clearly establishe­d their approach — and made clear how they differ from each other. As the campaign kicks into gear, it’s at least clear which tracks the candidates are racing on.

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 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS PHOTOS TORONTO STAR ?? Candidate Jennifer Keesmaat took every single opportunit­y to attack fellow candidate John Tory during the first Toronto mayoral debate on Monday morning.
RICHARD LAUTENS PHOTOS TORONTO STAR Candidate Jennifer Keesmaat took every single opportunit­y to attack fellow candidate John Tory during the first Toronto mayoral debate on Monday morning.
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