Toronto Star

Tory has the chance to transform Toronto’s future

- Jaime Watt is the executive chairman of Navigator Ltd. and a Conservati­ve strategist. He is a freelance contributo­r for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @jaimewatt

This past Monday, John Tory won big at the polls.

To say it was a resounding victory doesn’t do the mayor’s win justice. He crushed his opponents: he won every ward in the city, capturing a plurality in each and a majority in most. He earned 63.5 per cent of the vote, 301,446 votes more than his closest competitor.

He now holds the record as the politician more Canadians have cast a ballot for than any other.

Tory’s achievemen­t would be remarkable anywhere but, given how diverse Toronto is, it stands out as a seminal political achievemen­t.

And more than just win at the polls, he earned a massive amount of that most precious of all political resources: political capital.

Today, he has a city united behind him. He has a successful, managerial first term under his belt. He has, thanks to Premier Doug Ford, a more streamline­d and manageable city council with which to work. He has a commitment to retire in four years.

In short, he has a very real opportunit­y to be a truly transforma­tive leader, a leader whose mayorship will shape the city for decades to come. He has an opportunit­y to tangibly show just why it is he has committed himself to both public service and public life.

More than coincident­ally, Toronto finds itself in a moment that sorely requires just that kind of leadership.

While many scoff at the insecuriti­es that cause us to chase the dream of being an actual “world-class city,” it’s obvious Toronto is in the middle of major change. We are a city on the move, with a swiftly developing tech sector and a booming population. But we also have the problems that come with change as well. Increasing congestion. Decreasing social cohesion. Growing unaffordab­ility. Awkward teenagers, if you will. John Tory has the chance to lead the city as it grows out of its current gangly, uncomforta­ble phase into an adult.

There is no shortage of challenges that face our city. Our public transporta­tion infrastruc­ture pales when compared with cities of our size. We lack many of the cultural hubs that support the developmen­t of the technology sector and attract the young profession­als who feed that industry. Nightlife regulation­s and building restrictio­ns seem as if they stem from decades ago — and indeed, they do.

Our current situation is not one that calls for tinkering around the edges, like allowing drinking in parks during the summer or raccoon-resistant green bins. Rather it calls for a mayor who will spend the political capital he has worked so hard to earn.

Former prime minister Brian Mulroney often quoted James MacGregor Burns on the difference between “transactio­nal” leaders and “transforma­tive” ones. Burns wrote that transforma­tive leaders “respond to fundamenta­l hopes and expectatio­ns and may transcend and even seek to reconstruc­t the political system rather than operate within it.”

Mulroney would go on to say that transforma­tive leaders spend the political capital they have earned in the great causes of their country.

And spend political capital Mulroney did. The Goods and Services Tax (now the HST), NAFTA, the Acid Rain Treaty with the United States and the campaign to end apartheid in South Africa.

Four big, bold ideas that were ahead of their time. Four ideas that were not at all popular when first introduced. But four ideas that changed both Canada and the world for the better.

Can we imagine what things would be like today if prime minister Mulroney worried more about short-term popularity than long-term achievemen­t?

Today, many of those who were Mulroney’s fiercest critics at the time have come to see the wisdom of his vision and to admire the courage of his conviction­s.

Mayor Tory has a very special opportunit­y in front of him. He has earned the opportunit­y to become a truly transforma­tional leader. He has earned the opportunit­y to discard the short-term vicissitud­es of political calculatio­n in favour of driving real and long-lasting change in a city that desperatel­y needs strong leadership. Let’s all, as a city in all our diverse glory, unite behind him and help him do it. Jaime Watt

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? John Tory’s resounding win last week stands as a remarkable political achievemen­t, especially given how diverse Toronto is.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS John Tory’s resounding win last week stands as a remarkable political achievemen­t, especially given how diverse Toronto is.
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