The Niagara Falls Review

Ontario PCs anti-media bias ends up making them look stupid

- KEITH LESLIE Keith Leslie is a veteran Ontario journalist covering politics.

As Canadians struggle to sort out what’s real and what’s not in the ever-evolving digital news world, the Ford government goes out of its way to limit the ability of journalist­s to do their jobs.

The media were barred when Ford Nation, formerly the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Party of Ontario, met in Niagara Falls last weekend to debate policies and re-election strategy.

Festivitie­s kicked off Friday with a security guard interrupti­ng a live TV report by CBC’s Mike Crawley outside the convention centre. Crawley, a respected Queen’s Park veteran, politely kept reporting while the large security goon moved between him and cameraman Robert Krbavac, warning they were trespassin­g and police would be called if they didn’t leave.

The nearly four-minute confrontat­ion aired live on CBC News Network until someone from the party finally came out and told the guard to stand down. Nothing says open and transparen­t government like having security stomp in to block a live TV report and order journalist­s off the property, after barring them from being inside.

Premier Doug Ford’s office insisted no one from the party ordered security to disrupt the live CBC broadcast and issued an apology to Crawley. However, the security company declined to be thrown under the proverbial political bus and issued its own statement saying the guard was indeed acting on orders from the PC party.

Whatever the truth, the PC ban on the media led directly to the guard’s actions, although he, and presumably his colleagues, need training in how not to be a jerk.

Did the former journalist­s who serve as Ford’s chief of staff and deputy chief not anticipate banning reporters from a government conference would send a message to delegates and security to view the news media as the enemy?

The anti-media message was stressed by Kory Teneycke, Ford’s 2018 and 2022 campaign manager, who warned PC loyalists they would be “ridiculed and misreprese­nted” by reporters. The online site PressProgr­ess obtained video of Teneycke’s speech, despite the media ban.

Candidate Ford had every right to buck tradition by declining to have a media bus for his 2018 campaign. But Premier Ford should never ban reporters from a government conference.

Working the halls, meeting the people parties love to call grass root members and seeing how they interact with elected representa­tives and unelected party brass, helps journalist­s better understand them, the parties and policies. It also empowers people who rarely, if ever, get access to regional and national media to express their ideas and opinions, especially ones that are being ignored or downplayed by the party powers that be. It’s a very democratic thing.

When a government bans the media, they gather outside meetings to provide coverage as best they can, but that means any protests — and government­s always attract protests — will get more than usual coverage because the reporters are locked outside with the protesters.

Journalist­s are like most Canadians. It takes a lot to get us outside in February to stand around in the cold, especially if there’s a nice, warm filing room inside where we can work. Under those normal circumstan­ces, protests become part of the story, but not the main story because it’s all reporters are left to work with. How does that help the PCs? It doesn’t.

The Ford government’s spectacula­r screw-up of its redesign of Ontario’s licence plates was a classic example of a self-inflicted wound. This was another. Two for two in 2020.

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