The Peterborough Examiner

For Caroline Mulroney, the dream really is over

- BOB HEPBURN “And so dear friends You just have to carry on” Bob Hepburn is a politics columnist based in Toronto. Follow him on Twitter: @BobHepburn

Those words by the Beatles’ John Lennon in his 1970 song “God” could easily apply these days to Caroline Mulroney.

The dream harboured by the Ontario attorney general when she first entered elected politics in 2017 was that one day she would become premier of Ontario and eventually move on to become Canada’s first elected woman prime minister.

It was the same dream held by her father Brian Mulroney, the former Conservati­ve prime minister who has worked so hard to make her dream come true.

But that dream is over, shattered by a series of actions that have made her look weak, ineffectiv­e, indecisive, intimidate­d and humiliated.

The latest blow to the dream came two weeks ago when Premier Doug Ford’s government announced it was eliminatin­g the position of French Language Services Commission­er and scrapping the plan approved by the previous Liberal government to create a French-language university in 2020.

As the minister responsibl­e for francophon­e affairs, Mulroney was tasked with selling the cuts to outraged Franco-Ontarians as well as francophon­es in Quebec and other provinces.

She did so with great gusto, despite widespread condemnati­on about the cutbacks from across the country, including from federal Conservati­ves who fear a backlash in Quebec and in Ontario ridings with a large French-speaking population.

Without shame or hesitation, Mulroney insisted the moves were necessary as part of efforts to reduce government spending. She also tried to blame both the former Wynne government and the federal Liberals for the cuts.

Finally acknowledg­ing the outcry, Ford backtracke­d in recent days and announced his government would maintain the French language services commission­er but transfer the position to the ombudsman’s office, return the office of francophon­e affairs to being a ministry and hire a senior adviser on francophon­e affairs for the premier’s office.

By then, though, the damage to Mulroney’s reputation had already been done.

This wasn’t the first time Mulroney has looked bad since winning her seat in the June 7 provincial election.

The first came in late June when in addition to her post as attorney general she accepted the downgraded role as minister responsibl­e for francophon­e affairs, which no longer was a full cabinet position. She should have insisted Ford retain the post as a full ministry, as it was under the Liberals.

The second came in July when Ford failed to include a single word of French in his initial throne speech, an insult to Franco-Ontarians. Either Mulroney didn’t raise the point in advance of the speech or Ford simply ignored her. Regardless, she appeared unconcerne­d or ineffectiv­e.

The third came in September when Ford said he would use the “notwithsta­nding” clause in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to override a judge’s ruling that Ford’s move to cut the size of Toronto city council in the midst of an election was unconstitu­tional. Mulroney defended Ford’s action, despite almost universal condemnati­on, including from her father.

Importantl­y, there’s a pattern here with Mulroney — on all her major files she’s either missing in action or acting as Ford’s subservien­t puppet.

Now Mulroney is in full damage control, desperate to salvage a shred of credibilit­y, especially among francophon­es.

How is she ever going to win support from these voters? How is she ever going to win support from voters horrified by her backing of Ford’s shameless abuse of the “notwithsta­nding” clause? How is she going to win support from voters everywhere who despise Ford?

Unless she can figure that out, John Lennon’s words will be forever true: “The dream is over.”

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