Toronto Star

A wild South Weston showdown

Can Doug Ford’s nephew topple the NDP incumbent in a historical­ly Liberal riding?

- JOSH RUBIN STAFF REPORTER

With the election heating up, local candidates are busy trying to prove they’re the best fit to represent constituen­ts at Queen’s Park. But the races are tight — and all kinds of factors could swing the outcomes. Today, we take a closer look at three compelling ridings, and what candidates are up against.

As he chats breezily with customers at a small Caribbean lunch counter, Faisal Hassan doesn’t look like a guy in a fight for his political life.

“Hey, how are you? Family doing well?” Hassan says as a customer comes up to greet him while he’s waiting in line for tea at Fahmee Bakery.

Another asks if Hassan can help a relative out, and hands him a business card.

“Let me see what I can do,” says Hassan.

But the relatively cheerful tone belies the fact Hassan could be facing the prospect of becoming a one-term MPP.

In a riding that was previously represente­d by a Liberal at Queen’s Park for all but a few months of its existence, Hassan is already swimming upstream as the NDP candidate in York South—Weston. Throw in the fact that the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve candidate happens to be Mike Ford — yes, Doug’s nephew — and being the incumbent suddenly doesn’t seem like the automatic advantage it often can be.

Hassan insists he’s not worried, and says Ford — who represents a neighbouri­ng district on Toronto city council — isn’t a serious threat.

“If the PCs were going to win this riding, it would have been in 2018,” Hassan says, referring to the previous election, when PC candidate Mark DeMontis finished a close second to Hassan, earning 32.95 per cent of the vote to Hassan’s 36.07. Incumbent Laura Albanese finished third, with 27.83 per cent, as voters swept Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals out of office across the province. “That was a wave. And waves come and go.”

Besides, Hassan sniffs, Ford doesn’t even live in the riding — and he didn’t resign his council seat to run.

“How’s he going to represent our community? Who’s looking after the people? It’s all about somebody’s career.”

Ford is careful to point out he’s donating his council salary to charity during the provincial election campaign, and that his constituen­cy office staff is still busily working away.

“People can call the office, people can call some of the neighbouri­ng councillor­s. They can call me, too, but I won’t be able to get back to them as quickly as I usually do. Work is still getting done. People can still get help,” says Ford.

As far as not living in the riding goes, Ford says it’s an area he knows well — and not just because his council ward is right next door.

“It’s a community I know very well. It’s a neighbourh­ood that I’ve lived in and grew up here. It’s a neighbourh­ood that I played hockey in,” says Ford.

As for running in a riding that has never elected a PC candidate since it was first contested in 1999, Ford says he isn’t trying to make a point. It’s not, he says, like Justin Trudeau running for a House of Commons seat in the federal riding of Papineau, which had been a Bloc Québécois stronghold.

“It is not lost on me that this hasn’t typically gone in the Conservati­ves’ direction,” says Ford. “I chose York South— Weston because it’s a community I know well. I worked in the local councillor’s office for some time. I wouldn’t put myself into a position where I would just go into a riding for the sake of going into a riding.”

Ford, whose uncle Doug was swept into the premier’s office on a PC wave four years ago — and whose late uncle Rob was an often-controvers­ial figure during his tenure as Toronto’s mayor — isn’t running away from his family name. Not that voters would let him, he says.

“Let’s put Doug and the PC party aside for a second. So many people come up to me and talk about Rob, and the work he did in our city and community connecting with people,” says Ford. “Rob is a big reason I got involved in politics and community service. He had a huge heart for this city.”

But while acknowledg­ing he’s been inspired by his family’s political history, Ford insists he’s got his own way of doing things.

“There are always preconcept­ions, there’s no doubt about it. But I have a proven track record of getting the job done. That’s what I’ve done at city hall for the last six years — work with members of council of all stripes,” says Ford, a claim backed up even by some of his most ardent opponents.

Joe Cressy, one of Toronto city council’s most reliably left-wing votes, made fast friends with Mike Ford after Ford was elected to council in 2016, in his uncle Rob’s old ward.

“I think I was elected at 30, and he was elected in his early 20s. We were the two youngest councillor­s. He used to jokingly refer to me as ‘Old Man Cressy.’ We were the two kids on council,” says Cressy, who recently resigned from council and is moving into a role with George Brown College.

Cressy and Ford would frequently tangle during council debates, but it never became bitter or personal, Cressy says.

“He’s a conservati­ve, proudly so, but he’s also a very collaborat­ive individual. And so Mike and I, we would debate against each other on the floor of council very strongly, and then we’d go out for a beer afterwards together,” says Cressy. “He’s always been somebody who’s been very clear in his politics, but very much a collaborat­ive guy, and a decent, decent person.”

But even if he offers a less combative style than his uncle Doug, Mike Ford still backs PC policies which haven’t been good for York South—Weston, a riding that was hit hard during the COVID-19 pandemic, argue Hassan and Liberal candidate Nadia Guerrera, a veteran teacher with the Toronto Catholic District School Board.

“It took us seven months to get a COVID-19 testing centre. And vaccines? They were going to other communitie­s,” says Hassan of the riding in the city’s northwest corner, which early in the pandemic suffered some of the highest infection rates in the Greater Toronto Area.

That record during the pandemic will hurt Mike Ford’s chances on election day, says Guerrera, adding that many front-line workers at warehouses and manufactur­ers, as well as educators, live in the riding.

“There’s a very strong antiFord sentiment in this riding,” says Guerrera, who insists she’s no long-shot, even though she’s running against a big-name PC candidate and an NDP incumbent. In 2018, Guerrera finished a distant third for the Liberals in Parkdale—High Park, where Bhutila Karpoche cruised to victory for the NDP.

“I don’t think I’m the underdog. The NDP incumbent hasn’t delivered. It’s a two-way race. And we are the progressiv­e option.”

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ??
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO
 ?? NADIA GUERRERA NDP candidate Faisal Hassan, top, is fighting to keep his seat of York—South Weston against Liberal Nadia Guerrera and Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Mike Ford, the nephew of the premier. ??
NADIA GUERRERA NDP candidate Faisal Hassan, top, is fighting to keep his seat of York—South Weston against Liberal Nadia Guerrera and Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Mike Ford, the nephew of the premier.
 ?? VINCE TALOTTA TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ??
VINCE TALOTTA TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO
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