Sunday, May 27, 2018
Doug Ford and the Beware of Doug Campaign
It's the final debate the Ontario election campaign. The stakes couldn't be higher.
And you can be sure that Doug Ford's Team Harper handlers have been trying to hammer one talking point after the other into him.
For with his polls heading south, and his campaign dented by scandal, it could very well be his do or die moment.
But at least he has something new to offer the voters.
And like the man himself, it couldn't be more blunt or more brutish.
A promise to bring cheap beer back to Ontario.
“For too long beer consumers have been forced to pay inflated prices for beer in order to increase the profits of big corporations. We’re going to allow price competition for beer and this will save consumers money,” Ford said Saturday in a statement.
And although the move can only be described as desperate, and could flood the province with drunkards like his late brother Robbie...
It does make some sense.
It helps Team Harper portray their man as a man of the people.
When in fact he's not "For The People" as his campaign slogan proclaims. He is as Martin Lukacs points out, a mercenary for the millionaire class.
Never mind that he inherited a multi-million dollar business from his father, a conservative politician. Never mind that he has coasted on the political machinery of his brother, former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford. Never mind that he spent years as a city counsellor trying to dismantle public services, has surrounded himself with Stephen Harper’s closest advisors, and is now advancing policies that would be a Trump-like giveaway to the wealthiest. Half-baked denunciations of the elite are apparently enough to eclipse an entire career of fealty to them.
His policies, if he ever dares include them in a campaign platform, would hurt rather than help many members of the so-called Ford Nation.
A tax-break for low-income earners? Alongside his roll-back of the new minimum wage, it actually leaves them poorer. The tax-break for the middle class? That would in fact benefit the most wealthy. And those corporations that whinged about a slight increase in worker’s wages? They’re getting a $1.3 billion giveaway. Welcome aboard – you’re being taken for a ride on the corporate gravy train.
But at least the cheap beer should make him even more appealing to some of his most ardent supporters, the province's white supremacists.
Far-right figures and groups, from the explicitly white supremacist to the more crypto-fascist, have not been shy in proclaiming their support for “Ford Nation” and their belief that Doug Ford could create an opening for white supremacist activity similar to the effect of Donald Trump in the United States.
A recurrent theme of their analysis is that Ford, like Trump, will “electrify” the white working class and give blue-collar people permission to be racist. They lament that Ford likely won’t bring in their desired white ethnostate right away but argue that his election will hasten its arrival.
And while that "analysis" couldn't be more more disturbing, or just crazy.
And makes this campaign from the Cons at the Toronto Sun even more absurd or obscene.
It's clear that Ford welcomes the support of those white supremacists, for what else could explain his warm feelings for the grotesque bigot Faith Goldy?
Or explain his role in this video?
All of which only confirms what I've always believed. Doug Ford may be a buffoon, but he is dangerous.
For what else would you call a man who would slash the province's safety net, fire thousands of nurses, and largely privatize medicare?
As well close down safe injection sites which have taken years to set-up...
Even though that could kill hundreds, even thousands, of people.
What else can you call a man like that, except a fascist and a criminal?
But then his lack of concern for human life is only one of the many reasons this kind of warning is being nailed or plastered on walls and poles all over the province.
And now there's even a song...
I can only hope that warning will be heeded, and that tonight's debate will help finish off Ford's chances of becoming Premier.
And that this turns out to be true:
Doug Ford is still betting that voters will be less concerned about the substance of his populism than about his shallow stunts and rhetoric. But it looks more and more likely that he might be proven wrong. Ontarians are catching on that an out-of-touch, silver-spooned con-man isn’t out to defend “the little guy” – he’s a mercenary for the millionaire class.
For Dougie is dangerous.
And if he is not stopped, first he'll kill Ontario.
And then with his Harper Cons and his Nazis he'll help kill Canada...
I can’t believe that Ford is making cheap beer the centrepiece of his campaign. And what scares me is that it just might work. There a lot of low class low information people in this country. They want first class hospitals, but they don’t want to pay taxes, so cheap beer should be right up their alley.
ReplyDeleteHi anon@1:24 PM...The idea that any tax is bad is a growing problem in this country, and the staple issue of the right these days. But hopefully Ford's cheap beer promise will only appear to his brutish base. As I said in my post, I can see what the Team Harper gang is trying to do, but it looks too much like a crass bribe, so I don't think it will work...
Deletewho wants "cheap" beer. it tastes like horse piss.
DeleteOh, look who it is. The resident Hooters Girl and wrestling diva of Fox News North. Nice to see Faith Goldy, aka Miss KKKitty, still running interference for her "candidates" from the upstairs attic of Ezra's saloon at the Rebel KKKraft Brewery. Andrew Scheer, Jordan Peterson, now Drug (or should I say Drunk) Fraud. She really knows how to pick 'em, doesn't she?
ReplyDeleteGawd, Republicans and Conadian right-wingers alike really are a trashy basket of deplorables. Probably as many teeth as IQ points combined in the entirety of the "party" base. And they have the nerve to call Trudeau an idiot and accuse Liberal voters of casting their ballots for superficial reasons. When they're the ones stupid enough to believe they're going to get showered with gold by voting for Dougie Trump's piss in a can.
I'm serious about researching this to see if it is even legal. I know that the SAQ and the LCBO have minimum pricing policies, and they probably also exist in the case of beer.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, the reason I favour beer and wine sales in groceries has nothing to to with wanting people to abuse alcohol or any other substance; it is mostly because I want equal access for people who don't own cars. I'm virulently against anything he or his late and not-lamented oaf of a brother had to say in terms of cars vs people and the environment.
Hi lagatta...I don't drink but it never bothered me to see beer sold in corner depanneurs in Québec. And you make a good point about helping people who want to buy beer but don't own cars. But Ford's buck a beer can only increase the consumption of alcohol in a country where in my opinion it's already too high. Binge drinking is a huge problem, and I would invite Dougie to spend a long weekend in a hospital ER to see what deadly havoc it causes...
DeleteSimon, dougie won`t understand even if you spent a month in an ER.
DeleteI don't support buck a beer - that would make beer cheaper than bottled water! And I suspect that it is illegal.
DeleteLiberalizing and prohibiting stuff people will always do are remarkably attractive policies—to voters, that is. But as policies they don’t always pan out the way they were advertised as electoral campaign purposes—that’s because advertising has to be a neat, simple one-liner with no room for distracting cautionaries.
ReplyDeleteHere in BC we’ve been through the beer-pricing ploy: Bill Vander Zalm did it successfully—for the “working man,” he said—but we ended up with a very unsatisfactory premier who effectively drove the Socred brand into the ground (on the other hand, he was largely responsible for Mike Harcourt’s NDP win, providing BC with one of the best governments it ever had, but we could have easily skipped the last days of the Socreds, in retrospect).
Christy Clark, who found herself in similar straits, also deployed the “liberalization” of liquor regulations. Now you can by any kind of booze almost anywhere in SuperNatural BC—yet Christy went down to defeat after providing us with one of the worst governments we’ve ever had.
On the other end of the rainbow, prohibition has also made for provocative and potent division of, again, the “working man”: the ascent of womens’ temperance leagues, one of the first exercises of womens’ Suffrage, was in response to virtually libertarian liquor regulation and widespread drunkenness; it was a problem that Prohibition seemed to be a solution to. Yet the traffic of bootleg liquor facilitated the ascent of organized crime. By the time booze became legal again (but more regulated than pre-Prohibition), organized crime had become irreversibly entrenched and diversified into many other sources of ill-gotten wealth.
The same might be said about Cannabis, the poster-drug for a social war that began in the late 50s and was pretty much lost as an agent provocateur a few decades ago as judges started ignoring penalties provided in law and storefront marijuana retail started thwarting the antiquated law. Now the matter of liberalization, called for even decades ago by the father and now implemented by the son, will not give up the ghost as a political haymaker.
The best advice I could give the citizens of the province of my youth is this: beware the politician promising cheap booze. It is the sympathy of a scoundrel. It is the sign of shallowness. It is the dregs of demagoguery.
Beware The DoFo is a succinct as you can put it.
Hi Geoffrey...I like this a lot:
DeleteThe best advice I could give the citizens of the province of my youth is this: beware the politician promising cheap booze. It is the sympathy of a scoundrel. It is the sign of shallowness. It is the dregs of demagoguery.
As I told lagatta, the public health implications concern me the most, but I am also revolted by Ford's cheap demagoguery. It's in line with all his other pronouncements, none of which are properly thought out or costed. I thought Rob Ford was the worst Canadian political leader I had ever seen, but at least he was only a mayor. The thought that his equally ignorant, brutish bother could be a premier, is enough to make me vomit. If he does manage to get elected, it will be a sign that something is terribly wrong with this country, and a sign hat we are being infected by the same political disease that has wrought havoc in the U.S. and Europe....
being from B.C. I`d second Geoffrey`s advise. I might mention not all stores are interested in selling booze in their grocery store. it requires space and extra staff.
DeleteWhat Christy Clark also gave us was money laundering as a big industry and I might add she had a number of Harper`s staff working in her office. She wasn`t a liberal, she was a con dressed as a liberal and most of us spelled it B.C. Lieberal.
If Doug the slug is rejected its a win for humanity. I have seen first hand what happened in the balkans and we do not need that kind of lizard brain leadership.
ReplyDeleteHi Steve...I agree, if Ford is defeated after having started out with such a huge lead, it will be something to celebrate. And it will deal a mighty and hopefully fatal blow to the HarperCons who did such damage to our country, and are now pulling oaf Ford's strings in their continuing attempt to change Canada beyond recognition...
DeleteThe MSM is always denying that Ford is our wannabe Trump, but all his talk about “elites” and the way he attracts Nazis is only too familiar. When will the media wake up and stop normalizing right wing losers like Ford, Ezra Levant and Andrew Scheer?
ReplyDeleteI don't expect much from Canada's toilet paper monopoly at Compost Media. Let alone the recycled hacks at the Conrad Black Channel, Conservative Bullshit Channel, Cult Brainwashing Channel, etc. etc., whatever you want to call the zombie Harper mutation of the CBC. But the New York Times did call Duh Ford a "tinpot Trump" back in March.
Deletehttps://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/22/opinion/doug-ford-populism-canada-trump.html
Now, take from that what you will, and with more grains of salt than the Sahara has sand. This is, after all, the paper that excoriated Hillary Clinton for 25 years, ran interference for the Bush war machine, and is still running right-wing apologia in the form of finger-wagging op-eds demanding that liberals stop being so "smug" about unimportant "identity politics" distractions like missing Guatemalan children and police brutality against African-Americans, and start reaching out to the all-important "economically anxious" Trump voters who want us dead.
But, every now and then you catch a glimpse of Halley's comet orbiting the earth in a leap year during a total eclipse. Which is to say, an honest headline from an otherwise useless corporate rag.
Hi Jackie...yes, they are a deplorable lot, and I shudder to imagine how they must have reacted to Ford's cheap beer announcement. I'm sure it must have resembled a zombie coven getting the word that school bus full of children had just broken down outside their cave door. And as for the Toronto Sun, I don't think I've ever seen a front page of a Canadian newspaper as bad as that one. I'm not surprised since its editor in chief worked for Rob Ford for years. But it is a disgrace and yet another reason to hope that Postmedia goes down like the Titanic and the sooner the better...
DeleteHi anon@5:01 PM...It seems so obvious to me that Ford is our cardboard Trump. A bestial demagogue who is only missing about four dozen IQ points and a red cap to be a mini Donald. But as we all know our shabby media is reluctant to take on right-wing politicians, lest they annoy their corporate masters who are only interested in tax cuts, even if they kill this country or turn it into a jungle....
DeleteThe price of beer in Ontario is highly regulated. The Liberals did away with buck-a-beer. SomInguess Doug could fix that - more tax revenue gone. However, he’s blaming the price if beer on corporations. Still hasn’t a clue.
ReplyDeleteUU
Hi UU...As I said above, since I don't drink I have no idea about the the economics of beer. I did hear a friend say that in her opinion buck-a-beer would deal a mortal blow to small craft beer brewers which would be a pity. But I'm sure Ford is blissfully unaware of the collateral damage of anything he proposes, for as you say he hasn't a clue about that or anything...
DeleteIt would be. And nowadays $1 beer would - alcohol aside - contain all manner of harmful or untested substances.
DeleteBill Vanderscam used this ploy in BC in the early 80s only to say
ReplyDelete"I thought maybe the breweries would help me out " when it inevitably didn't happen after he was elected.
never
Hi Art City...I can only hope that what happened to Bill Vanderscam happens to Drug Fraudscam before it's too late. For I guarantee you if the Ford ape does get elected we will see an explosion of corruption like this country has rarely seen before. And it will be the closest thing to what happened to Chicago during the days of Al Capone...
Deletewhat happened to Bill Vanderzalm was of his own making. he took money from some one he ought not have taken it from. He also didn`t provide decent government and the revolt started within his own party and the first letter was signed by all of the Constituency executive, which included their sitting MLA, a well respected man within the party. In the end there wasn`t much left of the Socreds and they rebuild as the B.C. Lieberals, after el gordo `stole the party from Gordon Wilson. From there it was all down hill, gave away the provincial railway to his long time bag man, largest mass firing of women in Canadian history, the highest rate of child poverty in Canada, more money for private schools while public schools had to close, fire teachers and teachers`aides, sky high home prices, and finally money laundering via the casinos. what more could a province have wanted.
DeleteAs almost always, love Jackie Blue's ascerbic and trenchant comments. That vid for Rebel Live has to be one of the creepiest in a while. It could be the setting for another one of Atwood's dystopian novels.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see you are still maintaining this blog Simon.
xx AR
Hi AR...yes, Jackie has a marvellous command of the English language, and nobody drives the Cons who visit this blog as crazy as she does. I have to delete more vile comments aimed at her, than I have to delete disgusting Con comments aimed at me.
DeleteI should be envious, but of course I'm delighted. I also picked up some weird vibes from that Rebel video. Which I should add is also fraudulent, since it seems to imply that people like Jordan Peterson and Gavin McInnes will be speaking at their little love in, when Peterson like Ford has never been on the list of speakers, and McInnes who was has mysteriously dropped out. What a bunch of losers.
As for my blog, I'm still maintaining it although I have to admit that Twitter would be so much easier... :)
The populist Cons are an odd coalition,at one extreme there are those well into to 50% marginal tax bracket that believe its their hard work and superior intelligence that has got them there and they DESERVE more while at the other end there are those that would trade off social benefits such as lodging, health care and education for cheap BEER. Somewhere behind the scenes we have the Darwinian cult of Bannons and Petersons that believe society has become so stupid that in order to save it the only solution is first to destroy it. Populism rather than war seems to be their weapon of choice but that could suddenly change. Once destroyed, only then can the intellectually elite rise unrestrained from the ashes. Sadly there seems to be a majority of volunteers for the destruction phase, the rebuilding is totally another question!
ReplyDeleteRT
as they used to say, in tough times you can get half the working class to kill the other half and that is what dougie and his are setting up. those who espouse the racist ideas don`t seem to understand they have more in common with working people of colour than those financial elites.
DeleteHi RT....Although Stephen Harper preceded the rise of Trumpism, I was always struck by how he never sought to build anything, only to destroy. We still have a milder version of the Bannon cult here, but the growing anti-tax revolt will eventually lead us to the same place. There was a time when Canadians understood that taxes are the price of civilization, but greed has undermined that position, and unless we can halt that trend, our future will indeed be Darwinian...
ReplyDeletewith dougie's skills the citizens of Ontario won't even be able to afford "cheap" beer. anyhow people don't like "cheap" beer. it tastes cheap.
ReplyDeletedougie doesn't seem to understand not every one is all about "cheap" beer. All those AA members, those who don't drink, etc. "cheap" beer is so yesterday, just like dougie.
Ford is just a cheap imitation of trump the dump. If voters of Ontario elected Ford, then they will have gotten what they deserve. All others can leave and move to other provinces. Oh, right Ottawa, is in Ontario. Let me see, oh right set it up as a separate province, territory.
rolling back the min. wage might get him a few votes from owners of businesses, but they don't counter the number of people who earn min., wage. They need to get out and vote.
Ford is a blight on political stage matched only by Kenney. Oh, well there is the old Peter Principle, rising to the height of their incompetence.
Unfortuantely for the racists who support ford, the American political system works differently from the Canadian one. American states get away with a lot of things, given "states' rights". Canada has a national human rights code and its right in our constitution. the racists might just want to pack up and move south of the border. Even if dougie is elected, it won't help them much. Part of the reason Trump has been able to make such big changes is they have a huge poltical appointee class within their government. Not so much in Canada and getting rid of senior bureacrats is tougher than you think and very expensive as we have seen in B.C.
ReplyDeleteAnyhow I expect even if dougie wins the most seats a combo of NDP and Liberal seats will keep dougie out of the Premier's office and that will be enough.