News   Jul 12, 2024
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Mayor John Tory's Toronto

Unfortunately, rather than an anti-Tory stance, this is feeding the old simmering 'anti-Toronto' stance.

And surrounding municipalities were chafing at the largess show to Toronto for 'pet' projects. (Whether that sentiment is justified or not). Even if Tory backs down, the 'gravy train' is over. QP has learned to say "NO". Any money headed to Toronto projects now will be for the province, by the province, and at the behest of the province. And that especially included transit.
 
Unfortunately, rather than an anti-Tory stance, this is feeding the old simmering 'anti-Toronto' stance.

And surrounding municipalities were chafing at the largess show to Toronto for 'pet' projects. (Whether that sentiment is justified or not). Even if Tory backs down, the 'gravy train' is over. QP has learned to say "NO". Any money headed to Toronto projects now will be for the province, by the province, and at the behest of the province. And that especially included transit.

None of this "learning" is likely to be relevant in 12 months, given how terribly the Liberals are polling across the province, including in Toronto proper. Latest poll has them at 19% in Toronto, 12% in 905.
 
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None of this "learning" is likely to be relevant in 12 months, given how terribly the Liberals are polling across the province, including in Toronto proper. Latest poll has them at 19% in Toronto, 12% in 905.
Oh I wouldn't write off the Liberals just yet and the Tories have a history of blowing huge leads - to say nothing of fact that they have yet to release any strong policy papers. "A week is a long time in politics" -and the election is over a year away.
 
Oh I wouldn't write off the Liberals just yet and the Tories have a history of blowing huge leads - to say nothing of fact that they have yet to release any strong policy papers. "A week is a long time in politics" -and the election is over a year away.

I'm not writing anyone off either. But to say that the situation is looking dire for the Liberals would be an understatement.
 
How many years are we going to be going through this charade? Again, you can't cut your way to becoming a great city the same way you can't penny-pinch Rogers into becoming a better company.

Facing $343M budget gap, Toronto could freeze spending in 2018

City staff is recommending Toronto freeze its budget this year, an idea that has the mayor's support but has left some councillors sounding the alarm.

Toronto's budget committee will meet later this week to discuss a new report that calls for all arms of the city to hold budgets where they were in 2017.

To balance its books — something it's required to do by provincial law — the city needs to find some $343 million in savings, even if it increases residential property taxes by two per cent.

Mayor John Tory, speaking at a news conference about the future downtown relief line, said he supports the idea of starting the months-long budget process by taking a "really hard look" at what the city's spending.

"A lot of people are having to make do with the same amount they had last year," he said, adding he thinks those people will be happy to see the city doing the same.

Last year, Tory called for a 2.6 per cent across-the-board budget reduction, although many of the proposed cuts that departments floated were rejected. Tory said he hopes the city can again find a way to hold the line on spending without cutting any services.


Coun. Gord Perks, a fierce critic of last year's budget process, tweeted this year's plan will be a "disaster" for the city.


"How can we ask other governments to pay more for housing, daycare and transit when we freeze our own spending?" he wrote.


TTC, TCH, police will require biggest investments in new year

Operating expenses are expected to increase by $499 million this year, the city report notes, with the TTC, Toronto Community Housing, and police requiring the biggest new investments.

Coun. Janet Davis, who fought against proposed child-care cutbacks last year, echoed Perks's comments online.

"Yes, the province and feds should pay more, but we have to as well," she wrote.

Every department at the city will be expected to come up with its own plans to meet the target.

"Cost containment, service efficiency, modernization and service level changes as well as revenue strategies are required," the report notes.

The departments will also be expected to report on the "equity impact" — the effect of budget restraint on those it would affect most, including vulnerable populations — of any changes they bring forward.


http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/city-budget-freeze-1.4107184
 
So long as people elect tax-cutting/tax-freezing politicians, this will go on. Everyone wants things but too many think that tax cuts are the solution. Of course, governments can't spend recklessly, but services cost money.
 
So long as people elect tax-cutting/tax-freezing politicians, this will go on. Everyone wants things but too many think that tax cuts are the solution. Of course, governments can't spend recklessly, but services cost money.

Tory will be in campaign mode in 2018, and he clearly thinks he is more vulnerable to a right wing populist (of a certain Etobicoke family) than a left winger.
 
We need a strong centre-left (or realist) candidate. She or he doesn't necessarily need to win, but needs to capture the imagination and hope of progressive voters and pound Tory at every opportunity. More a Soknacki with more charisma and recognition than an Olivia Chow.

If it's only a choice between Tory and Ford, I would consider voting Ford.
 
Why hasn't anyone officially challenged Tory yet? I am not including Doug Ford in this, though he has been oddly quiet lately.
 
We need a strong centre-left (or realist) candidate. She or he doesn't necessarily need to win, but needs to capture the imagination and hope of progressive voters and pound Tory at every opportunity. More a Soknacki with more charisma and recognition than an Olivia Chow.

If it's only a choice between Tory and Ford, I would consider voting Ford.

I'm seriously wondering about Desmond Cole.
 
He wouldn't win, but he would be the necessary thorn in John Tory's side at candidate debates. Even better if he could find an open ward he could win in.

In fact maybe the best strategy for the left would be to focus more on winning council races so that they can resist Tory's agenda, if they can't find a mayoral candidate that can win.
 
While we're in the habit of using the left/right distinction in Council politics, it's a bit confusing. The right invariably supports blowing very large amounts of money on projects that simply don't bear economic scrutiny, like SSE or the Gardiner East rebuild. Meanwhile, they consistently underfund basic maintenance of our existing assets. That's hardly the wise stewardship of our hard-earned tax dollars they profess.
 
Joshua Hind on Tory's Smarttrack failures:
@joshuahind said:
1/ During the 2014 campaign, I said Tory should focus on gaming the Smart Track idea. He wouldn’t even have to build anything.
@joshuahind said:
2/ All he had to do was work on a fare agreement with Metrolinx that let TTC riders take the GO RER at some kind of discount.
@joshuahind said:
3/ I’m not saying that’s real transit, but he could have asked TTC to make a “SmartTrack Fare” and it would pass for progress with his base.
@joshuahind said:
4/ And by “Tory’s base”, I mean, “People who don’t take transit and can be easily impressed by even the smallest transit achievement.”
@joshuahind said:
5/ SmartTrack was brilliant. A branding pitch that wouldn’t have to cost the city a dime. Tory, a career political dud, managed to blow it.
@joshuahind said:
6/ Now Tory’s got the cost of additional SmartTrack stations (remember those?), a subway boondoggle and nothing shovel-ready for 2018.
@joshuahind said:
7/ Tory has screwed up what should have been the easiest 4 year term in Mayoral history.

https://twitter.com/joshuahind/status/862655399090155520

Cityslikr follows with additional biting, yet succinct commentary:
cityslikr said:
As this thread from @joshuahind illustrates, we have to stop being surprised John Tory's turned out to be a terrible politician.#TOpoli
cityslikr said:
Many of us suspected it going in. The man had shown all signs of incompetence in his previous political incarnations. #TOpoli
cityslikr said:
Once elected mayor, he surrounded himself with some of the worst elements city council had to offer. #TOpoli
cityslikr said:
He maintained Rob Ford's ideological and geographic division on the most important committees at City Hall. #TOpoli
cityslikr said:
Mayor Tory spent untold amounts of political capital on some of the most questionable projects, often defying city staff to do so. #TOpoli
cityslikr said:
All the while, ignoring some of the city's most pressing problems, allowing them to continue burning through willful neglect. #TOpoli
cityslikr said:
If any of this continues to surprise you, well, you were in the Tory can to start with and you're quite comfortable staying there. #TOpoli
cityslikr said:
We elected a mayor who dressed up his incompetence better than his predecessor. Nobody can be that bad and look that sharp. #TOpoli

https://twitter.com/cityslikr/status/862662118457389056
 
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