Northern Light
Superstar
It's remarkable how certain zombie talking points simply refuse to die, no matter how inaccurate or dishonest they are. This is the sort of drivel I used to see in the Toronto Sun over 30 years ago, back when I was a kid and actually read that rag. It was bullshit then and it's bullshit now. Wynne was and is a "centrist" and a neoliberal, which meant she tried to put a mildly progressive façade on carrying out the right's dirty work for them while she was in power. That's what neoliberals do, and that's why, among other things, she privatised Ontario Hydro and sold Woodbine Casino to a private consortium - and a shady one, no less - for pennies on the dollar. Not because she was some far left looney who wanted to turn the province into a nanny state. Privatising everything in sight is demonstrable Thatcherism. It's certainly not liberalism or leftism at work, though the business-friendly empty suits who mostly run our supposedly progressive political parties in the West these days are at odds to make it appear otherwise. Ultimately, these bastards are serving the same masters that our official conservative parties are. It helps if you consider them to be competing factions of greed who are essentially on the same side.
I don't want to make it sound like we're quibbling over semantics because this matters. I thought Wynne was a fairly typical politician of her ilk, and figured her personality was so banal it would insulate her from personal attacks once election season started up. What I didn't count on was her near-staggering levels of incompetence. By the time the election finally arrived, I'd personally gone from having no strong opinions about the woman one way or the other to feeling like I could cheerfully wring her neck myself should the opportunity ever arise. If that's how I felt, one can imagine the mindsets of the local reactionary crowd, i.e. the mouth-droolers & kooks who were already calling her a "devil" and a "demon" online, mostly because they were religious primitives. But people at large didn't truly begin to hate Wynne until she started explicitly carrying out the Tories' agenda for them, the Hydro sale being the most obvious (and damaging) example. That's what got her kicked out of power, not being "Premiere Mom," for fuck's sakes. That claim is downright idiotic on its face.
I'm overwhelmingly in agreement w/this analysis, except, in part with the last two sentences.
I do think, as Ford established with his fairly trivial gestures on alcohol (neglibly lower price, more convenient times/places for purchase) there was a market for that; whether some folks wish it was otherwise, or not.
Moreover I think Wynne hectoring that restricting such things (points of sale or minimum beer prices) was for the public good, did rub a lot of folks the wrong way. Not because its a particularly important issue to most, but just
because it condescends to people. In that respect......the * Listen here, I know better * droning , particularly when that wasn't really true......just grated on her likibility.
I think that in concert w/neo-liberal action, more particularly, the move on Hydro One (not in the platform, no compelling reason to go against a previous Liberal position) and the bugling of Hydro in a larger sense (both the size of bills but also their convolution) damaged the Liberal brand.