Voltz
Senior Member
I never would have though that Stintz would be the one the call for the special meeting of council, and if anything it would have only been about Eglinton and not the rest of the transit city lines.
I don't see how organized labour should be called a "relic" by "progressive" people, especially in in an era of a shrinking middle class and where corporations continue to play bingo with millions of people's futures.I'll admit to this being the only positive thing I could think of when Ford was elected. A Mayor like Ford was needed to bust up the unions' death grip on our city's budget. I guess I'm unusual in that I'm pretty left wing in most of my political thinking but I'm anti-union. They're a relic of the past and have become like bullies, at least the ones that deal with the city.
Wit this, it's clear that Ford can no longer count on Stintz to vote his way. With the razor thin margins that has been propping up his policy, that's the end for Ford. He's not gaining any new friends and the ones he had are turning against him.
He can definitely kiss goodbye to eliminating the Land Transfer Tax or any future attempts at cuts to services.
Wow. Good for Stinz re-affirming council and moving clearly and honestly with this. She's been waffling a lot up until now, but this is strong stuff. In the face of losing her chair, it's practically heroic.
Heroic? I don't think so.
She was a Ford loyalist until the day before yesterday. Now that the wheels are so obviously falling off the Ford bandwagon (i.e. two weeks after Council adopted all those Colle-sponsored budget amendments), she's jumping off it.
Classic finger-to-the-wind "leadership".
Good for Stintz... really impressive. She will likely be kicked out as TTC chair, but she has just become a major contender in the next mayoral election.
What's wrong with that? A councilor that wants to actually build city infrastructure while making sure the city gets the best use of the financial resources, while strategically building consensus with councilors from all political leanings to get it done; surely everyone wants that? Stintz has moxie, I like that. Stintz for mayor!Which could be a mixed blessing--after all, she may look good next to Ford, but she's still firmly a right-of-centre standard-bearer...
This is a great test to see which councillors have the potential to be mayor. Strike Karen Stintz off that list. She knows how to play the game, but her motivations to save "transit city" comes off as insincere.
(and you can bet that neither the centre nor the left will allow Stintz to become the anti-Ford vote).
Relatively speaking, it's still pretty early to discern patterns in the post-amalgamation political dynamic. Pressed to do so, however, I would argue that Stintz does not have the over-the-top personality that seems to be necessary for any rightwing mayoral victor (as opposed to Lastman or Ford). Besides, removed from the Ford machine, she may just simply fade away at City Hall as other, stronger voices begin to assert themselves (again, both from the centre and the left). Few will remember the particulars of this episode by the time the next election rolls around.
“The only advice I could give Metrolinx is that this is their project and if they see merit in going underground the whole way, then do it.
She knows that her position as TTC chair is toast, so with nothing to lose, she's sticking it to Ford and doing what's best for the city. Some of you accuse her actions as being insincere, but then why did she initiate a transit plan that she knew Ford would never agree with? I applaud her. This might even be a prelude of her running against him in the next election...