Daniel Dale on what happened near the mayor’s home

fuji

Banned
Jan 31, 2005
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Sure dude, I'm gonna spend hours searching for those posts. I'm not the one with 10 posts a day who apparently has nothing else to do
In other words, once again your post was based on ignorance. You don't actually have reasons for the things you say.

Congratulations, you're a troll.

 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
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Sure dude, I'm gonna spend hours searching for those posts. I'm not the one with 10 posts a day who apparently has nothing else to do
Gotta congratulate you on the honesty of your handle, a fine name for a guy who is too lazy to back up the insults he uses because he has no facts.
 

Phil C. McNasty

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Dec 27, 2010
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Gotta congratulate you on the honesty of your handle, a fine name for a guy who is too lazy to back up the insults he uses because he has no facts
Thanks Jones, knowing that I have your congratulations will make me sleep better tonight
 

fuji

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Jan 31, 2005
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The incident appears to have hammered Ford in the polls, with the biggest declines in his own home turf:

http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/0...met-after-toronto-star-reporter-confrontation

Rob Ford’s approval rating plummets after Toronto Star reporter confrontation

Mayor Rob Ford’s citywide approval rating has fallen, nowhere more dramatically than in his home turf of Etobicoke, a new poll by Forum Research reveals.

Four in 10 Toronto residents surveyed said they approved of the job Mr. Ford was doing, a drop of seven percentage points since last month. In Etobicoke — where the mayor clashed with a local journalist recently after attempting to buy a slice of public parkland next to his home — Mr. Ford’s rating fell by 15 percentage points, to 33%.

“I think trying to buy the parkland for himself, chasing a reporter and all that, it’s just more antics,” Forum Research president Lorne Bozinoff said Wednesday. “I don’t think it’s mayorly to be doing that type of stuff. It just seems like the old Rob Ford, getting into some kind of trouble.”

The Forum telephone survey of 704 residents was conducted Monday and is considered accurate to within plus or minus 3.7 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The poll comes three weeks after a tense encounter between the mayor and Toronto Star reporter Daniel Dale outside Mr. Ford’s Etobicoke home. At the time, Mr. Dale was researching a story on Mr. Ford’s bid to expand his property by purchasing a small piece of public parkland directly adjacent to his lot.

Beyond the parkland issue, Mr. Bozinoff said, Etobicoke residents may be feeling the mayor has taken their support for granted, while fighting for subways on the other side of the city.

“He’s not perceived to be doing anything for Etobicoke,” Mr. Bozinoff said.

Though the 2014 election is still a political lifetime away, the Forum poll reveals that if a vote between Mr. Ford and one of his strongest potential opponents were held today, the mayor would likely be on the losing end.

Councillors Adam Vaughan and Karen Stintz would each beat Mr. Ford handily in a two-way race, the poll shows, while Councillor Shelley Carroll would run neck-and-neck with the mayor. Political commentator and former mayoral candidate John Tory would win by the widest margin, the poll shows, with 52% support to Mr. Ford’s 29%.

When it becomes a three-way race, however, the margins narrow. In a three-way race among Mr. Ford, Mr. Vaughan and Mr. Tory, they come in roughly equal, at 26%, 33% and 31%, respectively. In a race among Mr. Ford, Mr. Vaughan and Ms. Carroll, the mayor wins with 36% of the vote. The numbers indicate that if the left wants to put forward a candidate to beat Mr. Ford, they will need to rally around one person rather than divide support, Mr. Bozinoff said.

“It’s a major undertaking to take him on, but it can be done, and only one person can do it or we’re going to have a rerun of the last election,” he said, referring to Mr. Ford’s victory over former deputy premier George Smitherman and former deputy mayor Joe Pantalone. “If we end up with a three-way race, he’s going to win.”​
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
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In the latest hoorah over his work schedule and agenda, all that Ford has offered by way of explanation has been his constituency work. He claims he deals with more than a dozen such matters a day, often doing site-visits. What he fails to grasp is that an alderman in Etobicoke has a constituency of just tens of thousand, and going to look at an individual bus shelter or flooded basement is feasible and indeed part of the job.

But he's the Mayor of a city of more than three million, every one of them a constituent. Everyone of them has a Councillor to get their pothole filled. The Mayor is supposed to be leading the Roads and Works Commissioners into a strategy that regularly gets to all the potholes all over the City long before the Councillors realize that's the third call and they'd better check on it. But where's Rob? Driving with one hand, phoning with the other and looking for a parking space, so he see what the constituent saw.

I don't believe the term micro-managing can ever be used as a compliment.
 
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