This is a repost of two articles and a radio interview that bridged them. My complete take on the Ford fiasco as I am moving on to other issues! These were originally posted here, on rabble.ca and on The City, a Vancouver urban affairs radio show.
Dangerous addictions: Toronto, right wing hypocrisies and Rob Ford
Another week in Toronto, and another scandal involving our sideshow of a mayor, Rob Ford.
This latest one, in case somehow you have not heard,
involves an apparent video of
the mayor allegedly not only smoking crack cocaine but also using
homophobic language to disparage Justin Trudeau and describing the
players of the high school football team he coaches as "just fucking
minorities".
It really is one thing after another with Ford. For example, very shortly after
entirely credible claims were
made regarding apparent drunken sexual misconduct by Ford by Sarah
Thomson back in March, new allegations that the mayor, prior to this,
was asked to leave a different public social function also due to apparent intoxication burst onto the headlines.
Despite the overwhelming and constantly mounting evidence to the
contrary, Ford himself and many of his allies have continued to insist
that all the allegations are simply a fabrication of his enemies and
the "liberal media", most especially the Toronto Star. (In the
specific case of the latest alleged video, this is especially silly
given that the story was first published by an online American
publication). This is almost humourously delusional for a bunch that
presents itself as hard-headed, no-nonsense "realists".
Even before this latest and extremely serious allegation and
regardless of its specific veracity, however, Ford has to be seen as
having come to symbolize the basic unfairness of our society. If there
has ever been a more obvious personification in the Canadian context of
the reality that rich white men can get away with actions and
behaviour that absolutely no one else would be able to, I am not aware
of it. And, not just get away with the behaviour, but get elected to
office and defended by otherwise self-described "law-and-order" right
wing types despite it! From drug possession, to driving under the
influence, to repeated domestic assault calls (and, indeed, charges),
to not being held to account for violating campaign finance laws, to
avoiding any repercussions for having violated conflict of interest
rules, to seemingly using staff payed by the public inappropriately, it
goes on and on and on as outlined in this
Google doc. And nothing really happens to him as a result. The one and only time he was punished, the punishment was reversed on appeal.
There is an understandable temptation to regard all of this as a bad
joke and an irrelevance or to see it as merely fodder for the
international press and late night satirists to sneer at Toronto; which
is already happening and is richly deserved. A temptation to see it as
a distraction from the truly pressing issues facing the city.
But that, I think, is a mistake. First, if this is a distraction
that has derailed the city's agenda, there is only Rob Ford to blame
for that. But more importantly, the fact that this farce has played out
for so long with so little consequence for Ford cannot help but to
foster and reinforce entirely warranted cynicism in many communities
about our society's claim, such as it is, to the equality of all before
the law. It also emboldens the forces on our Far Right who have an
essentially anti-democratic notion that their partisans are above the
law and that the actions of their heroes, like Ford, should be dealt
with and viewed in ways entirely different to how they would view them
were they to be committed by citizens who are not white or wealthy and
who are not populist folk icons.
Let us recall that many of the same Toronto media outlets, talk
radio devotees and reactionary politicians who are turning a blind eye
to this pattern of both proven and alleged behaviour or pretending
that it is all an invention of the media, were the same people who were
driven to self-righteous rage
when a TTC employee
on medication for a serious illness (he has since died) and who was, in
fact, an actual hero, fell asleep in a ticket collection booth during a
shift and had the misfortune to be photographed. They regularly take
sadistic glee in pillorying and publicly humiliating public employees
and officials for far more minor transgressions than those Ford has been
accused of, charged with and, in the case of campaign finance rules,
found guilty of having violated.
In fact, of course, much of their whole narrative and vision of the
world is based around lies about "wealthy" and "lazy" union workers,
the supposed immorality or criminality of immigrant and minority
communities, that the poor or people on welfare are the authors of
their own misfortune and are usually scam artists, and so on.
How ingrained these ugly and racist views are in right wingers of
Ford's ilk can be seen from the mayor's own false and derogatory
comments about the young men on the football team he coaches. He has,
completely insultingly and erroneously portrayed his coaching as some
kind of heroic and charitable act that keeps the players out of jail
and gangs (and, ironically, off drugs) and that keeps them in school.
His comments
so infuriated the parents
and teachers of the high school (Don Bosco Catholic Secondary in
Etobicoke) that many feel he should no longer be allowed to coach.
Yet, the irony is that it is Ford who has never had to work for
anything, who has been caught in possession of drugs in the past, who
treats his job as a joke,
skipping meetings to coach football or leaving the floor of a council meeting to
watch playoff hockey,
and so on. Far from being "one of us" Ford is proof that rich and
powerful men are not us at all. They get to play and live by an entirely
different set of rules.
This toxicity and anti-social attitude on the part of the right has
grown more shameless in direct correlation to the rightward drift of
our politics and the mainstreaming of what used to be extremist ideas
and viewpoints. Moreover it is gripped by a stunning hypocrisy in that
many right wing commentators, politicians and voters feel entitled to
make sweeping generalizations about the moral conduct and fiber of
different communities, and to espouse social philosophies and
narratives centered around the necessity of personal morality and
"restraint" and the primacy of personal conduct in the determination of
social outcome, disparaging notions of systemic oppression and denying
the reality that there does not, at all, exist a level playing field
or equality of opportunity in Canada, and yet they are completely
unwilling to apply to these "principles" to themselves or those they
support. It is meant for the "other", not for those in the club.
Otherwise how is Conrad Black, a non-citizen and convicted felon,
who was sent to jail in the country that the right idolizes, the United
States, in Canada at all? One need only ask oneself if a
person-of-colour without the bank account and the lordships would also
have been allowed this great courtesy by our supposedly tough-on-crime
government to know the answer to that.
Punishment, mandatory minimums and prison are for ordinary people,
people who cannot afford fancy lawyers, and people who they see as not
really "Canadian". Compassion, understanding and second chances are for
their own.
Did Rob Ford smoke crack cocaine with drug dealers while spouting
off homophobic and racist comments. Who knows? That it seems completely
believable says a lot, but it is, of course, possible that it is not
true. It is also possible that the video will never see the light of
day. It is possible that the allegations will be proven and that Ford,
with near certainty should they be, will be forced finally to resign in
disgrace.
But in some respects no matter the outcome the salient fact remains
that the system that created Ford, that allowed his rise and that
excused and forgave his many transgressions will survive him either
way. While Ford may be an unusually buffoonish and ignorant child of
social privilege there can be no doubt that a different set of rules
are applied to all the other children of the rich and powerful as well,
especially if they are male and white.
Rabble.ca Contributor Michael Laxer on Rob Ford | Inaugural Engaging
Women, Transforming Cities Conference Brings Equity Lens to
Urban Issues
Originally posted on The City FM
The Rob Ford saga shows no signs of dissipating. Is this the end of
Mayor Rob Ford’s bumpy tenure at Toronto City Hall? On the podcast,
rabble.ca contributor Michael Laxer weighs in on the ongoing Rob Ford
saga. He provides a critical and progressive analysis of the Rob Ford
affair in a
recent article.
And in the second half of the show, we hear about the
Engaging Women, Transforming Cities Conference from
Associate Professor Margot Young
(UBC Law). The inaugural national conference is designed to facilitate
discussion about transforming our cities into places where women are
more involved in electoral processes, and municipal governments are
responsive to the priorities of women and girls in Canada’s urban
centres. The conference applies an equity lens to a variety of urban
issues, ranging from housing justice to environmental sustainability.
Find it on iTunes and subscribe to have the weekly podcast downloaded automatically.
The Right's perilous denial of reality: Rob Ford and anti-democratic fictions
Two weeks on and Toronto's ever evolving "crackgate" scandal seems to
show no signs of going away as daily revelations alternately stun and
bemuse Torontonians, Canadians and, to a degree, the international
press. It has been almost surreal in its absurdity and in the spectacle
of such things as city hall security guards escorting a mayor's aide to
the bathroom, Doug Ford holding press conferences to allow his brother
to sneak out the back door of city hall, and so on.
A comprehensive outline of developments was put together by a Toronto weekly,
The Grid, though this excludes the latest days of news, such as the assertion by the
Toronto Star that Ford, who has claimed no video exists,
told his staff he knew where it was, as well as news that
two more staffers in the mayor's office have resigned.
From the first allegation of Rob Ford smoking crack with drug dealers, to the
Globe and Mail expose of Doug Ford
as an alleged former major hash dealer and their portrayal of the Fords
as a wealthy, white supremacist befriending, violence prone, drug
dealing Soprano-style family, it is an astounding tale. Given the mayor
and his brother's rabidly pro-police, "law-and-order" stances it would
seem that the city of Toronto is run by people who truly redefine
right-wing populist "tough on crime" conservatism.
The Fords, with typical bullying instincts, have either denied
everything or failed to actually answer allegations. As has been their
narrative from the beginning of their political career, they have
portrayed their opponents and critics, especially in the media, as a
coalition of downtown "elites" and public sector workers and unions or
as somehow beholden to them.
Attempting to include John Stackhouse and the business newspaper the
Globe and Mail
in this grand pro-labour conspiracy, as Doug Ford did in TV news
interviews, truly qualifies it for entry as one of the dumbest and
least believable conspiracy theories ever put forward; on par with
David Icke's contention that Reptilian lizard people control the
world's governments. The mayor's
farcical attempts
to claim that his aides (four to date) are all quitting because his
office was simply a stepping stone to better things and that they in no
way indicate that anything might be wrong at city hall are also
humourously delusional.
Ford's allies on council and more broadly are trying to distance
themselves from the mayor and the clear absurdity of many of his and
his brother's actions and claims. But even here the connection to
reality is often tenuous. The Deputy Mayor, Doug Holyday,
for example,
stated the obvious and agreed that a video of Ford smoking crack
exists, but held out hope that it was all a fabrication by some
apparently highly skilled drug dealing cinematographers and film
editors. Meanwhile Ontario Tory House Leader Jim Wilson, in distancing
the once enthusiastic Hudak Conservatives from the idea of Doug Ford
running in Etobicoke North in the next provincial election, soared to
new levels of denial inanity when he acted like he barely even knew who
Doug Ford was,
stating "I
don't even know the guy ... personally I've never even met him." I am
sure Tim Hudak wishes he could even attempt to say the same.
But the whole Ford agenda and narrative, quite apart from this
latest scandal, has been a dangerous fantasy from the start and was
even before they were elected. The notion that the city government
could cut taxes but increase spending on infrastructure and build
things like subways, all by eliminating the supposedly wasteful
government "gravy train", by privatization, and by beating down the
unions was obviously a fiction in 2010, when they got elected on the
basis of it as a platform, and it has proven itself as such. Now the
Fords are reduced to making claims about an allegedly impressive
"fiscal record" in office that reporters such as
Metro's
Matt Elliott, among others, have fairly effectively demolished.
And the Fords are not at all alone on the right in indulging in
wholesale and profoundly socially and economically damaging denial of
reality. It is, in fact, the right's new normal in this country and
more broadly.
From the spectacular failure of what
Paul Krugman has described as "the austerity delusion" that is still widely accepted as economic gospel by right wingers like Ontario's
Tim Hudak,
to the truly environmentally suicidal attempts to either deny climate
change or the seriousness of its implications by the Harper government,
the right has completely embraced false and destructive narratives.
They have over the last quarter century created a new populism around
lies about supposedly entitled welfare recipients milking the system,
and nonsensical assertions about "special interests" and "powerful
unions" and so on. In doing so, they attempt to turn the actual power
relations in our society on their head, and assert that it is workers
and the poor who are lazy, exploit the system, live off of the labour of
others, shirk work, have politicians and "big government" in their
pocket, etc., as opposed to those who actually indulge and benefit most
in such patterns of behaviour and power: corporations and the wealthy.
They have been very successful in changing the discourse so that,
for example, many in the media will talk about unions and corporations
as if they have equal social, political and even financial clout and
political power, a clearly false assertion. When faced with the fight
and struggle of women, native people, marginalized communities and
others for equality and justice they retreat to cries of "reverse
racism" or "reverse sexism" to attempt to claim that it is actually
those who have benefited for centuries from colonialism, racism and
patriarchy who are now the "oppressed". This results in simply idiotic
notions such as those that "men's issues" exist at all independently of
race or class, or that white people are being disadvantaged by no
longer being automatically granted the superior social statuses and
outcomes that they were as a group in the past.
These ideas are ugly and angry and often succeed in enlisting those
who have been left behind or who constantly face destitution due to the
economics of the neo-liberal era. Further, they thrive on this anger
and an increasingly extreme and vitriolic partisanship for them to
continue to exist for the very reason that they are false. In this same
way they undermine democracy as they are not based on rational
discourse at all. They depend on a constant assault and lashing out
against their opponents and enemies, real or perceived, in order to
maintain their appeal.
The right wing politicians, media and core base in Toronto knew full
well that Rob Ford was a bigot with a nasty and violent past, that he
lacked self-control and that his platform was pure fantasy before he
was mayor and yet they embraced and helped to elect him anyway. That
many of them are turning on him now is simply opportunistic, not
principled.
Ultimately this is why the scandal continues to matter and is not
simply a sad spectacle or a case of personal misconduct. It is both an
epic tale of the right's fundamental hypocrisy and an indictment of its
anti-democratic false narratives.
Photo: flickr/ashtonpal