H/t Moudakis
Here in Ontario, there are two reasons our air quality is compromised: this summer's ongoing forest fires and the stench of corruption whose source is Queen's Park. Of the two challenges, the latter is the most foul. The good news, however, is that people are no longer just holding their nose and going about their business. Columns, editorials and voluminous letters to the editor attest to that fact.
In my last post, I encouraged people to read Martin Regg Cohn's piece. He has another one in today's Star that also merits perusal. It insists, using Municipal Affairs Minister Steven Clark's own words, that he must resign.
Now I know the concept of ministerial responsibility has degenerated into being just a quaint notion, but as Regg Cohn points out, it was a principle near and dear to Clark just a handful of years ago - when he and his fellow cabal members were in Opposition.
Day after day, he rose in the legislature demanding that Liberal cabinet ministers do the right thing — resign — after doing the wrong thing. I could list the top 10 reasons why Clark should quit, but he would surely remain impervious to persuasion.
Let us instead recite Clark’s own persuasive reasoning from years past. Given how his own chief of staff orchestrated and curated the Greenbelt giveaway while he feigned ignorance, consider Clark’s record of demanding resignations from other errant ministers:
“It’s sad to say that they’ve killed the tradition — actually, no, the duty — of ministerial responsibility,” Clark hectored the Liberal government in 2016 as he targeted the energy minister of the day (Glenn Thibeault). “There used to be a time when ministers took their integrity seriously and believed they had to have the trust of the province … Will you stand up, premier, walk over to the minister’s desk and ask him to resign?”
In May 2017, Clark gave a long speech on the long-standing tradition that a minister should quit when under a cloud: “A minister of the Crown would do the right thing and step aside until their name was cleared,” he thundered. “There’s never any shame, never any dishonour in doing the right thing.”
The column is filled with examples of Clark's high dudgeon over ministers failing to take responsibility and doing the right thing, all underscoring his current breathtaking corruption and hypocrisy. I highly encourage you to read it.
Meanwhile, the fury expressed in letters to the editor remains unabated.
Ford must take responsibility for Greenbelt
Ontario to establish working group to deal with Greenbelt probe fallout, Aug. 14
I take great umbrage in being asked to swallow the excuses of our Premier Doug Ford that neither he nor Housing Minister Steve Clark were in the loop on such a red-hot-button decision as opening up the Greenbelt.
Sorry Doug, high school is out and “the dog ate my homework” doesn’t cut it.
I applaud the media for turning the lights on high on this Greenbelt Scandal. Yes folks, SCANDAL. Repeat it often so it becomes indelible in our minds, even when offered a free hamburger at Fordfest.
David Ottenbrite, Cambridge
A disservice to the people of Ontario
Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservatives ‘favoured certain developers’ in controversial Greenbelt plan, auditor general finds in scathing report, Aug. 9
I can see the statues in the Gallery of Infamous Conservative Premiers of Ontario with Mike Harris, who gave away Highway 407 and Doug Ford, who gave away the Greenbelt. Surely these two will go down in history as two premiers who did a great disservice to the people of Ontario.
Charles Campisi, Oakville
Housing crisis is about affordability
10 key take-aways from the auditor general’s Greenbelt report, Aug. 9
The auditor general’s report confirms it. This government is corrupt. It is not “for the people” but rather for the ultra-rich cronies who are well connected.
The Social Contract has been broken. How can we the people trust anything this government does? The whole premise of a housing “crisis” is a ruse, as outlined in the AG’s Greenbelt report. Even the Ontario government acknowledged in 2022 that there was enough serviceable land outside the Greenbelt to meet the Ford government’s housing targets.
We do have a housing crisis, but it’s about affordability.
Giacomo Tonon, Willowdale
Follow the honourable path — resign
$8B question with no believable answers, Aug. 15
Certainly affordable housing must be built. However, there are lands available (not in the Greenbelt) that would certainly serve the purpose.
It is obvious that Ryan Amato, chief of staff for Housing Minister Steve Clark, is the scapegoat in this tawdry mess orchestrated by Premier Doug Ford and Clark.
The entire situation is the quintessence of subterfuge.
Ford, Clark and Amato should take the honourable path and resign.
Jeffrey Manly, Toronto
For shame, Doug Ford
$8B question with no believable answers, Aug. 15
Doug Ford and his Housing Minister Steve Clark deny any knowledge on how Ryan Amato, chief of staff for the housing minister, decided which land parcels to remove from the Greenbelt, for development.
This despite 78 organizations registering strong opposition to the proposed changes since it was announcement last fall.
Under such scrutiny, it’s impossible to believe that the Premier and housing minister didn’t check and double check the decisions that were made.
If, in fact, they didn’t know that developers were choosing the land tracts to be removed, they should at the very least be declared incompetent and lose their jobs.
Clark and Amato have got to go. And shame on you Doug Ford for insulting the intelligence of the citizens of Ontario thinking we would buy your story.
Laura Fehr, Mississauga
People are angry. They are angry at the betrayal of a premier's promise not to touch the Greenbelt, they are angry at the billions in profits being funnelled to the connected few, and perhaps most of all, they are angry at being treated as brainless, expected to suck up the transparent lies that the Ford cabal is so addicted to perpetuating.
I think this scandal and the current outrage has legs. There is only one solution: a criminal investigation resulting in criminal charges against its architects. It's the only way to clear the air.
I recently watched a Doug Ford interview. He said Ontario is on track to receive 5 million immigrants in the next 10 years.
ReplyDeleteWhere will they all live? What about the strain on our infrastructure? How will that affect the already dilipated healthcare system? How many more cars on the road?
Seems like the greenbelt isn't the biggest environmental issue we're facing in comparison to mass migration.
-MC
The challenges posed by the Liberal immigration policy are many, MC. But the one undeniable fact, from all the things I have read, is that cannibalizing the Greenbelt will do nothing to stem those challenges. Indeed, building more affordable housing on readily available land within city boundaries would seem a more logical course of action, but one that would deny the massive profits Ford is intent on funnelling to his powerful friends.
DeleteExcellent post - very informative!
ReplyDeleteGlad you found it useful, Cathy.
Delete.. it defies belief, Lorne ! As I’ve suggested elsewhere.. it appears the Developers ‘tipped off Doug Ford’ & not at all vice versa. Some of my best friends are now multi millionaire Commercial Developers approx same age as me.. we play hockey together. I’m on record that Doug Ford is presented Literal Blueprints.. with complete Step by Step Stages / Pathways that he can Legislate & see through to Completion.. his ‘payoff’ ? I would suggest that it’s offshore Properties. He and the Developers are Telling Canadians.. ‘We intend to keep doing this until someone stops us’ - I say this because I was astonished by the obvious backtrail they did not even attempt to hide. We will now see ‘What Level Of Corruption Is Now Embedded In Ontario Policing’
ReplyDeleteRemember how Ford Legislated Immunity For Private Long Term & Extended Care From Lawsuits - Private or Class Action - Literally Ensuring They ‘Are Above The Law’
🦎🏴☠️
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DeleteThere are so many things that the electorate will need to be reminded of when the next election finally gets here, Sal. While editorials, columns and letters to the editor suggest this is still very much a hot topic with voters, experience and history show that memories fade quickly. And while I am not optimistic that the OPP will investigate this with any vigour or rigour, I have not entirely abandoned hope in that regard.
DeleteLorne, Ford will continue to double down and will not respond to any public pressure. He is in the political field for two things. It is ego and graft. RG
ReplyDeleteFord may find that particular combination of motives odious, RG, or at least one hopes that is the case.
Deleteboth The Boss & I, among many others, Lorne
ReplyDeletebelieve This Is The Hill Doug Ford Dies On
& are on record saying so immediately
pre Auditor General Report.. 🦎🏴☠️
Again, it’s either that or we learn
just how corrupt ‘policing is in Ontario’
I sincerely hope you are right, Sal. We cannot forget this if we want a cleaner government.
Delete