Still Plenty Of Room On The Stage

Such is the voter’s dilemma, living in a first past the post electoral world.

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You come across a candidate who hits all the right notes and you think to yourself, yeah, I can get behind this one at about the exact time you realize, yeah, they don’t have a hope in hell of winning.

That’s me and Ari Goldkind right now.

Running as he is for mayor in a town that doesn’t take kindly to electing strangers to that position, calling his campaign a long shot is being generous. donquixoteAt this juncture, Mr. Goldkind sits with about 52 other candidates out on the fringes of the race, Don Quixote’s all of them, tilting at a seemingly impregnable windmill.

Anyone who has followed us here at All Fired Up in the Big Smoke from the beginning knows that we spent a lot of time and bytes during the 2010 election writing about the fringe candidates for mayor. Hell, we even ended up endorsing one of them. We have a certain fondness for the outsiders especially when the slate of endorsed insiders can be so patently uninspiring.

The fact of the matter, however, is that 95% of those relegated to the fringes are fringe candidates. Madmen, publicity seekers, stunt takers and single issue candidates. offtheradarFew have any sort of grasp of the full breadth of issues this city faces. What makes them run is anyone’s guess but even in a campaign as long as our municipal one is, there’s not enough time to spend offering up a wider platform to them.

After attending Ari Goldkind’s campaign launch last Wednesday, I can confidently say that we would be doing ourselves a huge disservice if we continue to think of him as unelectable and not worth our time listening to. Yes, the odds remain high against him. Until he can get himself on the radar of the mainstream media, he will continue to be an unknown. Toronto does not have a history of throwing caution to the wind and electing a complete outsider like Naheed Nenshi, say.

Am I comparing Goldkind to Nenshi? No. But I think any progressive voter should take a moment or two to look through his campaign literature and the issues he is talking about.

Most impressively for me is his boldness in talking upfront about the necessity for more taxes, tolls and other revenue streams. “Toronto Needs the Truth” his campaign flyer insists. arigoldkindHe’s also not afraid to talk about one of the city’s biggest budgetary bugaboos: the Toronto Police Services.

As a proud, self-proclaimed outsider to municipal politics, I have some concerns Mr. Goldkind hasn’t fully brushed up on all the nuances of municipal powers and the always thorny matter of city-province jurisdiction. It won’t be as easy as just declaring an intention to toll. The city currently doesn’t have the power to collect any HST. Queen’s Park hangs protectively over all such decisions.

But, hell, if that lack of knowledge disqualified every candidate from running for office, there would never have been a Mayor Rob Ford.

More worrisome for me is Ari Goldkind’s lone wolf/anti-career politician campaign rhetoric. (h/t to @judemacdonald for this particular conversation.) While he sits diametrically opposed to everything Rob Ford represents, the two men share a certain seeming disdain for a collaborative approach that city council depends on to function. lonewolfOf this mayor’s many colossal failures, perhaps the most damaging in terms of governance was his go-it alone, my way or the highway approach. A mayor unable to work with those not always sharing the same opinion or ideology is a mayor unable to lead the city.

At this point, however, I will give Ari Goldkind the benefit of the doubt. Inclusion is not necessarily the language of the outsider, long shot candidate. Certainly the speech he gave at his campaign launch was much less combative, as he spoke of surrounding himself with smart people with differing opinions.

As voters, we will do ourselves a huge disservice if we don’t insist on Ari Goldkind getting a shot on stage to debate the other mayoral candidates. With the news that Sarah Thomson will get the fill-in spot in Rob Ford’s absence at next week’s National Ethnic Press mayoral debate round table discussion, obviously the definition of ‘fringe candidate’ is somewhat elastic. Sure, sure. She ran in 2010 and gained almost no traction before dropping out late in the race. Nothing she’s done subsequently lends any credence to the notion she’ll fare better this time around.

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If we can’t even dream a little at this point of time in the municipal campaign and insist that all credible candidates get an opportunity to be heard, what chances are there that we can move beyond accepted conventional wisdom in building a better city? Ari Goldkind has, I think, proven to be a credible candidate for mayor. He has a small but committed and enthusiastic organization behind him. His platform is one many progressive voters can get excited about. There is no downside that I can see to this campaign if he moves from the fringe and joins the always unofficial rank of serious contender.

Let’s see to it that happens. Let’s demand that it happens.

pushily submitted by Cityslikr

A Mayoral Catch-22

I was mulling over Edward Keenan’s piece in The Grid yesterday about, well, fringe mayoral candidates, thinkinganddrinkinglet’s call them for lack of a better heuristic when, don’t you just know it, up pops the news that former candidate Sarah Thomson is planning another run at the mayor’s office.

You know Ms. Thomson. Barely cracked double digits in the 2010 race before throwing her lightweight weight behind the eventual 2nd place finisher, George Smitherman. Then ran something of a spirited campaign for the Liberals in the 2011 provincial in the riding of Trinity-Spadina, giving the long time incumbent Rosario Marchese a bit of a scare. Sarah “Transit” Thomson who basically took her one good idea from 2010 – road tolls – and built a platform of self-promotion around it. Yeah. That Sarah Thomson.

As I write this, Thomson showed up at City Hall this morning in a horse drawn red wagon to register. Whatever. But it does provide me a nice little segue into a larger discussion about fringe candidates.

Next Wednesday CityNews will be holding the first televised mayoral debate of the 2014 campaign. cinderellaAll 5 “major” candidates have signed on to participate, according to the announcement. Olivia Chow. Rob Ford. David Soknacki. Karen Stintz. John Tory.

Will a 6th podium be added now for Sarah Thomson? If so, why? Because she ran previously? Because she organized events around regional transit problems? Because she owns a publication? Because all this combines to give her public standing?

On the other hand, if CityNews doesn’t extend an invitation to the debate to Ms. Thomson, why not? Why do they get to make that decision? Who determines which candidacy sits beyond the fringe and which one doesn’t?

Mr. Keenan seems to suggest that’s it’s kind of an organic process. “As with any job — in this case, the CEO of a $10 billion-a-year organization responsible for millions of peoples’ daily necessities,” Keenan writes, cv“the hiring criteria includes significant experience and demonstrated abilities as much as anything else.”

There’s certainly some truth to that. In Toronto, it’s been the case for pretty much forever that the only way to the mayor’s job is through city council. Mayoral hopefuls have traditionally put in time as councillors first. No outsiders need apply.

“Putting together a successful campaign is actually a pretty good proxy for many of the attributes you need to govern,” Keenan continues, “managing a staff and volunteers, inspiring people to work on your behalf, raising funds, and engaging in a public debate that convinces citizens to put their trust in you and your plan. The press will pay close attention to candidates who show they can do that on a citywide scale. And so will voters.”

Again, certainly true, but for me, really only half of the equation. “Managing a staff and volunteers…raising funds…engaging in a public debate” are essential but none of it just appears out of the blue. All that’s easier said than done. Without an established name or easy access to money to buy yourself one, outside candidates have to work doubly hard (at least) to get their name and ideas out there. backroomI am troubled by that notion.

What I see is a slate of candidates that is presented to voters on the basis of money and influence. Prominent, backroom donors, well-worn campaign strategists, political party apparatchiks, all cajoling, tempting and eventually signing on to work for candidates they deem acceptable to run for mayor. These are your candidates, Toronto. Now, vote as you see fit.

And the media, especially media outlets that wind up hosting mayoral debates and forums, are complicit in this heavy-handed winnowing of the field. Only candidates from the given slate are invited to participate. Why? Well, because these are the ones voters want to hear from? Why is that? How does the media determine that? Look at the polling numbers, we’re told. Numbers derived from polls featuring only the non-fringe candidates’ names.

It’s a pre-determined, closed loop. An iterative process with only a handful of appointed variables, ultimately ending up with the choice from pick one of the above. closedopensystemNone of the above is never presented as a viable alternative.

Look. The 2014 campaign is about two and a half months old. Candidates have been registered since January 2nd. Yet, only after Olivia Chow — who everybody knew was running — officially entered the race last week were we informed that the official debates would begin. I’m not alone in finding the timing a little fishy, am I? It feels like the fix is in.

Instead of hashing and rehashing the will he or won’t he/when will she narrative and pursuing the HMS Destructive tour of the current incumbent, maybe a little time could’ve been devoted to listening to some of the other candidates for mayor, suss out their fitness for the job. In early February the U of T Scarborough student union held a mayoral forum that featured the mayor, David Soknacki and 3 of the fringe candidates. footinthedoorThe Toronto Star’s Daniel Dale covered it and, in his opinion, declared that one of the 3, Robb Johannes just might’ve won the debate.

So why hasn’t Mr. Johannes been invited to participate in the CityNews’ debate? Based on the observation of an experienced City Hall reporter giving his candidacy some legitimacy, what must he do to be given a shot at proving himself worthy of further consideration?

In 2010, we here at All Fired Up in the Big Smoke ran some 30 or so Meet A Mayoral Candidate posts throughout the campaign. Admittedly, most, a high percentage of them, rightfully deserved the fringe label. Remember, anybody with $200 to spare can run for mayor. It was hard to tell why many were in the race. A lark. Mere attention seeking. Misguided sense of direction.

But a handful of them were thoughtful, interesting and dedicated to giving their time and energy to the city. Hell, we ended up endorsing one for mayor when all was said and done. Not every fringe candidate should be viewed fringe simply because they don’t yet have money, resources or influence.musicalchairs

And I would argue that this time around, there are even more potentially serious fringe candidates then in 2010. The subject of Mr. Keenan’s article, Ari Goldkind, immediately strikes me as somebody worth listening to. Matt Mernagh. Jeff Billard. Richard Underhill. Morgan Baskin. The above mentioned Robb Johannes.

Are any of these credible mayoral candidates? I don’t know. But who the fuck am I to blithely brush them off before giving them a chance to hear what they have to say, deliver their plans and ideas to a wider audience?

“You don’t need the press to legitimize your candidacy,” Keenan informs the fringers. “Only your campaign can do that.”

That sentiment seems hopelessly and impossibly pollyannish or unaware on Keenan’s part; neither adjective I’d normally attach to him. Yes, we can all look to Calgary’s Naheed Nenshi as living, breathing proof that an unknown entity can come out of seemingly nowhere to score an improbable victory. ignoreOutsider candidates should look to Nenshi to see how exactly he and his team pulled that off. But to point to that very, very rare example and conclude it’s all about a little innovative DIY, and that somehow the media’s exclusionary practices to all but the few anointed candidates doesn’t play into the fringe determination of the many, that only truly viable candidates will earn a place in the spotlight, I think ignores just how a vast majority of the voting public gets their information and processes it in determining what way their support is going to go.

disappointingly submitted by Cityslikr