The Politics of Division and Confrontation Loses A Warrior

That Nick Kouvalis has effectively left the Ford Administration so soon should come as no surprise to anyone. He/they always claimed his position as the mayor’s chief of staff was very, very temporary. He is, after all, a campaign strategist. His job was done on October 25th when he helped get Rob Ford elected mayor of Toronto. Hell, as a strategist, Mr. Kouvalis should be able to retire on that feat alone, delivering up the seemingly undeliverable on a Karl Rove-like level.

The real surprise was that he was ever made part of the official administration in the first place, let alone chief of staff. What was the mayor (or whoever does it for him) thinking? As far as I know, Mr. Kouvalis has little hands-on experience with actual governance but then again neither does the mayor. Did Team Ford simply assume that the ‘mandate’ they were given by 47% of the voters meant the mayor could just bully his agenda through with no finesse required? Stack the committees with like-minded right wingers and then intimidate enough centrish councillors into going along with the agenda.

From that standpoint, Kouvalis’s appointment makes some sense. He does bring an intimidating presence and certainly the tactic brought some early success with the easy elimination of the VRT, cutting of office budgets and a general sense that whatever the mayor proclaimed it would come to be. The death of Transit City, for one, and the birth of Transportation City.

The administration has been far less sure-footed with the budget process in general and the TTC in particular. First a fare increase. Then no fare increase. 48 bus routes to be cut. No wait. Re-allocated. Then, well, maybe not that many. 16? 41? Like they’re calling audibles at the line of scrimmage before being forced to call a time out for a little regrouping. We’ll get back to you on that.

Growing pains for any new administration should be expected and it would be unfair to demand otherwise from this one. While the ideological purity of the Ford Administration might mitigate some early missteps with everyone marching in such lockstep, the anti-government nature of this group invariably leads to gaffes and slip ups. If you’re not predisposed to govern, you’re bound to make mistakes trying to do so.

But the news last week of some serious, call security kind of tension involving Nick Kouvalis suggests that there’s more turmoil at work than simply learning the ropes. Could it be that the mayor is already realizing that the hardnosed approach is rendered less effective with a single-minded use of it? While it may work on the campaign trail, it gets tired very quickly once in office especially if your mandate isn’t as solid as you think it is. You need the occasional carrot (trying hard to resist mayor’s unfamiliarity with vegetables reference here) for the stick to be of much use.

Maybe Mr. Kouvalis’s departure is an indication that Mayor Ford is willing, in his very awkward way, to reach out to his more strident opposition. The announcement of Amir Remtulla as Kouvalis’s replacement seems to back that up. As former executive assistant to former Deputy Mayor Case Ootes, Mr. Remtulla comes with some heavy bipartisan support from the likes of councillors Joe Mihevc and Mayor Ford antithesis Adam Vaughan. “He gets the complexity of the place,” Councillor Vaughan is quoted as saying. “Amir’s not one of those people to be a bull in a china shop. He understands it’s about making the city work.”

The mayor’s new chief of staff, at least according to Councillor Vaughan, is everything the mayor and his former chief of staff aren’t. Comfortable with the complexity of governing and not bullish in a place that requires the use of deftness at times. Is it too much to expect that under Mr. Remtulla’s tutelage we may even get to hear the mayor stutter out the word c-c-c-c-c-compromise?

As much as it may go against his constitution to do so, the mayor may be starting to realize that one note, sounded over and over again, while working over the course of a 10 month campaign, will quickly fall on deaf ears when in office. With nearly 4 years still left in his mandate, he will have to change the tune to one that more than just his most ardent supporters can sing along to. That he seems willing to consider this possibility with the ouster of Nick Kouvalis and appointment of Amir Remtulla may well signal the first break in the clouds of what has been a severe cold front of My-Way-Or-The-Highwayism that’s been the signature of the Ford Administration early in the game.

kumbayaly submitted by Cityslikr

Will Rob Ford Rule As He Ran?

So the Mayor Rob Ford era is off to a colourful start, let’s call it. Amidst all the news reports filled with the ‘dirty tricks’ his team employed, we’ve also learned that our mayor-elect is now deep in debt; the fiscally responsible candidate turning out not to be all that fiscally responsible when it came to campaign spending. Except perhaps when it came to paying minimum wage for some of the campaign workers. “I wanted young kids because I could pay them nothing and they would do what I told them to,” said Nick Kouvalis, Ford’s campaign manager. “I paid them $500 a week and I wanted 60 or 70 hours a week out of them.”

One could almost shrug it off as nothing more than the understandable triumphalist crowing from a guy who masterminded one of the most improbable election victories in recent memory. Basking in the publicity of last Friday’s Public Affairs Association of Canada gathering of campaign managers and city bigwigs, who could blame Mr. Kouvalis for indulging himself in a little boastful chest-beating? In political circles, he’s clearly arrived and his services would now be in high demand. Polish up that resumé and move on to the next electoral fight.

The thing is, Kouvalis is sticking around town to become Ford’s chief of staff. So were we being offered a preview of how the new administration will operate? Deceitful. Dishonest. Divisive. Possibly acceptable when it comes to running a campaign (possibly) but regrettable and destructive in terms of running a city. Especially a city that appears to be as divided between its inner suburbs and downtown core as Toronto is presently.

Little so far emanating from the Ford camp suggests that it’s a divide they’re looking to heal or mend. When Kouvalis veered off into policy between tactical discussions at PAAC, one of the things he suggested he’d like to do away with is the Tower Renewal Program. Without getting into the details, it’s an initiative that “combine[s] green technology with neighbourhood revitalization projects to make stronger, greener communities across the city.” Hoping to eventually include all the 1000+ residential apartment building in Toronto, 4 pilot sites started in September, 3 of which are located deep in Ford Country.

If his chief of staff is to be believed (a stretch based on the kind of campaign he ran), Mayor-elect Rob Ford doesn’t care for neighbourhood revitalization even in the areas of town who voted for him. Combine this with the fact that he wants to kill Transit City and replace it with subways that’ll reach far fewer riders outside the core and it’s difficult to reconcile Rob Ford as a mayor who represents the anger and dislocation felt by his suburban constituents. It seems as if the split wrought by amalgamation is one that our new mayor wants to exploit for his own political success and survival. Otherwise, he would’ve sent Nick Kouvalis on his way with a handshake and briefcase full of cash after the election and brought in someone more conciliatory to oversee the running of his administration at City Hall.

curiously submitted by Cityslikr