Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Is There An Heir To Ford Nation After Rob Ford's Death? Experts Think Not

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2016 12:41 PM
    TORONTO — Rob Ford's death has left his followers despairing at the loss of a man they saw as a champion for the everyman, and experts say there's no clear heir to take up the mantle and lead so-called Ford Nation.
     
    Ford, who died this week from a rare and aggressive cancer, came from a political family and some have suggested his older brother Doug — a former city councillor who ran for mayor in the last election — would be the natural successor in the hearts of supporters.
     
    But others say the elder Ford lacks the personal touch and the political timing his younger brother had, and there may be less of an appetite for the former mayor's populist brand of leadership when the next municipal election comes around in 2018.
     
    Many of the forces that propelled Rob Ford to power six years ago remain, particularly the feeling that government doesn't care about average people, said Myer Siemiatycki, a political science professor at Ryerson University.
     
    "There is a constituency there that can be politically mobilized," he said.
     
     
    However, Siemiatycki added: "It's not a given that the next politician to galvanize and connect with that sentiment in Toronto is going to be either a member of the Ford family or someone with Rob Ford's politics."
     
    Ford, who died at 46, rose to power as tensions between downtown and suburban residents reached a peak, harnessing a rising anti-elitist and anti-union movement by vowing to stop the public service "gravy train."
     
    That, combined with his candour and his insistence on personally returning phone calls, endeared him to hordes of voters who appreciated his regular-guy image.
     
    "Doug, I don't think, has that same people's touch or that same readiness to throw himself into kind of a Mr. Fix-It for whoever calls him," Siemiatycki said.
     
    Without its original figurehead, it's possible Ford Nation will simply disperse, he added. That sense of discontent would persist but without political expression, he said.
     
    Nelson Wiseman, a professor of political science at the University of Toronto, put it more bluntly.
     
    "Without Rob Ford, there is no Ford Nation," he said.
     
    While both Doug Ford and his nephew, school trustee Michael Ford, could capitalize on the family name, "it's a different dynamic," Wiseman said.
     
     
    Any lingering loyalty to the Ford brand is likely to fade come election time, he added.
     
    "I predict that three years from now, you're not even going to see the term 'Ford Nation' appear in news stories," he said.
     
    Nonetheless Ford supporters who came to pay tribute to the former mayor at Toronto city hall on Good Friday seemed set on finding a successor.
     
    "Hopefully someone can come forward. Maybe Doug; I'm not sure what his intentions are in the future," said Joe Wright.
     
    "Maybe (Coun.) Georgio Mammoliti, who knew the family, who knew Rob and Doug, can carry on Rob's legacy."
     
    Glenn Miscampbell, who worked on Ford's 2010 mayoral campaign, said the former mayor's brother is the best candidate to follow in his footsteps.
     
    "When he (Doug) runs, we'll be there for him," he said. "When you get into the upper echelon, you don't have the same contact with the people, the grassroot people who are just trying to struggle along every day and make ends meet."
     
    Some, however, said the man who replaced Ford as mayor also took on some of his ideals.
     
    "I think John Tory is doing a good job of carrying on some of his legacy as well," Wade Nassar said.
     
     
    Ford will lay in repose at city hall for two days before his funeral on Wednesday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Anti-Refugee Graffiti In Calgary School, Prime Minister Trudeau Says It's Not What Canada All About

    Anti-Refugee Graffiti In Calgary School, Prime Minister Trudeau Says It's Not What Canada All About
    A photo that Global ran of graffiti spray-painted on the side of Wilma Hansen junior high school in Calgary shows the words: "Syrians go home and die, It also says "Kill the traitor Trudeau."

    Anti-Refugee Graffiti In Calgary School, Prime Minister Trudeau Says It's Not What Canada All About

    January Home Sales Give Rise To Correction Concerns In Toronto, Vancouver

    January Home Sales Give Rise To Correction Concerns In Toronto, Vancouver
    Surging sales in the piping hot real estate markets of Toronto and Vancouver last month prompted one of Canada's big banks to express concerns Tuesday that the cities may be at risk of a home price correction.

    January Home Sales Give Rise To Correction Concerns In Toronto, Vancouver

    Heavy Rain May Have Played A Part In Fatal Crash In Peachland, B.C.

    Heavy Rain May Have Played A Part In Fatal Crash In Peachland, B.C.
    One person has been killed and another has critical injuries following a head-on crash on Highway 97 in Peachland, B.C.

    Heavy Rain May Have Played A Part In Fatal Crash In Peachland, B.C.

    New Brunswick Mom 'Devastated Again' To Find Out She Can't Donate Kidney To Sick Son

    New Brunswick Mom 'Devastated Again' To Find Out She Can't Donate Kidney To Sick Son
    Ashley Barnaby said from her home in Moncton that an official with the living donor clinic at the Queen Elizabeth II Hospital in Halifax informed her of the final decision Friday

    New Brunswick Mom 'Devastated Again' To Find Out She Can't Donate Kidney To Sick Son

    Montreal Astrophysicist Victoria Kaspi Becomes First Woman To Win Top Science Prize

    Montreal Astrophysicist Victoria Kaspi Becomes First Woman To Win Top Science Prize
    Victoria Kaspi, a Montreal-based professor, was handed the Gerhard Herzberg Canada Gold Medal for Science and Engineering in Ottawa, becoming the first woman to receive the award in its 25-year history.

    Montreal Astrophysicist Victoria Kaspi Becomes First Woman To Win Top Science Prize

    Formal Review Into Death Of B.C. Man Shot By Police Still On Table: Official

    Formal Review Into Death Of B.C. Man Shot By Police Still On Table: Official
     A high-ranking official responsible for policing and security in British Columbia says a provincial review into the death of a man shot by police outside a Lower Mainland casino isn't off the table.

    Formal Review Into Death Of B.C. Man Shot By Police Still On Table: Official