The Gift of Ford
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Available inEB BuyFormateBookLength73 pagesPublisherRandom House CanadaPublishedOctober 16, 2012List Price$2.99 CADISBN9780345812575Category
  • Political Science - Civics

The Gift of Ford

An E-Book Original

by Ivor Tossell
When people talk about recalling politicians, it's usually because the politician delivered something other than what they advertised, and the voters voted for--lies, frauds and infidelities. Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, however, is exactly what the voters endorsed. They elected him with full knowledge of his obstreperous history as a city councillor, his inability to play well with others, his one-track mind and one-track message. His opponents warned voters that his platform was mostly wishful thinking. But Torontonians voted for him anyway.
 
The story of Rob Ford is the story of what happens when voters--the supreme authority--throw a wrench into the gears of democracy and elect someone who can't govern, and manifestly never could. Ford's mayoralty has forced Toronto to reconsider questions that seemed settled long, long ago. What kind of city chose this man to take the helm? Where does a mayor derive his mandate--from the voters, the polls, or talk radio? Does it matter if a man is a national embarrassment if he's popular at home?
 
Unwittingly, Ford has made possible a resurgence of the urban values that unite conservatives and liberals alike, galvanizing citizens in a way the city hasn't seen in some time. This is The Gift of Ford.

Author

Ivor Tossell has been writing about cities, technology, business and culture since 2005. A native of Sault Ste. Marie, he's been a columnist for the Globe and Mail, and contributed a regular item on the reign of Rob Ford to the Toronto Standard. His writing has also appeared in publications including the Toronto Star, the National Post, The Walrus, Report on Business Magazine, Spacing and Toronto Life.

Reviews

“The gifts of Tossell include a warm love for City Hall and all its players, and it’s this love that keeps the book upbeat. They also include an ear for the absurd and a fine sense of humour, much needed qualities when opining at length on one of the most outrageous politicians this country has ever seen.”
Spacing
| | Christopher Drost
Good mayors and bad mayors and goofy mayors have come before. But few have the same hypnotic appeal. Rob Ford complains there is a media conspiracy out to get him. More probably, the media realizes there’s something about this man that keeps people from looking away. The author of our latest Hazlitt Original, The Gift of Ford, explains the many attractions of Toronto's mayor.
Hazlitt talks with the former Vice President about what it will take for the US to recover from a catastrophic start to the 21st century.
| | Christopher Drost
In many ways, Rob Ford is a study in absences. He came into office looking like a man who would galvanize the city. He promised to stage a winner-takes-all battle between city and suburb, a grand contest of ideas between socialists and conservatives. As it turned out, he wasn’t so much with the ideas. He seems forever stuck at half-a-Dale Carnegie: he can make friends, but not influence people.