js97
Senior Member
What it has come to:
LEFT: Spend money raised on measures that benefit everyone, and especially the most vulnerable (i.e. improvements to transportation infrastructure that move people most efficiently, community centres, social housing, etc).
RIGHT: Spend money making it easier for the upper middle classes to amass wealth (subsidise their driving habits in like a million ways, try to reduce fees and property taxes as much as possible, etc).
This is why someone like Bloomberg, who is not particularly leftist in his ideological worldviews, came across as being a rather lefty mayor of New York.
Considering 70% of Canadian family own homes and similar/more own cars, I'm not sure what imaginary ideological cool-aid you're drinking. If you take a look at the cities demographic and household incomes, you'll see that most of the 'Upper Middle Class' live in the core, those that Chow seem to appeal to, vs the working class in the burbs, those that Tory/Ford appeal to.
Chow's Ward and her voting base is probably one of the hottest upper-class yuppie neighbourhoods in the city. Between 5 dollar lattes or the barbers that charge 40 dollars for a haircut. You need to live a little and see how the immigrants of Scarborough/Etobicoke live, between entrepreneurs and hourly wage tradesmen that are trying to pay bills.