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I don't think it would make a difference, except for those types who, by virtue of their own natural inclinations, are apt to pay attention to numbers and technical scores. Savvy politicians know that most voters vote with their guts, not with their heads. It's less about the arid rationale and fine-grained analysis of who scores what in which sweepstakes; it's more about the captivating drama of winners and losers.
 
Though I may be too cynical I actually wonder how many UP posters actually cast votes in the last Council and Mayoral election. The UT age demographic (as I understand it) is not a group who normally vote in large numbers.

Then again, a paradoxical counter-argument can be made that even your apparent UTer pigeonhole isn't representative of said age-demo-as-you-understand-it. After all, in practice, those who actually aren't prone to voting aren't prone to visiting or even knowing of (or caring about) sites like UT...
 
People, just in case you thought everything was normal since the Leafs blew a 4-1 lead, hell has officially frozen over.

Can we start an Andy Byford for mayor movement?

BY SUE-ANN LEVY,TORONTO SUN

TORONTO - He became CEO 14 months ago knowing full well a “more business-like approach” was needed to reinvent the TTC — and he set about doing so with much focus and little drama.

As I listened to Andy Byford speak to the Empire Club Monday about how in one year he has gone about replacing the “siege mentality” with a “can-do” culture at the TTC, I couldn’t help but think how the past two years have been a missed opportunity for the Rob Ford regime.

Byford talked about how he first delivered “quick wins” like all-day litter pickup on subway trains and the ability to purchase Metropasses at every station using debit and credit cards.

He told the crowd of about 200 he has spent the past year taking the TTC out of the Management Dark Ages by challenging mediocrity and obsessing about detail.

The TTC now has a vision statement, regular meetings that hold senior executives to account and performance indicators.

I suspect Ford rarely holds meetings with senior bureaucrats and wouldn’t know a performance indicator if it hit him in the head.

Byford has made it clear to the TTC union that “decades of old practices need to be swept away.” He’s started with the contracting out of the cleaning and servicing of buses at two garages.

But it won’t end there. Byford referred to the end of the collector job when Presto comes in and getting rid of guards on subways with the new trains, which are designed to be operated by one person.

Unlike Byford, Ford came hurling out of the gate with a plan to contract out garbage in District 2 and to remove the “jobs for life” provisions in the CUPE contracts.

Once that was done, he lost his way. There is so much more he could be doing, for example, with the parks bureaucracy. Customer service is nowhere near what it should be at City Hall.

Byford has now put together a corporate plan of what the TTC needs to achieve from now until 2017 to restore the TTC to that “jewel in the crown” of North American transit.

“We now have a plan to guide our transformation,” he told the crowd.

Ford has had no plan for two years — full stop.

Byford made no bones about the fact that the TTC needs sustained funding and “strong political leadership” — that is, long-term thinking from his political masters — to add capacity in the system to try to catch up to the rapid development in Toronto.

“It’s the most political place I’ve ever worked ... it’s certainly a challenge,” he told reporters after his speech. “Here, I’m dealing with 45 different opinions.”

He acknowledged that his TTC boss, Chairman Karen Stintz, leaves him to run the show, which is a good thing. I would say that’s probably because he makes her look good.

After all, this is the same Stintz who fought to the bitter end not to axe former chief general manager Gary Webster.

This is also the same Stintz, who told anyone who would listen in recent weeks that revenue tools were needed to fund transit and the mayor wasn’t showing leadership by refusing to have a council debate.

But when push came to shove last week at council, the TTC chairman didn’t have the courage, guts, leadership — call it what you want — to support any revenue tools.

Flanked by her entourage (her lovesick lapdog John Parker and her henchman J.P. Boutros) at the Empire Club Monday, she claimed she, along with council, “proceeded with a list of exclusions” consistent with what “other councils were saying around the province.”

(Let’s give her a gold medal for excellence in political spin!)

But getting back to Byford, he said he will not be “fazed” by the lack of political leadership and intends to “keep banging that drum for sustained funding.”

Ford, on the other hand, has allowed others to set the agenda — content to push the issues he should be handling now off to the next election.

Could we start a Byford for Mayor movement?

http://www.torontosun.com/2013/05/13/can-we-start-an-andy-byford-for-mayor-movement

WHO IS THIS PERSON AND WHAT HAS SHE DONE WITH SUE ANN LEVY?!?!
 
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We definitely need someone with the qualities of Byford, but Byford is not cut out for mayoral duties- his realm is in transit, not politics.
I think that call to make him mayor was more humour than a serious suggestion.

Wow ... when not bearing grudges, and not being biased, she can actually still write. I'm not sure I've ever made it to the end of one of her columns before!

She's not as stupid as I make her out to be. She knows which side of the bread is buttered. I wonder if this says more about what future she thinks the Sun has, and wanting to build up a portfolio of good material, in case she needs to find employment elsewhere in the future.
 
That turnaround is pretty amusing.

Also...
Minutes after Mayor Rob Ford arrived at a contentious community council meeting in Etobicoke on Tuesday evening, he bolted out of his seat, sprinted up an aisle, and left the building — to wander around the parking lot putting “Rob Ford Mayor” magnets on the doors of cars.
Ford was accompanied by a City Hall security guard. When a reporter told him that some people might find his behaviour strange, he responded only that some people might find the reporter strange.

http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/201..._spreads_his_message_with_fridge_magnets.html

... what the hell.
 
It's a waste of taxpayers money to sit around at boring meetings, listening to people. It's a much better use of our mayor's time if he spends it wandering around a parking lot attaching campaign magnets to cars. Good use of city staff and security guard time too.
You may be right but he probably does less harm attaching magnets to cars than 'being a Mayor". Sad but ...
 
We are after all dealing with a mayor of increasingly diminished expectations. We're getting to the point that as long as he can string a few nonsensical words together and he doesn't soil his pants in a meeting we start to think of that as an accomplishment.
 
WTF ... using taxpayers money and resources to campaign !?!

Better than sitting in at the Etobicoke Community Council meeting to listen to deputations (both pro and con), who may have researched, formed an option, and presenting them, it seems. Why waste 5, 3, or whatever minutes given to the each of deputations, when he could be out campaigning before the official start of the city elections. But he did return to vote at the Community Council meeting.
 
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