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Martin Regg Cohn: Money is distorting Ontario’s democracy. Here’s how Doug Ford can fix that

Pandemics are bad for politics.

Fundraising dinners are suspended and ordinary donors are upended. That leaves the major parties desperate for fat-cat developers to make up the difference.

Money politics is the ugly underside of democracy — outstretched hands and greasing of palms. But .

Yes, the crisis is straining campaign financing. But it is also constraining campaign spending.

Quite apart from the sudden shortfalls in fundraising, it’s the sharp limitations of physical distancing that have redrawn the map for politicians, who can no longer roam far and wide to reach voters, let alone hit up donors. Which is why the pandemic is, paradoxically, a prescription to cleanse our politics of accumulated toxins.

We tried once before. Back in 2016, after a the wild west of Ontario fundraising, the previous Liberal government abuses — so that politicians from all parties could cater to voter interests, not .

But Doug Ford’s Tories unilaterally after they took power two years later, revoking public financing of political parties (modest “per-vote” subsidies based on most recent election results). Now, COVID-19 has changed the equation.

Fundraising is falling on deaf ears because ordinary Ontarians are out of pocket. Which leaves deep-pocketed developers whispering in the ears of desperate politicians.

With the benefit of hindsight, the premier has every reason to restore the “per-vote” allocations that he unilaterally phased out (scheduled to end next year). And with a little foresight, Ford could go even further in leading a cleanup of dirty money.

The perfect storm of a pandemic is the ideal time for the premier to curb excessive campaign spending, better reflecting the virtual world of COVID-19. Why allow parties to spend (and therefore raise) as much as $10 million for a provincial election campaign that amounts to overkill?

Amid COVID-19, we are entering a new world of political outreach and campaign marketing that is more digital than ever before. The premier could make the best of a pandemic by forcing all politicians to collectively clean up their act — with sharp new limits on how much they spend to grease their lumbering campaign machines.

The major parties already spend too much money to raise money. All those sumptuous fundraising dinners are obscenely inefficient ways to attract donors — with big sums (and fine wine) poured down the drain to keep the cash flowing, while politicians waste time prostituting themselves.

As for those costly and clunky whistle-stop campaigns, they are whistling past the political graveyard. Just ask Ford, who ditched the traditional “leader’s tour” in the 2018 election, forsaking the customary chartered aircraft and customized bus, while eschewing the companion “media bus” laid on (for a hefty fee) for travelling reporters. The leader’s tour tends to be a “loss leader” for parties keen to get “earned media” (coverage), but most cash-starved outlets dropped anyway (the Star was often one of the few organizations to tag along).

Prohibitively expensive television advertising is fading as rival parties opt for more targeted social media channels and other digital vectors. Today’s technology allows campaigns to harvest hundreds of thousands of cellphone numbers for a song, identifying potential voters with a simple text message.

Large election rallies are today populated mostly by weary campaign volunteers trying to create the illusion of support (those Donald Trump rallies are an anomaly and anachronism). Spared the expense of renting large halls, chartering transportation, and spending on big media buys, provincial campaigns are overdue for downsizing — while rightsizing “per-vote subsidies” to shore up the gap.

The 2016 campaign finance reforms belatedly and wisely banned corporate and union donations, but compensated the parties for the funding gap with a “per-vote” public subsidy of $2.71 per ballot cast. Based on the results of the 2018 election, the victorious Tories were in line to receive $6.3 million annually while the NDP would get $5.2 million, the Liberals about $3 million, and the Greens around $700,000 — until Ford overruled his own party by phasing them out.

Oh, and let’s stop calling them subsidies — an outdated misnomer — and refer to them more accurately as voter “allocations.” In fact, we already heavily subsidize contributions from the most affluent Ontarians thanks to generous tax credits (starting at 75 per cent of the donation), so why not level the playing field by letting every taxpayer’s vote count with a “per-vote subsidy” rather than a “rich voter subsidy?”

The premier should restore those public funding allocations (even if it means dialing down the old “subsidies” that enrich the most affluent donors), while also reducing campaign spending limits. A true populist would ensure that all political parties wasted less money at campaign time — and wasted less time on raising money at other times.

Just as COVID-19 is upturning the economics of business, it is changing the business of politics. Ontario needs to finish what it started in 2016, responding to the recent strain on private fundraising with a new constraint on party spending — and a matching increase in public funding.

The virus of dirty money can distort democracy in the best of times. Now, in the worst of times, the deadly COVID-19 virus can disrupt our democracy for the better.

Martin Regg Cohn is a Toronto-based columnist covering Ontario politics for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

What we know about the organization behind demonstrations against COVID-19 restrictions

For months in Toronto, The Line Canada has been organizing crowded demonstrations opposing the lockdown and public health directives aimed at curbing the spread of .

Most recently, on Tuesday, supporters of this organization were among those , where owner Adam Skelly was offering dine-in service, defying recent provincial rules that only allowed takeout and delivery.

The Line Canada created its website on April 30, 2020 to be a hub for multiple organizations across Canada that have been opposing the lockdown and restrictions that have been implemented to combat COVID-19.

The group calls itself a “civil liberties group” and says it is not an anti-mask organization. Footage and photos of the rallies however show the majority of the supporters not wearing masks and some wearing shirts or carrying signs that deride mask use, despite public health recommendations. The Star reached out to The Line Canada for comment, but did not hear back by the time of publication.

National director of The Line Canada, Lamont Daigle, also listed “no mandatory vaccinations” as a goal in a July video interview.

In Toronto, the group has been arranging self-described freedom demonstrations, which have been mostly held in Yonge-Dundas Square every Saturday, as well as at Queen’s Park. Many carry white flags with the group’s logo, a black circle with a red line through the middle.

The protests have been attended by hundreds, despite the province’s cap on outdoor gathering sizes (which has ranged from 10 to 100 at various times) to reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19.

In mid-October, a demonstration and was met with several replies on Twitter wondering if bylaw enforcement would be issuing fines for the size of the gathering and lack of physical distancing.

Elsewhere in Canada, The Line held protests in Sarnia, Winnipeg, Saskatoon and Edmonton.

Protests have also been brought to small towns around Ontario on a weekly basis, including for example in St. Thomas, Ont. where 200 people arrived, at a time where there was only one active case of COVID-19, causing worry from the mayor that the gathering may lead to spread, Global News reported. In Aylmer, Ont., about 2,000 people from across the province flocked to the town of 7,500 for a demonstration.

The organization claims to have been banned from Facebook, but maintains Instagram and Twitter accounts.

Angelyn Francis is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering equity and inequality. Her reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Reach her via email:

Structure demolished at Hydro One’s Orillia project site, resident says

Hydro One will not confirm a report that a structure at the site of its future provincial grid control centre in West Orillia was recently demolished, citing “high security needs” as the reason.

A photo taken by local resident Bill Tiffin in late October appears to show a concrete structure reduced to rubble at the fenced property along University Avenue.

The image of the site, where construction is underway on the facility, also shows a pair of excavators next to the broken-up material.

“I go by there 10 times a day, so I saw them building the entire complex, including that one tower that I watched them tear down,” Tiffin told Simcoe.com.

The local man said he watched as a “huge machine” was brought to the site in advance of what he said was the structure’s demolition.

“Something with a reach that you would normally use for digging canals and ponds and stuff,” he said. “I thought, ‘I wonder what they’re going to do with that thing’ – well, the next day I saw them using it to tear that tower down.”

Simcoe.com contacted Hydro One to determine if a structure was, indeed, torn down and, if so, for what purpose.

Tiffin’s photo was provided to Hydro One at its request.

A representative for the company later responded to Simcoe.com’s questions in an email statement.

“Due to its high security needs, specific construction details are not available,” said Alex Stewart, media relations and communications. “We expect construction to be completed by late 2021.”

Stewart said the “state of the art facility will be home to highly-skilled employees whose primary function will be to ensure the safe, secure and reliable delivery of power to communities across the province.”

Once the grid-control centre is completed, an existing facility in Barrie will serve as a backup control centre.

Hydro One anticipates moving between 150 and 250 jobs to the Orillia facility. The company’s investment in the local development is said to be approximately $150 million.

City officials, meanwhile, peg the near-term economic impact of the development at about $400 million.