Bill Kelly: Doug Ford’s foot-in-mouth disease
Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford, left, and Ontario Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne shake hands after taking part in the second of three leaders' debate in Parry Sound, Ont., on Friday.
Nathan Denette / The Canadian PressIn a classic case of damage control Sunday, PC Leader Doug Ford was telling anyone who would listen that he really, really likes immigrants and that immigrants like him.
It sounds very much like Ford’s assertion that he really supports families living with autism, even though he tried to shut down a home for autistic youth in his Etobicoke ward when he was a city councillor.
The latest backtracking comes on the heels of his comments at a leaders’ debate in northern Ontario on Friday.
READ MORE: Wynne, Ford and Horwath enter second week of Ontario election campaign
When asked about instituting an incentive program to attract skilled immigrants to the north, Ford said he might consider it, but, as he stated, “we have to look after our people first.”
Just who are “our people?”
Ford’s comment not only plays into the hateful and erroneous theory that immigrants are taking jobs away from “his people,” but it also runs contrary to the desire that many northern Ontario politicians have advocated for, namely to attract more skilled immigrants to fill jobs in northern communities.
READ MORE: Ford, Horwath spar in northern debate as Wynne defends her record
It seems that every time that Ford strays from the talking points that his handlers have written for him, he puts his foot in his mouth with outrageous and often inaccurate statements.
His tenuous grasp of the issues facing Ontario is concerning. What’s more concerning is that for many voters, it doesn’t seem to matter.
Bill Kelly is the host of Bill Kelly Show on AM 900 CHML and a commentator for Global News
© 2018 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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