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Scheer's Camp Says Pressing Doug Ford On French Services Cuts Like Talking To A Wall

Charlemagne

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11/19/2018 08:38 EST

Andrew Scheer's Camp Says Pressing Doug Ford On Ontario's French Services Cuts ‘Like Talking To A Wall’

The Ontario premier has set off a national debate that could hurt federal Tories in 2019.

By Althia Raj

CHRIS YOUNG/CP

Ontario Premier Doug Ford meets with Federal Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer in the Queens Park Legislature in Toronto on Oct. 30, 2018.

OTTAWA — Blindsided by the Ontario premier's decision to cut French services, Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer's camp is hoping that Doug Ford realizes he's set off a national debate that could hurt Scheer in next year's federal election.

"We are associated to a decision that we did not help make, that we were not aware of — we learned this at the same time as everybody else when they made their announcement — and now, it's like, as if by association, we are OK with that decision," a frustrated member of Scheer's team told HuffPost Canada on Sunday.

In a fiscal update Thursday, the Ford government announced it was backing away from its election promise to fund a French-language university in Toronto and was eliminating the Office of the French Language Services Commissioner — moving some of those responsibilities to the province's ombudsman.

The provincial government painted the decision as a cost-cutting move, though it did not reveal how much money it expected to save.

"The road ahead is not an easy one and will require difficult decisions," Ontario Finance Minister Vic Fedeli said. "Everyone across the province will be required to make sacrifices, without exception."

Scheer was not consulted on the decision or given any advanced notice, the source said. It was also clear from Ford's team's initial response that they had given no thought to what the decision might mean for the federal Conservative leader, he added.

When Scheer's office called them Friday morning, "it was like [we were] coming from Mars," the source said. "Life and politics, it is not just numbers."

At a press conference Sunday, Scheer said he conveyed "concerns" he heard from people, including members of his caucus, to Ford directly on Saturday when the two met at the Ontario PC convention in Toronto.

"And just reinforced with him the idea that as prime minister in 2019, I would certainly be looking for ways of protecting and enhancing services to official languages communities all over Canada, of course, in Ontario as well," Scheer said.

But the Tory leader sidestepped questions over whether he had asked Ford to reverse the cuts.

"It's up to Mr. Ford to manage those types of things," Scheer responded, when asked again whether he made a direct request of the Ontario premier.

Scheer said his support for the official languages "is unwavering," and he said it would be "very, very clear to Canadians" where he stands on protecting official languages in next year's election.

He remained hopeful, it seemed, that voters would see a distinction.

"People in the next federal election will be voting on federal issues," he said. "And people in provincial elections vote on provincial issues."

Scheer spoke with Ford, Caroline Mulroney

Scheer isn't trying to say he doesn't care what happens to Franco-Ontarians, the source told HuffPost.

"We could have gone to Toronto and not talked to him about it. We sat with him, we told him to his face: 'What did you just do? And why? And this doesn't work, there are consequences and maybe you don't realize it.'"

Scheer spoke with Ford and with Caroline Mulroney, the minister responsible for francophone affairs.

The two leaders spoke for 15 minutes. "After two minutes, we realized that he wasn't going to change his mind," the source said. "It was like talking to a wall."

Scheer's camp told the Ford team that their decision hadn't just touched a chord in Ontario, but also one in Quebec. Columns and editorials denouncing the decision have been published in every major Quebec newspaper, with some opinion writers questioning the province's role in the federation if official languages are so easily attacked elsewhere.

"Anglophones are more rational, but us francophones, we are more emotional," the source said.

He compared Ford's decision to former prime minister Stephen Harper's decision to cut services to veterans. The government at the time thought it was doing a good thing, solving a problem by streamlining services and closing small offices, but instead, he noted, the decision set off a firestorm in the veterans community and created enemies for no good reason.

"We made that mistake. And now they've made that same goddamn error that we did in the past."

While Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed his deep disappointment with Ford's decision, federal Official Languages Minister Mélanie Joly sought to paint the Ontario premier and Scheer with the same brush. She tweeted over the weekend: "Scheer and Ford's Conservatives should know that Francophones cannot and will not be shortchanged."

Scheer and Ford's Conservatives should know that Francophones cannot and will not be shortchanged. We will defend the 600,000 Franco-Ontarians and 7,9 millions Francophones of our country.https://t.co/bcSSYz4pA3

— Mélanie Joly (@melaniejoly) November 18, 2018

Scheer spent much of his Sunday press conference complaining that the Liberals were politicizing the issue and noting that he had been the first leader to reach out to Ford's office.

"We shouldn't have to wear this," the Tory source told HuffPost. "I think up to now, we've done what we've needed to do.

"We sat with Mulroney. We sat with Ford. We delivered a message: our own concerns, the concerns of our caucus," the source said. "And after that, they are big boys... .

"We'll talk to them again [Monday] and I would really like them to say, 'we're reversing our decision.'"

https://m.huffingtonpost.ca/2018/11/19/andrew-scheer-doug-ford-french-cuts_a_23593494/?ncid=fcbklnkcahpmg00000001&fbclid=IwAR3_NmIi80fImQhhNHbs79pKPBHYYwV5etcY8Tp6ez3npEY5PA4xh98_M2g
 

essguy_

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Nov 1, 2001
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OH BOY!!! A family dogfight between a neutered poodle and a retarded, overweight pitbull.
 

Orion1027

Member
Jan 10, 2017
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What a popcorn fart of an issue! Quebec has Bill 101 that places restrictions on the English language, and nobody has the balls to whisper a peep about it. Ford cuts some spending and all of a sudden it’s a cataclysmic.
 

bver_hunter

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Dumb DOFO needs someone to tell him that Canada is a BILINGUAL Country. Just because he is not smart enough to learn a second language, that does not mean that he has to present obstacles to students who want to develop their multilingual skills. Not surprising that an election promise is broken. Maybe he cannot remember all the election promises, and that is why they were very hesitant to disclosing it. But Baby Scheer could not even convince him change his mind. Can he be trusted to overcome any tiny obstacles that may arise if he takes over as a PM. Nahhh!!
 

saxon

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Dec 2, 2009
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Dumb DOFO needs someone to tell him that Canada is a BILINGUAL Country. Just because he is not smart enough to learn a second language, that does not mean that he has to present obstacles to students who want to develop their multilingual skills. Not surprising that an election promise is broken. Maybe he cannot remember all the election promises, and that is why they were very hesitant to disclosing it. But Baby Scheer could not even convince him change his mind. Can he be trusted to overcome any tiny obstacles that may arise if he takes over as a PM. Nahhh!!
Canada is bilingual? Tell that to Quebec.
 

nottyboi

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May 14, 2008
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Man with all those Conservatives messing with Scheer, Trudeau could run his campaign from the Aga Khans island and still win!!!
 

Moviefan-2

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Oct 17, 2011
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Prior to last week, I suspect the overwhelming majority of Ontarians had no idea there was an office for francophone affairs. Rolling its responsibilities into the Ombudsman's duties makes perfect sense.

As for the former Liberal government's promise of a new French university, post-secondary experts such as Alex Usher have pointed out that Ontario doesn't have a student population that could support such a university.

There are plenty of French-language university and college programs in Ontario. Building a new university that would consist of almost-empty lecture halls seems dumb to me.
 

bver_hunter

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Nov 5, 2005
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"As French-language schools and enrolment grew across Essex County, so did a sense of excitement over plans to launch Ontario’s first-ever French-language university, possibly with a satellite campus in Windsor.

The new campus — at a cost of around $80 million — was scheduled to open in downtown Toronto in September 2020 with an initial enrolment of up to 400 students. A president and board of governors for the post-secondary institution were already named and in place."

https://windsorstar.com/news/local-news/cancelled-french-language-university-saddens-local-community

A dumb decision to cancel as there were 400 students enrolled, and the staff was already enlisted. That does not make the lecture halls "empty". The progress made in education etc. by the previous Government in education will be going down the drain!!
 

Moviefan-2

Court Jester
Oct 17, 2011
10,489
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A dumb decision to cancel as there were 400 students enrolled, and the staff was already enlisted. That does not make the lecture halls "empty".
My high school had more than 400 students, and it wasn't serving a geographic area extending from Toronto to Windsor.

To put this in perspective, the French-speaking population at the University of Ottawa is 13,000 students.

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/co...ghts/wcm/7bf3d78a-c34f-45e2-b91e-beda494b43c4

Here's Alex Usher's analysis from last year: http://higheredstrategy.com/a-francophone-university-for-ontario/

A total waste of money.
 

bver_hunter

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Nov 5, 2005
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My high school had more than 400 students, and it wasn't serving a geographic area extending from Toronto to Windsor.

To put this in perspective, the French-speaking population at the University of Ottawa is 13,000 students.

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/co...ghts/wcm/7bf3d78a-c34f-45e2-b91e-beda494b43c4

Here's Alex Usher's analysis from last year: http://higheredstrategy.com/a-francophone-university-for-ontario/

A total waste of money.
Obviously The National Post will blindly support any Conservative Government.

400 students was just a start. There are 600,000 Francophones in Ontario and growing. Investment in education is never a waste of money.

So why is Scheer convinced that it was the wrong decision then? How do we keep Canada as a bilingual nation, and just scrap education institutions that want to embrace and advance that cause??

The only positives I see is it hurting Scheer's Elections hopes, especially in Quebec and among the Francophones in Ontario. Therefore I will not lose sleep over it!!
 

Orion1027

Member
Jan 10, 2017
482
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Dumb DOFO needs someone to tell him that Canada is a BILINGUAL Country. Just because he is not smart enough to learn a second language, that does not mean that he has to present obstacles to students who want to develop their multilingual skills. Not surprising that an election promise is broken. Maybe he cannot remember all the election promises, and that is why they were very hesitant to disclosing it. But Baby Scheer could not even convince him change his mind. Can he be trusted to overcome any tiny obstacles that may arise if he takes over as a PM. Nahhh!!

Perhaps someone should inform Quebec of that too, with bill 101 and all. What a bunch of hypocrites liberals all are!! How is it that not one person has mentioned Quebec’s “language police”, sign laws etc?
 

Zaibetter

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Mar 27, 2016
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Canada is bilingual? Tell that to Quebec.
Quebecers should open their mouth, they're language nazis. If you want a french university go to Quebec. Apparently Trudeau the Groper is not happy with it and is going to jerk off Ford.
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
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Perhaps someone should inform Quebec of that too, with bill 101 and all. What a bunch of hypocrites liberals all are!! How is it that not one person has mentioned Quebec’s “language police”, sign laws etc?
Language Police is a bit over the sun. However, what is wrong with Bill 101, if that is what the Quebecers desired? The Quebec Economy is diversified with strong manufacturing and service sectors? The Conservatives just moan about everything, like it is doomsday to them. Sheesh!!
 

wigglee

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2010
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Ford is getting a lot like idiot Trump. Both his french diss and his insane buck a beer ploy ( which he bragged about again today) are counterproductive in terms of playing to his base. Alcoholics probably don't vote, but francophones do. He thinks he can be the darling of the beer swilling anglo rednecks, but I don't see it paying off, except maybe with Zaibetter
 

essguy_

Active member
Nov 1, 2001
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People - don't miss the forest for the trees here. At the heart of this is that the National Conservative Leader and Ontario Conservative Leader simply don't respect each other.

Scheer thinks that Ford should listen because he is "Andrew Scheer, Leader of the CPC" and Ford is just "dumb Ford". Ford thinks that Scheer should fuck off because he is Doug Ford, recently elected Premier of Ontario and Scheer is just "hapless Poodle Scheer". Neither thinks much of the other and Ford, when his fat head hits the pillow, likely dreams of being PM one day. He can't do that unless Scheer loses. Scheer is simply clueless and thinks that people should listen to him because he's the "leader", forgetting that he was an obedient clapping seal for a decade in power with ZERO leadership ability and he's viewed as a joke by many.

It's very funny to watch.
 
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