Doug Ford's love affair with Trump and Musk shows he can't be trusted

Ontario Progressive Conservative Party Leader Doug Ford (right) campaigning in Ottawa on Feb. 4, 2025. Photo via: Doug Ford on X
Three weeks from election day, Doug Ford and his Progressive Conservatives are well ahead of their opponents in the polls. That ought to give any sensible person pause. The province is home to 16 million people. It creates roughly 40 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product. It houses major industries, including automobile manufacturing, mining, real estate, and finance. In sum, the stakes are high in Ontario. Unfortunately, the Ford years have been a bumbling mess led by a buffoon who routinely exercises bad judgment — and the province may be in for more.
It really ought to be as simple as that: Doug Ford doesn’t have the good judgment needed to be premier of Ontario. There are countless examples of Ford making bad calls, but two recent cases illustrate this, let’s say, lack of discernment, better than any other could: his support for Donald Trump and his Starlink deal with Elon Musk.
In 2018, Ford proclaimed his support for then-president Trump was “unwavering.” Throughout Trump’s first administration, he could count on the premier of Ontario to have his back in Canada — a maple Republican, a northern red-stater. Trump had already shown the world who he was, of course: an authoritarian, a vandal, an arsonist. Trump launched his presidency with a Muslim ban; he pulled out of the Paris Accords; he ripped up the Iran nuclear deal; he lied about voter fraud.
And yet, Ford’s support remained, as he said, unwavering. Even when sharper eyes, including my own, saw what was coming, and warned of it, Ford backed Trump.
Later, when Trump attempted to overturn the results of a free and fair election in 2020, Ford remained in the Republican madman’s camp. When Trump returned for 2024, threatening tariffs against Canada throughout the U.S. presidential campaign, Ford still backed him. The Ontario premier was even recently caught on a hot mic saying he was “100 per cent happy” that Trump had won the election.
“Election day, was I happy this guy won? One hundred per cent I was,” were Ford’s exact words, before adding, almost as if Trump’s attacks on Canada had been an accident, “But then, the guy pulled out the knife and fucking yanked it into us.”
So, Ford backed Trump while the U.S. president terrorized his own country, bits of Canada, and the rest of the world. He just hadn’t hit Ontario hard enough. Yet. It’s not exactly a moment of profiles in courage.
Trump had mused about making Canada the 51st state as far back as his first term. He threatened and hit Canada with limited tariffs on aluminum in 2018. Later, when he dreamt up broader and deeper duties — 25 per cent and across the board — he was merely extending a mercantilist logic he’d long harboured openly, for anyone to see. But it took Ford until late 2024 to turn on Trump. You simply cannot trust a man who backs his own enemy until the last possible moment.
Let’s then skip the delicate language and ask the question any sensible person must be thinking: How stupid do you have to be to support a man who’s threatening to destroy your country? What kind of judgment does that show?
The bad calls don’t end there. Of late, Ford has won a lot of favour with this Captain Canada bit, with some praising him for joining the pro-Canada party. He joined late, which is better than never, I suppose. But it was quite late. When Trump’s tariffs were set to land, Ford announced the LCBO, one of the largest alcohol purchasers in the world, would pull U.S. booze from the shelves. Ontario would also, Ford said, prohibit U.S. firms from bidding on provincial contracts. And the $100-million deal was off with Trump consigliere, Elon Musk, to provide rural internet access. When Trump announced a 30-day pause, Ford reversed these decisions as fast as he’d made them. Faster, in fact.
The Starlink deal should never have been signed. Musk is an odious figure and, now, as a servant of the Trump administration, is part and parcel of an executive branch coup. And yet, Ford has reinstated the deal with Musk that he’d been, quite wisely, if belatedly, set to cancel. He could, and should, have left it in the bin.
Politics is ultimately about judgment, and Ford has shown, time and time again, that his judgment is poor at best. But his erstwhile backing of Trump, which for all we know could return in the months to come, and his contract with Musk, are beyond the pale. Ontario voters ought to consider this carefully when they cast their ballots later this month, and indeed, should exercise some good judgment of their own and vote for any party except Doug Ford’s.
Comments
Ford absolutely cannot be trusted. He 'stood down' when the City of Ottawa needed him during the 'illegal' occupation by the Convoy thugs. Who did he stand down for is the big question. Obviously easy to make the assumption that he is one of them as is Smith in Alberta and Moe in Saskatchewan and of course the leader of the Opposition, Poilievre (who associated with some very unsavoury characters i.e. Diagolon, German extremist etc.). So Canada is in trouble provincially and federally with some of our leaders which is very perilous for our future.
https://globalnews.ca/news/8959365/canada-day-convoy-james-topp-far-rig…
If Canadians had more of an ability to remember...and connect a few dots over time, they'd realize who coughed up a lot of the money to get that convoy to our capital city....they'd figure out that the leader of a foreign country imagining a land mass bigger than his entire domain can be easily annexed........didn't start undermining Canada two weeks ago.
A lot of ink has been spilled about the legitimacy of the Emergency Act the federal Liberals used to shut down those faux trucker extremists. More media needed to remind us that act might not have been necessary had the Ontario government done its job.
But of course Ford stood down. Likely because he didn't want to get in the way of his alt right supporters......or his dark money American friends....who found a government willing to admit to the climate emergency distasteful....and far too 'liberal' for their business plans for Canada.
We've been gulled and conned, lied to and misinformed about the international right wing in this country and abroad. But maybe listening to Trump's big ideas for Gaza will wake us up??
More likely we'll go weak in the knees and start pretending what's happening in the Middle East has nothing to do with extremists in Canada....or the erosion of our public health and education. I fear the international conservative movement will own us....our social services and our government pensions.......before we wake up to how connected, and international, they are.
Ford's going to sweep to another majority in Ontario....and the drum beat of climate denial/AI alternatives to human labour, will grow stronger. The Canada Ford is leaping to defend is not for all of us.
Oh I think many things are coming out and about time too.
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/politics/government/former-human-rights-chief…
All of our politicians from, at all levels, need to get off Twitter and quit making life changing announcements for Canadians on the site. That site is rife with irrational characters and mis/disinformation and does great harm. Let the extremists have the site where they can roil each other and froth at the mouth and chew on their own arms wallowing in their hate.
Ford cannot be trusted; he has shown that repeatedly with his secret deals, keeping his mandate hidden from Ontarians, filling the pork barrels of his corrupt donors and a huge fan of Trump. The election call was not needed and claims he needs a large mandate to deal with Trump, which is total BS! The election call is politically motivated and nothing more.
Time to go Doug, so we can elect someone who will fix our healthcare system, education and LTC problems. Your solution was to cut funding to healthcare and education, while giving your friends a free pass on LTC incompetence.
The sad part is that likely many Ontario voters have no idea how close Ford is to Trump....the history of that family suggests a 'conservatism' that is as narrow, as 'business' focused and as unwilling to face the reality of climate change as any MAGA Republican.
But perhaps we're all somewhat mentally challenged in the west when it comes to understanding the nature of limits...when it comes to our resourcing of the natural world. The majority continue to believe that we can't afford to address rising greenhouse gas emissions....but we can afford to keep forcing the natural world to produce infinite energy for our 'wealth creation' fantasies.
Both Ford and Trump are fantacists of endless wealth creation. Who and what they destroy for ever in order to have those riviera resorts, AI data centres, and ICE jeeps and trucks ripping into our broken wilderness areas.....matters not a jot to either of them.
They live in the rapacious manosphere...not the natural world.
This column needs to be reprinted in the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star. It needs to be linked in comments on right wing social media outlets that call out all the anti-Canada pro-Trump blather there. The Ontario Liberals and NDP need to have an adult discussion about cooperation in a potential minority government situation. But first, both opposition parties need to hammer Ford on being pro-Trump even when he's temporarily acting a out abd beating his chest as Captain Canada.
Should Mark Carney become PM, then he's got to have a tougher relationship with the provinces. Having federal pockets full of cash for Ontario's projects needs to be accompanied by a big stick. Agree to transit over highways, Doug, and we'll pay a larger share. But if ir's highways over transit, then we won't return your calls while we're working lucrative deals with other provinces to fight climate.
Etc.
Politics is about judgment. It is also about ideology. Everyone, and certainly everyone in politics, has an ideology. Pierre Poilievre, for instance, is fundamentally a fascist. Ford's ideology is mostly tacit because he's never likely to think enough about the question to come up with any real explicit principles that he's mindful of, but it comes down to "Pro-elite business as usual, but with even more corruption and a weird fondness for car-driven cookie-cutter suburbs". But he's willing to posture in the direction of wherever the wind is blowing, so you get a bit of populism, a bit of MAGA-sounding stuff when he's in front of that kind of audience, a bit of EV backing if he can sound like he's creating jobs, etc. etc.
But whatever he may say for the optics of the moment, that base ideology will reassert itself; his key decision-making process is based around "How can I get cushy contracts for my cronies?" I have no doubt that he will be much richer by the time he leaves politics than he was when he gained the premier's office.
Overall, through all the variations on a theme, Trump is Doug's daddy.