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Tag: Doug Ford

  • Trump Is Attacking Canada When He Should Be Attacking Reagan

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    The Gipper loved him some free trade.
    Photo: The Independent

    One of Donald Trump’s most interesting political achievements has been to force a Republican Party that had embraced free-trade orthodoxy for many decades into supporting, or at least tolerating, his own vintage 19th-century protectionist views. Like his harsh criticism of the Iraq War launched by the last GOP president, Trump’s frequently savage words about free trade and globalization have clearly embarrassed a lot of Republicans who are old enough to remember when that kind of talk was associated with lefty union types and cranky Old Right figures like Pat Buchanan. The fact that he has now made tariff-driven trade wars the centerpiece of his second-term economic policies is often ignored by old-school Republicans, or rationalized as merely a rhetorical weapon he deploys in cutting commercial deals with other countries.

    But at least one of the Canadians who are so often an object of Trump’s protectionist belligerence is drawing attention to the 180-degree turn the 47th president executed in conservative international economic thinking, or the lack thereof. Ontario premier Doug Ford ran an ad on U.S. television networks featuring clips in which the unquestioned patron saint of pre-Trump conservatism, Ronald Reagan, loudly and proudly embraces free trade:

    Here’s what the Gipper says in the ad, which is from a 1987 speech:

    When someone says, “Let’s impose tariffs on foreign imports,” it looks like they’re doing the patriotic thing by protecting American products and jobs. And sometimes for a short while, it works — but only for a short time.

    But over the long run, such trade barriers hurt every American worker and consumer.

     

    High tariffs inevitably lead to retaliation by foreign countries and the triggering of fierce trade wars.

    Then the worst happens. Markets shrink and collapse. Businesses and industry shut down, and millions of people lose their jobs.

    Throughout the world, there’s a growing realization that the way to prosperity for all nations is rejecting protectionist legislation and promoting fair and free competition.

    America’s jobs and growth are at stake.

    Trump promptly pitched a fit at Truth Social and suspended trade negotiations with Canada:

    CANADA CHEATED AND GOT CAUGHT!!!They fraudulently took a big buy ad saying that Ronald Reagan did not like Tariffs, when actually he LOVED TARIFFS FOR OUR COUNTRY, AND ITS NATIONAL SECURITY…. Thank you to the Ronald Reagan Foundation for exposing this FRAUD.

    Actually, the Reagan Foundation complained that Ontario hadn’t asked for permission to use the clip and said it “misrepresented” the overall speech, which indeed justified the imposition of tariffs on Japan. But there’s nothing fake about the clip; Reagan was making it clear that the measures he was taking against Japan were unfortunate and temporary expedients that did not detract from his more general commitment to free trade. The 40th president did not “love tariffs for our country and its national security.” Like nearly every pre-Trump Republican leader who remembered the disastrous effects of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, which helped exacerbate the Great Depression, Reagan only used trade restraints sparingly and grudgingly.

    Trump, on the other hand, has called “tariffs the most beautiful word to me in the dictionary” and believes in them not as a temporary measure or negotiating ploy but as the foundation of a good economy. He dreams of replacing the federal income tax with tariff revenues. He is precisely the sort of demagogue Reagan was speaking of as a misguided advocate of tariffs as “patriotic.”

    You can debate whether Trump is right or (as most economists believe) wrong. But you can’t debate whether he’s taken the free-trade policies of Ronald Reagan (who was particularly devoted to dismantling barriers to trade with Canada) and tossed them in a wastebasket. That may embarrass him and other Republicans, but it’s no excuse for blaming those with better memories.

    This post has been updated.

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    Ed Kilgore

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  • Ford wants to revisit ending ticket scalping amid Blue Jays ‘gouging’ | Globalnews.ca

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    As Toronto Blue Jays tickets are resold for thousands of dollars, Ontario Premier Doug Ford says his government may revive anti-scalping legislation it previously killed shortly after assuming office.

    “My personal opinion, going to talk to the whole team, they’re gouging the people,” he told reporters on Wednesday afternoon. “We have one player in the market that controls the tickets, that’s not right for the people.”

    Asked if he’d consider legislation specifically, Ford said his government would look at the option.

    Ford’s comments come a day after Blue Jays World Series tickets went on sale on Ticketmaster. Less than two hours after sales began, tickets were being listed for sale for more than $2,000. 

    On Tuesday, a single ticket in section 135 in the Rogers Centre for Game 1 was priced at $4,954. The lowest individual ticket found was in section 510 for $1,723, taxes included.

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    The prices caused uproar on social media, with many Jays fans questioning why a ticket could be purchased within minutes and potentially put back on the market for a significantly higher cost than it was likely purchased for.

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    The anger over price resales is not new, with anger erupting last year during Taylor Swift’s Eras tour which saw similar ticket prices and frustration.


    Click to play video: 'Toronto Blue Jays fans in Maritimes cheering team on as they head to World Series'


    Toronto Blue Jays fans in Maritimes cheering team on as they head to World Series


    Ford’s government previously scrapped part of a law that would have capped ticket resale prices at 50 per cent above the original face value.

    A section in the previous Liberal government’s Ticket Sales Act would have imposed that cap, but the Progressive Conservatives paused implementing it shortly after the 2018 election.

    A year later in 2019, it cancelled the rule, saying it was unenforceable and that it would have driven consumers to buy tickets on the black market and drive costs higher.

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    The Liberals under former premier Kathleen Wynne had originally introduced the legislation to tackle “scalper bots” that scoop up huge blocks of tickets.

    John Fraser, the Ontario Liberals’ parliamentary leader, told reporters Wednesday that reviving anti-scalping legislation was the “right thing to do.”

    “When we’re all waiting in line and we’re not getting tickets and the next second we see is 10, 12 times the price, that’s not fair,” Fraser said.

    NDP Leader Marit Stiles, asked if the legislation should be brought back, told reporters it should, “100 per cent.”

    “We asked for this when it came to the Taylor Swift concert, right, we need the government to take action,” Stiles said, adding her party will present something soon in the legislature.

    In his comments Wednesday, Ford said he doesn’t believe in one company “controlling everything,” and specifically named Ticketmaster.


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    Sean Previl

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