New research suggests room for Rob Ford’s populist appeal to be duplicated
OTTAWA — Ask whether populist politics could ever gain national traction in Canada and the answer is immediate: well, Rob Ford already did it in Toronto.
The now-deceased former mayor’s man-of-the-people appeal and his promises to “stop the gravy train” saw voters crown him king of Canada’s largest city in an electoral upset that many would later liken to Donald Trump’s surprise victory in the U.S.
Was it a one-off?
A new study by EKOS Research and The Canadian Press shows that the same world views held among Trump’s supporters still exist in the areas where Ford found a great deal of support in 2010, the suburbs around Toronto’s downtown.


