Rob Ford's longest-lasting legacy may be in the minds of voters who felt deeply connected
Ford Nation crowned their king because of his faults, not despite them
Long before Donald Trump bragged his loyal followers would support him even if he was linked to crime, Rob Ford's voter base did exactly that.
Ford Nation is the nickname for the largely suburban, conservative group who passionately supported former Toronto mayor Rob Ford, who died Tuesday at the age of 46.
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That group put Rob Ford on a throne, and the crown didn't slip — despite accusations and public meltdowns that would have destroyed other public figures.
Their actual loyalty far surpassed any hypothetical scenarios in Trump's recent boasts. And the reason for it is evident in posts and comments on Ford Nation social media sites: people felt like like they knew him, and forgave his faults because they believed he cared.
'There's so many memories Rob and I had shared'
"There's so many memories Rob and I had shared," wrote Connor Kripas. "I went to get one of his business cards and they had none, and I mentioned he blew all the money on other stuff, and Rob had a massive chuckle over it and basically agreed."
Ford made a point of connecting personally with voters, taking phone calls on his personal cellphone, visiting their homes and inviting them to his own. His long-running annual backyard barbecue at his mother's house (dubbed Ford Fest in recent years) often drew hundreds.
"Everyone in Toronto is welcome," read the invitation in 2012, about two years into his term as mayor. Some reports estimated as many as 5,000 people came to the event that year.
True to life or not, that image of Ford — the popular, available, serves-his-electorate leader who let his flaws show — is the enduring one for many.
"Rob did a lot of wrong things but I think he had a good heart," said one supporter at a suburban Toronto strip mall near Steak Queen, one of Ford's favourite haunts. "Nobody's perfect — the vice-presidents aren't perfect, CEOs, prime ministers. I don't think anybody's perfect. But I liked him as a person, I thought he was a good person."
Cleaning up the 'NDP mess' and fighting the 'downtown elites'
Ford's popularity rose during a time when the political mood in Canadian noticeably shifted right. He was a voice for suburban conservatives whose discontent simmered for years over the belief their values weren't reflected in Toronto municipal leadership.
"We started cleaning up the left-wing mess federally in this area," Harper said then. "Rob's doing it municipally. And now we've got to complete the hat trick and do it provincially, as well."
Ontarians elected a Liberal minority government a few months later, and a Liberal majority government in the election after that. But at the municipal level, Ford kept his support. He was re-elected as city councillor in 2015 after he withdrew from the mayoral race over health concerns.
And although cancer halted his ambitions for a mayoral bid in 2018, Ford Nation believes even his death was, in one sense, a victory against the "liberal elites" he detested.
"I always hoped he would fight his way back," wrote Ford Nation supporter Ted Davidson on Facebook Tuesday. "There is one consolation, though — Rob's death has upstaged the federal Liberals' first budget," he wrote.
"Rob would be happy."