Ferreira blames defeat on homophobia
ONTARIO ELECTION / 'This community deserves better'
Andrea Houston / Toronto / Friday, October 07, 2011
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Paul Ferreira blames a campaign of homophobic sabotage for his narrow defeat in the Ontario election Oct 6.

“There was an attempt to drive a homophobic wedge through this riding,” he explained after speaking to supporters at the Ambiance Banquet Hall in York South-Weston.

The evening was a nail-biter as NDP candidate Ferreira and Liberal incumbent Laura Albanese stayed neck-and-neck even after polls closed. With only three polls remaining and about 500 votes separating the two, Ferreira stepped up to the microphone at about midnight, forced a smile and thanked his campaign team to thunderous applause.

In his speech, he said that homophobia featured prominently during the campaign and that it is the main reason for his defeat.

“I am a gay man. A lot of buttons were pushed in this riding at the doorstep because of that,” he tells Xtra. “Those were messages of intolerance and division. This community deserves better.

“The people here in York South-Weston are loving and tolerant and accepting… Not once at the door did anybody make an intolerant or homophobic remark. Not once. But there were folks that went to the door pushing those buttons. It’s an unfortunate way to do politics. It demonstrates we still have attitudes to change, especially among our leaders.”
Paul Ferreira thanks his campaign team after losing to Liberal incumbent Laura Albanese.
(Andrea Houston)


In the final days of the campaign, Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak went on the defensive about campaign flyers that rivals have called “disgusting” and “homophobic.” A few days earlier, the National Post and the Toronto Sun came under fire for running a transphobic ad from the Institute for Canadian Values that protested proposed revisions to Ontario's physical and health education curriculum. The Post eventually apologized for the ad, but the Sun refused to.

Then, Willowdale PC candidate Vince Agovino distributed a similar transphobic ad by mail that contained a letter stating he would “defend” Catholic schools from “queer issues.” Agovino lost his riding.

NDP MP Mike Sullivan, who was on hand to support Ferreira on election night, says the homophobia in the campaign spilled over into the riding of York South-Weston. Ferreira was the target of “anti-gay epithets,” Sullivan says.

“Paul’s personal life has no business in politics in this day and age,” he says, sighing. “I was looking forward to working with him. Paul is a class act. He deserved a whole lot better than he got. And it was so darn close.”

Ferreira, senior advisor to NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, plans to spend some time with his partner, Tim, and his mother, who was diagnosed with cancer during the campaign. “I’m going to recharge the batteries.” He says it’s “far too soon” to say if he will run again in the next provincial election.

This was Ferreira’s fifth election campaign, including two provincial runs in 2007 and runs for the NDP federally in 2004 and 2006.


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Reader Comments


 
Working Class Area
If the voters in this working class area(one of the poorest in toronto) are so tolerant as claimed, why did a former City of York School Board Chair who was running for office fundraise in the Church-Wellesley area and run in the City of York? I have canvassed in the riding discussed and though I don't know about their tolerance of gays, there are some people in this riding who really dislike people living on welfare, going to foodbanks etc.
Gloria, toronto Ontario
10/07/11 12:35 PM EST
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This doesn't add up
"there were folks that went to the door pushing those buttons." Ferreira doesn't say Conservatives - he says folks - and looking at the results (Ferreia: 13020; Liberal Albanese: 13862) it seems homophobia targeting Ferreia would have been far more to the Liberal incumbent's benefit than the Conservative (who only received 3461 votes). Why jump to a story about a hateful Conservative pamphlet distributed in another riding? Why hasn't the Liberal campaign been asked about these allegations? Is Xtra only capable of reporting Conservative homophobia?
April, Toronto Ontario
10/07/11 4:37 PM EST
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