Ford fights back against ruling striking down council-cutting plan
TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford took the unprecedented step Monday of invoking a rarely used charter provision known as the notwithstanding clause to push ahead with his plan to slash the size of Toronto’s city council in the middle of an election, despite a court deeming the move unconstitutional.
Ford said his Progressive Conservative government would also appeal the judgment, which concluded the province’s council-cutting legislation was hurriedly enacted and interfered with the right to freedom of expression for both candidates and voters.
“I believe the judge’s decision is deeply, deeply concerning,” Ford said hours after the scathing court ruling. “The result is unacceptable to the people of Ontario.”
Ford’s use of the notwithstanding clause, which gives provincial legislatures or Parliament the ability to override certain portions of the charter for a five-year term, drew swift condemnation from critics, who said the size of Toronto’s city council was not the kind of issue the constitutional provision was designed to deal with.
