This is a special edition of Doorstep Postings, the periodic political commentary column written by Josh Lieblein for The CJN.

It’s a shame that our Palestinian friends have spent so much time and gotten so good at pointing out the contradictions that underlie and undermine our political systems. I say it’s a shame because they never seem to take into account how far people will go to uphold those contradictions.

NEW: Premier Doug Ford says he stands by his opposition to the Keffiyehs ban in the legislature.

The Premier also points out that he's not responsible, since the rules of Queens Park are largely governed by the speaker#ONpoli pic.twitter.com/xj7FxXYJjP

Pressing on one of these culture-war touch points is meant to produce a crack in the facade. Instead, the pressure produces another diamond of a ridiculous spectacle of amateur and allegedly professional legislators falling all over one another. Each scrimmage is ridiculous in its own unique way and is rendered completely indistinguishable from the last time this happened.

Did we ever figure out if a guy in a Spider-Man costume is allowed to scale the front entrance of Mount Sinai Hospital? How about that time when an apparently non-existent bus company was chartered to take Israel supporters to Ottawa and then took the money and ran? Was the vandal who apparently firebombed a food store whose sign reads “IDF” ever actually found?

To ask these completely logical questions is to miss the point. The wonking-off about law and custom and tradition and precedent—which overwhelms the debate every time—is the point.

Today, I sought unanimous consent in the Legislature to reverse the keffiyeh ban at Queen’s Park.

It did not go through.

Some members of the Conservative government voted against the motion. Premier Ford needs to make sure that his team is doing the right thing.#ONpol pic.twitter.com/gIvsmld3v0

Ontario has 124 well-paid professional point-missing provincial parliamentarians occupying Queen’s Park, each with their own brigade of hacks, flacks and family members. As they count the days until they qualify for their pension, they pass the time with recognitions of holidays and handing out Trillium pins, while the health care system and the housing supply burns. So, it stands to reason that some of the worst of these trivialities would bubble up from that house of ill repute.

If they can argue about something like the meaning behind an article of clothing—worn for some cosplaying symbolic purpose that most of the province doesn’t understand the first thing about—it is, for them, a break from the mundane. We must also once again remind the MPPs and the people they represent that, as provincial politicians, nothing they say or do affects anything related to Canada’s extremely minor sphere of influence over the Middle East.

Lots of backlash tonight to Ontario Speaker Ted Arnott's decision to ban keffiyehs from the legislature. Now the Premier is asking for a reversal #onpoli pic.twitter.com/vPcfIFvwvW


“Research” done by house speaker Ted Arnott, a man who is remarkable for being a non-entity amongst non-entities, into whether the wearing of the keffiyeh scarf in the Ontario Legislature is thusly four degrees removed from any relevance to the conflict. Arnott is so good at blending into the background that it recommends him higher than any other elected member for the position of Speaker. I know MPPs who’d be more offended by the presence of a Toronto Maple Leafs jersey, or a woman wearing a sleeveless top, in the legislature.

And yet his boss, Doug Ford, a man who never stops reversing himself at the first sign of trouble, threw the his own elected party member under the bus when he announced via social media that Arnott’s finding of the keffiyeh to be a divisive political prop was divisive in itself.

Some lore about the Milton provincial byelection, @zeeinmilton has been deleting all his social media photos where hes wearing a keffiyeh because hes afraid if he tells the local Pakistanis in Milton his thoughts on Palestine in public, he will lose the white PCPO vote in Milton https://t.co/Ekf2UUUIaw

Political observers immediately started circulating the approved explanation, which was that Ford and the PCs were nervous about losing the May 5 byelection in the mosque-heavy riding of Milton.

The result was that Jewish organizers, fresh off a meet-and-greet with cabinet ministers at the Prosserman JCC on April 9—where they non-divisively wondered why Ford’s party has been so slow about locking up pro-Palestinian protesters—soon realized that they’d been had.

It was an impactful evening to be at the Yalla Evening of Conversation, moderated by Brian Lilley, about our community safety and standing up against antisemitism and hate of all kind. Thank you to Daniel Warner and Avi Glina for organizing this event. pic.twitter.com/jt6f3krjkC

The day after, a motion to overrule the speaker was proposed by embattled NDP leader Marit Stiles, whose own position on the conflict has evolved from booting the keffiyeh-favouring MPP Sarah Jama from her caucus. Liberal leader Bonnie Crombie, herself no stranger to similar ethnic politics scrimmages in her home city of Mississauga, signalled her support.

Meanwhile, the Jewish MPPs, such as solicitor-general Michael Kerzner, were told that they could wait out in the hall if they couldn’t handle the heat and needed an excuse. And then, at the last minute, the whole house of cards came tumbling down.

Conservative backbenchers dragged their feet and the motion was no more, and we were in exactly the same position we had been before with the anti-keffiyeh side winning by default before they’d even had the chance to get organized. With everyone completely humiliated, the sad episode was put to bed and the Ontario Legislature went back to debating the scourge of fourplexes creeping into our neighbourhoods.

NEW: ⁦@OntarioNDP⁩ Leader ⁦@MaritStiles⁩ will seek unanimous consent from the legislature at 10:30 am to allow kaffiyehs to be worn in the chamber. ⁦@OntarioPCParty⁩ and ⁦@OntLiberal⁩ have asked the Speaker to lift ban. #onpoli https://t.co/FNqkoFuFzP

This whole display—much like the Iranian regime’s barrage of missiles fired at the Jewish state last weekend—now serves as fodder for various spin machines. Progressive Conservatives are actually supportive of banning the keffiyeh, but are too afraid to say what they really think. PCs are and always were Liberals in blue suits—just look at the Trudeau Liberal they have running for them in Milton. Doug Ford always hated Jews despite once claiming that his wife was Jewish. The entire political process is in thrall to demographics, and so long as there are more of them than there are of us, there’s very little we can do.

[In today's @nationalpost]
J’ACCUSE…! AN OPEN LETTER TO PRIME MINISTER JUSTIN TRUDEAU
Mr. Trudeau, we accuse you and your government, through your actions and inactions, of having contributed to the antisemitism we see running rampant in Canada today. You have permitted it to… pic.twitter.com/9F0SGz68WT

Far be it from anyone to finally realize that the enemies of the Jewish people are never going to stop looking for weak spots and pushing as hard as they can, no matter how trivial they may seem. The traditional methods of political engagement will endure, because when you always do what you always did, you’ll always get what you always got. And we’ll continue to place our faith in institutions that we know don’t have our best interests at heart instead of taking matters into our own hands.

In a bizarre moment in his press conference, Premier @fordnation said a government bill, Bill 166, goes too far in mandating anti-racism and antisemitism policies for colleges and universities.
Ford just threw @JillDunlop1 under the bus and reversed policy. Again.
Beep, beep… pic.twitter.com/Py1C5kSjsL

Sure, they wear a piece of cloth around their necks. But we’ve been wearing one around our eyes.

Josh Lieblein can be reached at [email protected] for your response to Doorstep Postings.

QOSHE - Doorstep Postings: Doug Ford scarfs it down after some of his party members support the house speaker keeping keffiyehs out of Queen’s Park - Josh Lieblein
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Doorstep Postings: Doug Ford scarfs it down after some of his party members support the house speaker keeping keffiyehs out of Queen’s Park

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18.04.2024


This is a special edition of Doorstep Postings, the periodic political commentary column written by Josh Lieblein for The CJN.

It’s a shame that our Palestinian friends have spent so much time and gotten so good at pointing out the contradictions that underlie and undermine our political systems. I say it’s a shame because they never seem to take into account how far people will go to uphold those contradictions.

NEW: Premier Doug Ford says he stands by his opposition to the Keffiyehs ban in the legislature.

The Premier also points out that he's not responsible, since the rules of Queens Park are largely governed by the speaker#ONpoli pic.twitter.com/xj7FxXYJjP

Pressing on one of these culture-war touch points is meant to produce a crack in the facade. Instead, the pressure produces another diamond of a ridiculous spectacle of amateur and allegedly professional legislators falling all over one another. Each scrimmage is ridiculous in its own unique way and is rendered completely indistinguishable from the last time this happened.

Did we ever figure out if a guy in a Spider-Man costume is allowed to scale the front entrance of Mount Sinai Hospital? How about that time when an apparently non-existent bus company was chartered to take Israel supporters to Ottawa and then took the money and ran? Was the vandal who apparently firebombed a food store whose sign reads “IDF” ever actually found?

To ask these completely logical questions is to miss the point. The wonking-off about law and custom and tradition and precedent—which overwhelms the debate every time—is the point.

Today, I sought unanimous consent in the Legislature to reverse the keffiyeh ban at Queen’s Park.

It did not go through.

Some members of the Conservative government voted against the motion. Premier Ford needs to make sure that his team is doing the right thing.#ONpol pic.twitter.com/gIvsmld3v0

Ontario has 124 well-paid professional point-missing provincial parliamentarians occupying........

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