The press conference that killed off Patrick Brown as the Leader of the Official Opposition of Ontario, Canada.
The sudden downfall of a minor politician seems insignificant, but consider that the Province of Ontario (Canada's largest province by GDP) is America's largest trading partner. Ontario has a GDP of $600 billion, an economy larger than most countries.
There's also a very Canadian angle to this story: at one point, Eric Lindros -- yes, the NHL hockey player -- pops up as being involved, though that's for a later story.
Brown gave this very short press conference minutes before an expose aired containing allegations of sexual harassment and assault. In a nutshell he is accused of a sex act with a drunk minor (16 years old), and the repetitive sexual harassment and alleged sexual assault of an aide.
We are months away from an election here in Ontario. Brown had a very good chance of becoming the next Premier.
As he delivered this press conference, much of his senior staff resigned, some via Twitter. Watching Brown, you can see he can barely keep it together. Not much of a Premier-in-waiting there.
As soon as he finished, he quickly moved away, pursued by the press all the way to his car. He refused to answer all but one question. "What are you going to do tomorrow?" To which he actually replied "Work as usual." Seriously?
Hours later, his caucus voted unanimously for his resignation. He tried to hang on, but in the middle of the night, he resigned.
I will write more on this, using the tag patrickbrown. There is so much more to tell.
-----
I feel bad for this guy, because guilty or not he is looked at as guilty. Even the comments on the radio, people were mentioning how he looks guilty for stepping down.
It seems to me, whether he stepped down or not people would complain. In Canada people are innocent until proven guilty, and I'd really like it if this was true for our politicians as well, because the party expects you to act in its best interest and step down before you're proven guilty. I'd argue we need more truly brilliant people in politics and these types of incidents make politics seem hostile to one's own reputation; this makes smart people want to avoid politics.
I watched a video by Faith Goldy on this incident, seems like all the guy did as kiss a girl and drive her home? Am I missing something?
Video source:
Yes. You are missing a lot. Don't listen to Goldy. I will post the specific allegations soon (there are two alleged victims). [He got a 16-year-old drunk 10 years ago (he stayed sober), took her to his home, got her into his bedroom, pulled down his pants and... and, yes, sure, he drove her home later. How nice.]
Politicians win and lose based on politics, not some steady, considered process. Political office is a high calling, and we don't have the luxury of waiting years for things to wind through the courts before deciding "Wow! I guess he wasn't suitable for that office he's occupied for years!" I reserve the right to make that choice earlier.
His own staff and caucus abandoned him. It's reasonable to assume they know something. As I will write about soon, members of his own Party have been chasing this stuff down for years.
We can't knock politicians out of the race every time a last minute accusation takes place. This would mean any candidate could be removed from running by a person making a false allegation. Why did the one girl wait 10 years other than to directly attack his career?
Sure we can. Political decisions are made all the time at and by politicians, including (for example) refusing to sign nomination papers, kicking MPPs out of caucus, out of cabinet, off of committees, out of other Party positions. There's often zero due processes for those things. The Party is bigger than any of its members. Politicians know this and take the job knowing this. Live by the sword, die by it.
These days complainants have felt that they have more power to come forward, so they are starting to do so. Most stay silent still though. The one who waited 10 years remains anonymous -- she was underage drinking at Brown's bar at the time and likely didn't want to get in trouble. Perhaps she came forward now because she feels more secure in life, and knows that she's not the only one?
The other was preserving career prospects. her other option was to lose her job, a common problem with sexual harassment claims at work.
I have a criminal complaint about someone who ran in an election years back. I stayed silent. It's damn risky coming forward. The machine behind politicians can ruin your life. Look at what Brown said: He intends to sue. Libel cases are very expensive to defend. I know because I've done it.
I complained about a very abusive situation at a different job years back. And then I lost my job because of the complaint. Ta da! Lesson learned.
I once reported a crime to the police. A person tried to violently force their way into my home. I managed to get them out without hurting them (an open hand push to their sternum that pushed back over the threshold). I closed the door as they hurled themselves at it, screaming. I called the police. They came, but were useless and refused to do anything. Then the person who had tried to break in called police in retaliation for me calling the police and made a false claim. $4000 later, the Crown agreed that person was the aggressor and dropped the matter. Between their illegal entering, their statement, and the section of the CC they employed, the person had committed several violations of the Criminal Code. Nothing was further done. The Crown refused. Lesson learned. Don't call the police.
My point in all that is this: There is considerable cost in doing the right thing. If it's just your word against another's, move on. They win. Gotta tell you though, it is damn frustrating.
Maybe one day, if that person runs for office again, I will come forward. Maybe I will because I'll have the money to hire a good lawyer. Maybe that person will be saying, in order to discredit me "why did it take 10 years...."
I totally get what you're saying, doing the right thing hurts and isn't easy to do. However I grew up being nailed against the wall more than once for something I didn't do, and it's a terrible feeling. The idea of destroying a person's career over an allegation is not okay to me, because it's too much power for one person to have with basically zero proof (To my knowledge).
Lastly the only thing I disagree with you about is that the party is priority. That is basically Hollywood style writing, the party does not come first; most of the time the 'party' is being reborn. It's character weakness to capitulate in this situation, the party has no tangible worth, only the individual does.
What are we going to do once the dust settles and we've properly factored that we've sabotaged ourselves of a leader?
In politics, the Party is more important than the individual. Absolutely. Leaders come and go. The Party remains. I've worked within two. That's how it works. Any leader who believes they are worth more than their Party is either leading a cult of personality (thus not a party) or has failed to understand that their ego is drastically over-inflated.
I cannot over-emphasize that politics is a different animal than any career. Politicians know this. They get the positions they do based on political considerations and lose it often based on the same. Lies do in politicians all the time. So do truths. So do uncertainties. People vote for and against politicians for reasons varying from the good to the very bad. It's not fair, but politics aren't fair. Should politicians lose positions based upon allegations? Absolutely. They can also muster sufficient political power to keep their positions despite allegations -> look at Trump.
Can bad results come from this sort of thing? Absolutely. In politics, that happens often.
I often say with Brown that I have made the decision to suffer his resignation if it was wrong to do because I am not willing to wait to see if they are found true when he's Premier.
I have other posts to write on this, including one as to why "innocent until proven guilty" isn't likely reliable here and is not the accepted standard in politics anyway.
You risk something great to what you care about. You see, people like me are entering into politics. My primary mission is to disrupt the status-quo, and good luck getting me to step down should you decide to throw an allegation towards me, because I'm no politician. I'll be the PM of Canada and regularly flipping people off. I'll tell the speaker of the house to go fuck himself if it suits me, it wont matter because real people will support me as their leader.
I love how right now NDP leader used the word "bullshit" and people want him to step down. Sorry but I want a measurement of efficacy in office, not political capitulation.
You should think about that, what you risk pushing people out like Brown. Eventually all that you're left with is radically progressive technologically proficient and articulate debaters. Entire parties will be destroyed by people like me, people who never wanted to go into office but feel compelled through a real sense of duty to progress the country forward.
I don't agree with Trump always, but I love that he says whatever he wants. Last thing America needs is a politician as president.