Ontario ‘blessed,’ says Kathleen Wynne on eve of World Pride

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83


Ontario ‘blessed,’ says Kathleen Wynne on eve of World Pride

On the eve of World Pride celebrations, Kathleen Wynne has spoken movingly about how accepting Ontario voters were in electing Canada's first openly gay premier.
Speaking with Matt Galloway on CBC Radio's Metro Morning on Wednesday, Wynne was asked how it felt to shatter such a barrier and be a pioneer at the helm of any government in a Commonwealth jurisdiction.

“Isn't that wonderful? It's wonderful,” enthused the premier, who led the Liberals to a majority election win last Thursday.

“It's a wonderful thing about this province. It's a wonderful thing about this country‎,” said Wynne, who succeeded Dalton McGuinty in February 2013 but had not faced the electorate until last week.

“As I said in my acceptance speech on election night, this is a beautiful and inclusive place that we live in. We're blessed,” said Ontario's first female premier.
Wynne noted her spouse Jane Rounthwaite was on the hustings with her throughout the marathon 41-day election.

“Jane was with me the whole time on the campaign bus,” she said.

“We were welcomed in communities in every part of this province and I think it speaks to who we are as Ontarians.”

With World Pride kicking off this weekend, Wynne is not the only trailblazer in the Liberal caucus.
Transportation Minister Glen Murray‎ was the first openly gay mayor of a large North American city.

Ontario ‘blessed,’ says Kathleen Wynne on eve of World Pride
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,844
93
48
It just makes you tingle with shame, all this talk of fudge packers and clam eaters. Who the eff really cares which adults you're diddling behind closed doors but the left always has to talk about it. Now the usual suspects will have their say.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
55,601
7,090
113
Washington DC
It just makes you tingle with shame, all this talk of fudge packers and clam eaters. Who the eff really cares which adults you're diddling behind closed doors but the left always has to talk about it. Now the usual suspects will have their say.
Presumably, the people who were hysterically terrified enough about it to criminalise it in religious and civil law.
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
45
48
65
if mr wynn says it is, it must be. he wouldn't lie to you.
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
210
63
In the bush near Sudbury
It just makes you tingle with shame, all this talk of fudge packers and clam eaters. Who the eff really cares which adults you're diddling behind closed doors but the left always has to talk about it. Now the usual suspects will have their say.
And there you are: right at post 2....
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
It just makes you tingle with shame, all this talk of fudge packers and clam eaters. Who the eff really cares which adults you're diddling behind closed doors but the left always has to talk about it. Now the usual suspects will have their say.

I love that pic.

It's like a kick in the balls for homophobes.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
The 80s.

I thought we were beyond that too, but just take a look at some Con posts and you will see they are still stuck in the 1880s.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,373
11,436
113
Low Earth Orbit
The 80s.

I thought we were beyond that too, but just take a look at some Con posts and you will see they are still stuck in the 1880s.

We should be beyond news articles cheering on a homosexual politician as well. Odds are good we've already had a gay PM. In or out doesn't make anything different.
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
45
48
65
as long as the summer-touque neckbeard crowd has a creamy latte, lifetime network and new 'devices', they're happy. probably never been out of the ossington strip but they're happy...and blessed. lowest information generation ever.
 

eh1eh

Blah Blah Blah
Aug 31, 2006
10,749
103
48
Under a Lone Palm
It just makes you tingle with shame, all this talk of fudge packers and clam eaters. Who the eff really cares which adults you're diddling behind closed doors but the left always has to talk about it. Now the usual suspects will have their say.

Wow. How 1950 of you. Remember, no masturbating for you.



We should be beyond news articles cheering on a homosexual politician as well. Odds are good we've already had a gay PM. In or out doesn't make anything different.

Well the difference is the haters are discounted when people are out and accepted.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
Good thing Ford keeps harping about how good this is for Toronto.

Toronto’s Pride Festival evolves into economic powerhouse

On the day before Toronto’s annual Pride Festival, Cafe California manager Vince Moneva sat in his restaurant, talking excitedly about what the event means to his business.

The festival is a big draw for the downtown area annually, and this year promises to be significantly bigger as Toronto hosts WorldPride, expecting a 66-per-cent increase in attendance.


The Pride Festival, which began Friday night and runs through to next Sunday, with the annual parade, means a lot to the bottom line of independent businesses such as Cafe California.

“Pride Week represents our profit for the year,” said Mr. Moneva, who has managed the establishment with his wife Leticia since 1988, with as many sales during the week as in a busy month.

“If it wasn’t for Pride, we wouldn’t be able to survive.”

Pride’s economic weight has grown with its popularity, now a 10-day festival expected to draw nearly 2 million visitors, with concerts from Melissa Etheridge, Carly Rae Jepsen, and Tegan and Sara, and sponsors like Toronto-Dominion Bank, Air Canada, and Telus Corp.

SPONSORED CONTENT
One big thing Canada could learn from Saudi Arabia

Pride Toronto, the non-profit organizer of the festival, estimates that the 2013 economic impact was $286-million, and that this year will be significantly bigger.

“It’s a huge event economically,” said Sean Hillier, co-chair for Pride Toronto, citing a study commissioned from market researcher Research House that indicates the festival created 3,470 jobs and generated $61-million in tax revenue in 2013.

David Roberts, a lecturer at the University of Toronto who teaches a course on cities and mega-events, agreed the festival is an economic powerhouse, though suggested the estimates were high.

He also argued the festival means a lot for the city’s image. “It shows they can host large events,” he said in an interview. “It fits Toronto’s brand image as a tolerant and diverse city.”

Andrew Weir, vice-president for Tourism Toronto, said the growth of Pride is something to be excited about,

“One of the most encouraging things about Pride is how it stretches across the city,” he said. “It’s not just a parade.”

Scott Dagostino, the manager of Glad Day Bookshop, described Pride as “our Christmas,” adding the store makes three times as many sales during the event. For Glad Day, it’s a welcome boost.

“This year has been kind of bad,” he said of the struggling bookselling industry. “To be honest, Pride kind of rescues us.”

While Pride Week is not an economic cure-all for businesses in the area, there is some reliance on the festival’s economic impact to fend off the rapidly rising rents that have closed a number of shops.

It makes the steady growth of Pride that much more important for the businesses that depend on it.

While Pride can’t always be expected to have the resources of World Pride, there’s pressure to deliver, Mr. Weir said.

“We have to make sure that [World Pride] sets a new floor, that we keep some of the equity we’ve built up in the festival. We have to make sure it’s always World Pride here.”

Follow us on Twitter: @GlobeBusiness

Two million expected to attend WorldPride festival in Toronto

Toronto’s Pride Festival evolves into economic powerhouse - The Globe and Mail
 
Last edited: