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  • Eisenberger hearing Jackson's footsteps

    The Hamilton Spectator (Ontario, Canada)
    July 28, 2007 Saturday
    Final Edition


    Eisenberger hearing Jackson's footsteps

    by Terry Cooke, The Hamilton Spectator


    "Don't look back. Something might be gaining on you." -- baseball
    great Satchel Paige

    With more than three years to go before the next municipal election,
    the number of potential challengers for the mayor's job is growing.
    The names of Marie Bountrogianni, Brad Clark, Lloyd Ferguson and Chad
    Collins wouldn't begin to exhaust the list of prospects. And just for
    fun, let's add the name of business mogul- philanthropist Mark
    Chamberlain.

    But Fred Eisenberger should pay special attention to east-Mountain
    Councillor Tom Jackson. Jackson has quietly positioned himself as the
    politician most likely to frustrate the mayor's aspirations for a
    second term and succeed at the political version of Survivor that
    promises to play out over the next couple of years.

    Jackson may be better prepared than others for what lies ahead
    because he is a consummate survivor in life and politics. Jackson's
    father arrived in Canada after having been orphaned in the Armenian
    genocide. The name on his passport read Missag Toumajian. Canada in
    the 1950s was not a place of opportunity for people with strange
    names and dark skin, so he reinvented himself as Ernie Jackson.

    His son, Toros Toumajian, became Tom Jackson so he could have a
    fighting chance in their new country. Starting kindergarten, Tom was
    fluent in Armenian but couldn't speak a word of English. Perhaps
    because of that initial handicap, he learned to develop relationships
    easily with people from all walks of life. Those abilities would
    serve him well in his chosen career as a politician.

    A McMaster grad who worked at Stelco before owning a pair of Second
    Cup stores, Jackson was first elected to council in 1988 in his
    second attempt for public office. He has polled among the highest
    vote totals of any councillor across the city in every election
    since.

    Jackson suffered a setback when he ran on Hamilton Mountain for
    Stephen Harper's Tories in the 2004 federal election (along with
    Eisenberger, who ran for the Tories in Hamilton East) but bounced
    back last year to win big -- again -- municipally.

    Jackson has more finely tuned political antennae than any member of
    council, including the mayor. He is an old-fashioned populist with an
    uncanny nose for public opinion. Jackson's support spans many parts
    of the constituency. His following includes an unconventional but
    potent mix of social conservatives, suburban ratepayers, cops and
    ethnic minorities.

    The most visible sign that Eisenberger has started looking over his
    shoulder came last month, when he threw his media adviser Ian Dovey
    over the side and restructured his office in an attempt to impose
    some administrative discipline. Less than a year into a four-year
    term, the mayor wisely recognized that his political honeymoon is
    over, with little accomplished and no clear agenda.

    Even more troubling for the mayor is a recognition that the coalition
    that got him elected has unravelled, leaving him without a reliable
    political base. The critical first year of his mandate was spent
    chasing fringe issues, like an anti-idling bylaw, that siphoned
    energy from the things that will surely define the next election: a
    healthier local economy and taxes.

    Look for the mayor to sharpen his focus to a few key issues come the
    fall as he attempts to recapture lost momentum.

    Negotiating a permanent solution to downloading, driving economic
    development, redeveloping the West Harbour and landing an NHL team
    will likely consume Eisenberger's attention as he readies himself for
    re-election.

    Jackson, on the other hand, will wait patiently in the wings to see
    if Eisenberger falters. He thinks the race will be won by the
    challenger with the fewest enemies and least self-inflicted wounds.

    Having spent much of his life preparing for just this kind of test,
    Tom Jackson's survival instincts will make him a contender worth
    watching.

    Freelance columnist Terry Cooke is a former Hamilton-Wentworth
    regional chair. He is president of Cooke Capital Corporation.
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