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Conservative MP Julian Fantino is sworn in as minister of state for seniors during a cabinet shuffle at Rideau Hall in on Jan. 4, 2011. - Conservative MP Julian Fantino is sworn in as minister of state for seniors during a cabinet shuffle at Rideau Hall in on Jan. 4, 2011. | THE CANADIAN PRESS

Conservative MP Julian Fantino is sworn in as minister of state for seniors during a cabinet shuffle at Rideau Hall in on Jan. 4, 2011.

Conservative MP Julian Fantino is sworn in as minister of state for seniors during a cabinet shuffle at Rideau Hall in on Jan. 4, 2011. - Conservative MP Julian Fantino is sworn in as minister of state for seniors during a cabinet shuffle at Rideau Hall in on Jan. 4, 2011. | THE CANADIAN PRESS
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Julian Fantino: Superstar?

Globe and Mail Update

The Conservative Party may win every single seat in the 905 next election or they may not win a single one in the vote-rich ring around Toronto. In either case, Tuesday’s cabinet shuffle will have next to nothing to do with the outcome.

So why in the world are otherwise smart pundits claiming otherwise? The shuffle is heralded as a “major boost for Toronto” by the Star, and this paper’s Ottawa bureau chief proclaims that “Harper lays stakes in Toronto suburbs with pre-election shuffle.”

It all sounds very dramatic and game-changey. It really, really isn’t. While Peter Kent’s new albatross that is the environment portfolio under Stephen Harper has been dealt with adequately by others, I thought focusing on how Julian Fantino may, or may not, play a role in swinging 905 seats to the Conservatives would be instructive.

Ladies and gentlemen: Mr. Seniors, Julian Fantino. Sure, the seniors portfolio is “about as junior as cabinet jobs come” but “seniors are important for the Conservative political strategy, however, since older voters tend to vote Conservative more than do younger voters”. A fact – seniors do vote Conservative in greater numbers than younger voters. But remember – this is all about a massive breakthrough in the 905 that leads to a historic Conservative majority. That’s the thesis being posited.

So let’s assume that somehow Fantino makes seniors even more likely to vote for the Conservatives than they were pre-Fantino (a fairly shaky assumption given that I’m not sure many seniors would say “I was going to vote Liberals but damn, the job Fantino did with that meaty seniors portfolio, doing all those important things that seniors ministers do... Why it just changed my mind”), it really won’t make much of a difference in the 905.

There are 20 ridings in the 905. Thanks to the still brilliant site Pundits’ Guide, I simply ran the rankings of every single riding in Canada from oldest to youngest. Here are the 905 ridings with their ranking (ie – the 308th riding is the youngest riding in Canada)

Ajax-Pickering – 274th

Bramalea-Gore-Malton – 297th

Brampton-Springdale – 298th

Brampton West – 300th

Burlington –61st

Halton – 295th

Markham-Unionville – 227th

Mississauga-Brampton-South – 278th

Mississauga East-Cooksville – 237th

Mississauga-Erindale – 258th

Mississauga South – 138th

Mississauga-Streetsville – 281st

Newmarket-Aurora – 233rd

Oak Ridges-Markham – 236rd

Oakville – 108th

Oshawa – 187th

Richmond Hill – 190th

Thornhill – 175th

Vaughan – 284th

Whitby-Oshawa – 245th

I’m no statistician but I notice a tiny trend: The 905 is probably the youngest cluster of ridings in the country. Certainly in Ontario. Seventeen of 20 ridings are in the youngest half of ridings in the country. The Brampton seats – which are presumably key targets for the Conservatives – are the two youngest seats in Ontario. That of course doesn’t mean that there aren’t seniors in each and every riding but the notion that having a “seniors minister” helps swing the 905? The demographics don’t work. If anything, it may make the Conservatives seem out of touch with the actual constituents of the 905 – young families. These people may take the kids to visit grandpa on weekends but in terms of who actually lives in the ridings, they’re disproportionately young.

But let’s put the “facts” of the 905 aside – facts do nothing but get in the way of a good narrative. Fantino could not be in a more different position from the average senior in Canada. Fantino’s pension, based on back of the envelope math, is worth almost $120,000 per year. Consider:

After five years as OPP commissioner, Fantino would be entitled to collect at least $20,000 annually under the Ontario Public Service Pension plan.

For his thirty-six years of service in his various roles that use the OMERS pension plan (London police, York Region police, Toronto police), Fantino would collect at least $87,000 per year.