Toronto UBB Protest NDP

The NDP take over Toronto's Stop the Meter Rally

Friday's Stop the Meter protest at Yonge and Dundas Square was not quite the rally organizers were anticipating. By my guess, about 200 people of the 2,300+ who clicked "attending" on Facebook actually showed up. The reason for the low turnout is anyone's guess. The fact the rally was on a Friday, came on the same day that the CRTC announced it would delay a decision on UBB for 60 days, or the general apathy of Canadians - are all possibilities.

Toronto UBB Protest Yonge Dundas

The staging and sound equipment was paid for by the NDP party - as was mentioned at the rally - and the NDP was quick to pass out party signs sporting "Stop the Meter" as a slogan in their trademark orange colour; leaving the rally to look, and sound, more like an NDP event than a non-partisan protest. A similar, if less conspicuous, strategy was evident at the Canadians Against Proroguing Parliament protest just over a year ago.

201125-ubb4.jpg

Numerous party members spoke at the event, including NDP Leader Jack Layton and NDP MP Olivia Chow. Liberal MP Dan McTeague was the only non-NDP politician present.

The low turnout hasn't, however, fazed organizers, who are plowing ahead with the planning of their next rally, which will take place on February 26th simultaneously with other rallies across the country.

201125-Gbrydson-UBB2layton.jpg201125UBB.jpg201125-ubb6.jpg

Photos one and four by GBrydson in the blogTO Flickr pool. Remaining photos by the author.


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Doug Ford just got even tougher on Ontario bike lanes with new measures

Toronto's $27 billion Ontario Line just crossed its biggest construction milestone so far

Rare Canadian gold coin sells for over $1.5 million

Toronto ranked among the top 100 best cities in the world for 2025

A full list of all the items included in Canada's holiday GST cut

Liquid soap sold at stores across Canada recalled due to contamination

Canadians to get GST cut on groceries and new $250 rebate ahead of holidays

Snow is finally coming to southern Ontario and here's when it will hit