It’s not me, it’s you.

That appears to be the message from Premier Kathleen Wynne to Mayor Rob Ford over a dispute on funding for the city of Toronto.

“Relationships involve more than one party,” Wynne said curtly Tuesday.

Her comments came after the mayor’s tumultuous one-hour meeting Monday with Finance Minister Charles Sousa at Queen’s Park.

Ford left saying he was “furious” at a change in funding arrangements that will leave the city with a $50 million budget hole to fix next year.

“He told me to increase taxes. This was a complete waste of everyone’s time today. I’m very disappointed,” a visibly seething mayor said afterward.

But Wynne, who pointedly did not once mention Ford by name during a 14-minute news conference, insisted “the city of Toronto is being treated fairly.”

“It’s been given the power, as I say, to control its own finances to a large extent,” she said, noting the Liberal government gave the city “powers — not just over just taxation and revenue streams — but over its own destiny.”

The premier also pointed out that the phasing out of transitional funding to the city comes as the province is uploading social services costs, which appeared to refute Ford’s claim that the most vulnerable would be affected.

“As we have been taking back costs that the city had imposed upon it, by the previous (Progressive Conservative) government, what we’ve been doing is allowing the city to have more space,” said Wynne.

“So social costs that were imposed on the city and other municipalities are being taken back by our government in order to give the city more flexibility.”

Still, the premier expressed mild concern that relations with Ford — whose office has been in disarray for the past five weeks since the Star and the website Gawker reported the existence of a video allegedly depicting him smoking crack cocaine — have soured.

“I’m sorry that the relationship has deteriorated at this point,” she said. “But I believe because we are treating the city fairly . . . we’ll get that back.”

Wynne emphasized that any political differences she may have with the Conservative Ford are not personal.

“My relationship with particular individuals in municipalities, including the city of Toronto, really has nothing to do with this particular discussion,” she said.

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“I have been critical of a negativity in politics that isn’t associated to one politician or another. I believe that it is in the best interest of all of our constituents across the province if municipalities and the provincial government find ways to work together.”

But when asked if she trusted Ford, Wynne, who usually remains at the microphone to answer all media questions, uncharacteristically walked away.

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