Premier Doug Ford and his Education Minister Lisa Thompson, both inexperienced in education policy and singularly unqualified to be making decisions on it, are all but certain to find themselves in a nasty battle this summer with the unions that represent Ontario's teachers. A few weeks ago Ford launched an early broadside: teachers should be required to take an annual math test. As policy, the idea is pointless. For it is hard to imagine that even Ford believes his proposal will meaningfully improve the consistently poor scores Ontario students have received on the province's standardized math tests over the past several years. However, when judged through the lens of naked political opportunism, Ford's idea makes great sense.

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To begin with, it avoids thornier and more costly proposals, such as reducing class sizes, revamping the math curriculum (Dalton McGuinty tried that early in his tenure, and the kids' standardized test scores dropped), investing in continuing education for teachers, or reminding parents that they have a role to play in reinforcing lesson plans at home. Rather than treating Ontario's math problem as a serious policy challenge, Ford has chosen instead to capitalize on it as an opportunity to demean and scapegoat an opponent. When teachers are on the picket lines this September, the premier will be happy to remind the public that the province's educators are so obtuse that they couldn't even pass a middle-school math test. This latest expression of contempt also dovetails nicely with his announcement that his government will save itself some money by eliminating nearly 3,500 teaching jobs. An insult to teachers This kind of tough talk appeals to two distinct parts of Ford's base. Teachers may not view themselves as part of the elite — a bogeyman Ford prefers to keep amorphous — but for voters who enjoy watching Ford rail against those who sip pink champagne, an attack on a well-regarded authority figure satisfies the same visceral urge to take someone else down a notch. Meanwhile, wealthier voters continue to flock to Ontario's growing private schools. For them, the notion that public school teachers are unqualified and incompetent validates their decision to abandon the public system. Ford's rants also offer the mirage that one day his government will lower their tax bill. In challenging Ford's proposal, Harvey Bischof, President of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation, noted that high-school teachers are assigned subjects based on their expertise and that a capable history teacher who could not pass Ford's math test would be prevented from continuing to teach history. It's a fair point, but a rhetorical disaster. For it concedes the possibility that all but a tiny fraction of qualified teachers in Ontario would, with sufficient notice and an opportunity to prepare, fail a middle-school math exam.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young Ontario Premier Doug Ford, centre.