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Wednesday, June 17, 2026

If I Ran for Mayor

I have been having a serious debate with myself as to whether I should publish this piece on The Hamiltonian. It was initially published on The Hamiltonian After Dark; a place for my musings.

I have decided to publish this because, respectfully, anyone running for Mayor may find it helpful. I would go as far as saying that Hamiltonains need to hear this message.

If I were thinking of running to be Mayor of Hamilton, the first thing I would do is humble myself.

I would begin by recognizing a simple truth: for far too many Hamiltonians, life has become harder.

Families are struggling with the rising cost of living. Seniors worry about paying their bills and remaining in their homes. Young people wonder whether they will ever be able to afford a house in the city they love. Small businesses fight every day to survive. Many residents feel unheard, unseen, and disconnected from the decisions being made at City Hall.

I have been listening to Hamiltonians for a very long time. I know that many are bewildered. They look around and ask -How can things keep getting worse while our voices keep getting louder?

I would not insult them by pretending that another round of consultations and listening sessions alone will solve our problems. Of course I would listen. Listening is essential. But I would also understand something equally important: Hamiltonians want leadership that gets to work. They want action. They want results.

My vision for Hamilton would be ambitious and unapologetically aspirational.

Why?

Because Hamilton has everything going for it except the kind of leadership that can unlock its extraordinary potential.

We have world-class healthcare institutions. We have brilliant entrepreneurs, skilled workers, remarkable neighbourhoods, a rich cultural heritage, and one of the most beautiful natural landscapes in Canada. We have resilience. We have grit. We have heart.

We need a shared conviction that we can become something greater than what we currently are. Because we can!

In fact, we have a responsibility to aspire to greatness. When a city loses the ability to imagine what it can become, it settles for what it has always been.

That is not acceptable. And it has not been acceptable for a very long time.

I would ask Hamiltonians to imagine something bold:

A downtown that once again becomes a source of pride. Neighbourhoods that are clean, safe, and vibrant. Roads and infrastructure that are maintained with excellence. A city that approaches homelessness with both compassion and accountability. A city where investment flows, businesses thrive, and our children and grandchildren choose to stay because opportunity lives here.

A city that believes in itself again.

But aspirations mean nothing without accountability. City Hall would become a place where performance matters.

We would no longer accept a system where senior executives are paid hundreds of thousands of dollars without clearly defined, public-facing expectations. We would no longer accept situations where millions of tax dollars are lost through scandal, mismanagement, or incompetence and everyone simply moves on.

Leadership without accountability is not leadership. It is entitlement.

There must be consequences. There must be responsibility. And there must be transparency.

We would establish publicly declared goals and measurable objectives. Progress would be routinely reported to residents. When we succeed, we would celebrate it. When we fall short, we would say so honestly and course-correct.

Because trust is built through honesty.

I would also introduce a brand of zero-based budgeting. In simple terms, I would ask City Hall to imagine that we are building our municipal government from the ground up. Every department would have to answer some fundamental questions:

Why do you exist? What value do you provide to Hamiltonians? How many people do you really need? How will success be measured? What outcomes should taxpayers expect in return for their investment?

This would not be an exercise in fear or indiscriminate cuts. Services would continue uninterrupted. The lights would stay on. It would be an exercise in purpose.

Because growth in staffing does not automatically translate into better services or better value for taxpayers. Every dollar belongs to the people of Hamilton and should be treated with respect.

Finally, I would seek to inspire something that has become increasingly rare in public institutions: a culture of pride.

I want people to come to work because they believe they are making a difference. I want City employees to feel challenged, valued, and empowered. I want excellence to be recognized and celebrated.

Performance goals and accountability should never be about fear. Done properly, they become a source of pride. They create meaning. They inspire innovation. They remind people that their work matters.

And when people who serve the public feel inspired, cities transform.

Hamilton's problems are serious. But our potential is greater. Much greater.

I believe we can create a Hamilton that is so transformed, so vibrant, and so hopeful that future generations will look back and say:

“That was the moment our city decided to believe in itself again.”

Respetfully

Cal DiFalco
Publisher; The Hamiltonian
Hamilton's Tastemaker In Local Politics and Community

1 comment:

  1. AnonymousJune 17, 2026

    Music to my ears!!!! DO IT! Jackson in the creek

    ReplyDelete

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