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Who gets your vote for Mayor of Toronto?

  • Ana Bailao

    Votes: 18 16.4%
  • Brad Bradford

    Votes: 3 2.7%
  • Olivia Chow

    Votes: 58 52.7%
  • Mitzie Hunter

    Votes: 2 1.8%
  • Josh Matlow

    Votes: 20 18.2%
  • Mark Saunders

    Votes: 4 3.6%
  • Other

    Votes: 5 4.5%

  • Total voters
    110
  • Poll closed .
Tory didn’t break any laws, all he had to do was admit he’d shagged a staffer and that he’s admitting it now because he wants to reconcile with his wife, and he’s taking a few months off. He had the support of the premier and there’s no recall mechanism at council, so Tory could have stayed.
Er...not really denying that. Rather a professional misconduct was made, it would of look really bad if he stayed...and likely many would demand he should go. And therefore, he could not reasonably run his office normally under that. So the only real option was to resign...

...I mean sure, he could dig in and choose to stay full on Rob or Trump, but the working relationship would never be the same or normal, to put it mildly.

So yeah, he left under his own volition...but not for the reasons you think he did, lol. And it should go without saying, that without this inappropriate relationship cropping up...he would of likely chosen to stay on. And campaign for another term even.

Anyways, this thread really isn't about Tory, as he's gone and there are other threads for that. So time to move on and focus on potential new mayors here.
 

Advocates say ranked ballots allow for better representation, more civility and more diversity in an election.​

What’s this about? How do you game ranked ballots?

“Another sea change came with the introduction in 2002 of ranked-choice voting that put an end to elections where the top candidates went on to a runoff election if they did not win an outright majority. Since then, in races where there is no absolute majority, the winner is only selected after successive rounds of tabulations, known as instant runoffs, in a confusing process that can readily be gamed by backers of particular candidates.”
 
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Some Toronto officials will lose their free-parking passes, but city councillors keep theirs​

From link. Dated Tue., Jan. 29, 2019

The TPA board voted to cancel parking passes for a handful of officials including Toronto Fire Chief Matthew Pegg and Dr. Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s medical officer of health.

Some Toronto officials and former agency directors are losing unlimited free parking at Green P lots and on-street parking, but many more politicians, officials and retirees are being allowed to keep the controversial perk.

The board of directors of the Toronto Parking Authority voted Tuesday to cancel parking passes for a handful of officials including Toronto Fire Chief Matthew Pegg and Dr. Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s medical officer of health.

Also stripped of the unlimited free parking will be ex-TPA board members who left after the start of 2014, including Peter Leon, appointed as city councillor for 11 months to replace Etobicoke representative Doug Holyday, and Darius Mosun, chief executive of an architecture firm.

Future TPA directors will not keep the freebie after leaving the board, nor will 20-year-plus TPA staff who leave the city agency but do not officially retire from it.

Mayor John Tory was among those who criticized a list of more than 160 people who were slated to get routine renewal of passes, in addition to TPA staff and contractors hired to do work in the lots.

Tory questioned the agency’s reasons for giving the freebie to so many people and asked for a review of who should continue getting it.

“I think it aggravates the citizens who we represent, when they see these people on what look like fairly flimsy reasons (getting) free parking and everyone else doesn’t,” he told reporters in December.

The mayor, who is often chauffeured and does not get a parking pass, questioned why city councillors need free parking. Two of the 25 city councillors — Michael Ford and Gord Perks — currently refuse the passes.

The reforms approved Tuesday by the TPA board, in line with the recommendations of Rob Oliphant, the agency’s acting president, cancel only about 10 current passes, costing the city about $6,778 a year, while preventing more passes from being issued in the future.

Oliphant said in a report councillors should continue getting free parking and the board concurred.

City councillors got a total of $15,822 worth of free parking last year “primarily for work,” TPA staff said, and should keep the passes because removing them would just force councillors to charge the parking costs to their office expenses, and not save the city any money.

“A very limited number of passes are issued to other (city agency) and City of Toronto staff, for business travel purposes,” that would also likely be expensed, staff said. The board voted to have councillors’ use of the pass detailed in their office expenses made public.

Also keeping the passes are TPA retirees with 20-plus years service, to “honour and reward their longtime commitment” to the agency, a practice “not inconsistent with other transit organizations.”

The board — currently three city staff, soon to be replaced by a mix of city councillors and public appointees — also approved rate increases of 50 cents per half-hour at eight Green P lots.

The hikes are aimed at generating a total of $3 million in annual revenue from the following lots: 21 Pleasant Blvd.; 30 Alvin Ave.; 37 Queen Street E.; Nathan Phillips Square; 20 Castlefield Ave.; 30 Roehampton Ave.; 40 York St.; and 20 St. Andrew St.

The parking authority’s mandate is to give Torontonians “high turnover, low cost, short term parking, especially in commercial areas.” To help achieve that TPA tries to set rates no higher than 75 per cent of the average price charged by nearby private parking lots.

Is there any update after this article?
 
I don't think Mitzie is that much better known.

Yes but she does have some minor political chops. Gil from what I can tell is more of a businessman with dabblings in NGO's.

In terms of Toronto, Mitzie is better known (at least in Guildwood).

I would feel more comfortable voting for someone who knows Toronto and Ontario politics than someone who has a bold vision but no experience.
 
Why does our mayor have to be a former or current elected politician. John Tory was never elected to anything until he became mayor, and had he not dipped his toe in the staff room he’d still be leading the city today to many people’s (excluding UT) satisfaction.
 
Why does our mayor have to be a former or current elected politician. John Tory was never elected to anything until he became mayor, and had he not dipped his toe in the staff room he’d still be leading the city today to many people’s (excluding UT) satisfaction.

He was the leader of the Ontario PC party. While never being an MPP that has to count for something
 
Like I said, he was never elected to any political seat. If that failure demonstrates anything it’s that a successful mayor needn’t have been previously electable.
I agree, I don't think viable candidates necessarily need to exclusively be career politicians. Rob Ford was an elected councilor for what, at least a decade before he became mayor, and look how that turned out.
 
Bad Badford says he wants change at City Hall, but his advisory committee includes Karen Stintz, Kory Teneycke, Jamie Watt (Navigator), Brian Teefy (StrategyCorp), Barbara Fox (Enterprise Canada), a Liberal Party strategist and the chair of Civic Action.

The old back room gang.

 

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