pud99
Senior Member
Sounds like a doomsday scenario.
The situation today is that Ford does not have the power to appoint the deputy mayor, to appoint the executive committee (which is the gatekeeper of iniatives and the budget process) or to appoint the chairs of committees. The decision that produced this result provides for its own expiry at the end of the current term. However, I cannot see anything in the Municipal Act or the City of Toronto Act that would disable city council from making exactly the same decision again at the opening of the next term. (The powers given to the mayor by statute, which cannot be 'retracted' by council, do not include the appointment powers mentioned above; those appointment powers belong to city council, which can decide to delegate them to the mayor and equally can decide not to delegate them to the mayor.)