Civic Issues: Will Toronto elect a woman as its Mayor? (Part-1)
Will Toronto elect a woman as its mayor for the remainder part of the current term? If it is, she will be the third woman mayor of this business capital and otherwise the biggest city of Canada.
Olivia Chow, a high-profile politician and widow of NDP leader Jack Leyton, has been waiting for this moment. A former MP and two-time mayoral candidate, she is leading the polls in a race to fill the seat Toronto’s former mayor John Tory vacated four months after the last Municipal election. His abrupt departure, after admitting to a lengthy affair with a former staffer, created an unexpected opening for long time mayoral hopefuls who put their aspirations on hold while Tory dominated the rough-and-tumble world of big-city politics. It is why the number of aspirants for top civic post in the country has gone up more than three times since the October 2022 polls.
And one of the candidates, Toby Heaps, claims that he is contesting the Mayoral polls on behalf of his dog, Molly.
Early this week, when a leading news magazine, The Economist, came out with this sustainability survey, it put Toronto in its list of top 10 Most Liveable cities. Interestingly, two other Canadian cities – Vancouver and Calgary – finish a little higher than Toronto in the Most Liveable cities survey.
Toronto is one of the most populous cities in North America, as well as the most populous city in Canada. Though Ottawa is the capital of the country, Toronto is the undisputed business capital of Canada.
It is a multicultural and multi ethnic city and has among strong runners for the coveted post of Mayor, a woman of Asian origin. Till now, Toronto has never elected any South Asian as its Mayor.
Among the top runners for the post are Olivia Chow, Anthony Perruzza, a sitting councillor; Chloe Brown, who finished third in the last mayoral election; Anthony Furey, a former Toronto Sun columnist; Mark Saunders, former Police chief of Toronto; Brad Bradford, a sitting councillor; and Josh Matlow, also a sitting councillor; besides Ana Bailao, a former councillor and Deputy Mayor, and Mitzie Hunter who resigned as an Ontario Liberal MPP to enter the race.
Ana Bailão has endorsements from councillors Jennifer McKelvie, Paul Ainslie, Shelley Carroll, Vince Crisanti, Frances Nunziata, Nick Mantas, Chris Moise and James Pasternak.
Olivia Chow has been endorsed by councillors Alejandra Bravo, Ausma Malik, Amber Morley, Jamaal Myers and Gord Perks.
Mark Saunders has been endorsed by councillor Stephen Holyday.
Councillors Brad Bradford, Josh Matlow and Anthony Perruzza are running for mayor but have no endorsements from fellow councillors.
Since the city is a hub for business, the arts, and finance, it is no surprise that it is one of the safest cities in the world. Homicides, snatchings, sexual assaults, thefts and robberies do take place in this “mini world” but they rarely hawk media headlines. Perturbed over the increase in incidents of assaults, snatchings and heinous crime on board the public transit system, one of candidates, Mark Saunders, a former police chief of Toronto, has promised more policemen to make local travel very safe.
Incidentally, June Rowlands (née Pendock; May 14, 1924 – December 21, 2017) was a Canadian politician who was the 60th mayor of Toronto from 1991 to 1994. She was the first woman to serve as Toronto’s mayor.
Toronto’s first mayor, William Lyon Mackenzie was appointed in 1834 after his Reform coalition won the new City of Toronto’s first election, and Mackenzie was chosen by the Reformers.
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