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2010 Toronto mayoral election

The 2010 Toronto mayoral election was held on October 25, 2010, to elect a mayor of the city of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The mayor's seat was open for the first time since the 2003 Toronto election due to the announcement by incumbent mayor David Miller that he would not seek a third term in office. The nomination period for the 2010 municipal election opened on January 4, 2010, and closed on September 10, 2010. The result of the election was a victory for former city councillor Rob Ford. He received 47% of the vote.[1]

2010 Toronto mayoral election

← 2006 October 25, 2010 (2010-10-25) 2014 →
Opinion polls
Turnout50.55%
 
Candidate Rob Ford George Smitherman Joe Pantalone
Popular vote 383,501 289,832 95,482
Percentage 47.11% 35.61% 11.73%


Mayor before election

David Miller

Elected Mayor

Rob Ford

A number of the mayoral candidates at a campaign forum in June 2010

Campaign

In the 2006 Toronto election, David Miller was easily reelected as mayor, winning 57% of the vote and leading in 42 of the city's 44 wards. On September 25, 2009, Miller announced that he would not be running for re-election. Prior to Miller's announcement important figures had already been contemplating mayoral bids, most notably Deputy Premier George Smitherman and former mayoral candidate and Progressive Conservative leader John Tory.[2] Miller's withdrawal created an open race and the possibility of a wide field of candidates contesting the position.[3] While there was speculation that Tory and Smitherman would both be contesting the race, Tory announced in January that he would not be a candidate. Tory's 2003 campaign manager and Liberal fundraiser Rocco Rossi announced he was running on December 14, 2009.[4] Smitherman announced on November 8 that he was resigning from the provincial cabinet in order to run for mayor.[5] They were joined in the campaign by right-wing councillors Giorgio Mammoliti and Rob Ford.

The left was initially split between two high-profile candidates: Deputy Mayor Joe Pantalone and TTC chair Adam Giambrone. Giambrone formally launched his campaign on February 1, 2010, but ended as sex scandal caused him to withdraw on February 10, 2010.[6]

According to Ford campaign organizer Richard Ciano, the campaign disregarded "the conventional wisdom [that] conservatives don't win in Toronto". The campaign rejected the conventional strategy of focussing on specific areas. The campaign bypassed traditional media outlets and used telephone town hall events to call some 40,000 homes simultaneously and invite respondents to a talk-radio-style event hosted by Ford. This created grassroots momentum and facilitated small donations and grew the campaign's database.[7]

Ford campaigned on ending wasteful spending at City Hall and campaign slogans such as "Stop the Gravy Train" and "respect for taxpayers" resonated with the public.[8] His campaign's extensive internal polls showed that wasteful spending at City Hall was one of the biggest concerns among voters, although that "seemed to be the last thing any of the other candidates were talking about".[7] Ford also pledged to do away with the city's century-old fair-wage policy, which required that private contractors be paid the same as union employees. It was said that Ford successfully tapped into recession-weary "ordinary" people who comprise the bulk of the population of Toronto, who were angry at perceived financial mismanagement at City Hall and powerful city employee unions with generous benefits and pension plans.[9]

Ford's message of putting taxpayers' interests before that of labour and special interests was also said to have attracted wide support among diverse immigrant communities in the inner-city and suburbs (whose demographics contrast sharply with the "urbane creative class" of The Beach and the Annex neighborhoods). By contrast, "people knew precisely nothing about what George Smitherman stood for", according to a spokesman for George Smitherman, who was considered Ford's chief opponent.[7][10][11]

Smitherman and other political opponents attempted to make an issue of Ford's past controversial statements and incidents. However, these did little to hurt Ford's popularity. A pollster found that "one middle-aged woman explained that she would overlook personality failings in a mayor – as long as he didn't waste her taxes".[12][13] According to campaign staffers Richard Ciano and Nick Kouvalis, these personal attacks were turned into advantages by the Ford campaign, portraying rivals making these personal attacks as "trying to keep the gravy train going".[7] The barbs directed at Ford generated more donations to his campaign, as did a deliberate lack of sophistication in style. According to Kouvalis "our polling said, don't put him in a $2,000 suit".[7] The revelation of Ford's DUI conviction in Florida, and his subsequent public apology, led to an increase in support for Ford.[7]

In June 2010, Ford and fellow councillors criticized retiring Councillor Kyle Rae for holding a retirement party at the Rosewater Club and billing the $12,000 cost to his office budget. Rae said that unspent campaign funds he was forced to turn over the city more than covered the cost, but critics pointed out that the campaign money was not his to spend. This example was used by Ford as an example of the "gravy train" at City Hall.[14][15][16]

On August 17, 2010, the National Post reported that a computer user inside the Toronto Star company made edits to the Wikipedia article about Ford that his campaign considered "very serious libel" and copyright infringement. Bob Hepburn, a Toronto Star spokesman, denied responsibility for the edits. "The Toronto Star owns a couple of these IP portals and they come under Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, which is a broader thing. The Toronto Star itself has a separate portal", said Hepburn.[17]

A Nanos Research poll, published on September 19, 2010, showed Ford doubling his lead from 12% to 24.5% over second-place candidate Smitherman (45.8% to 21.3% of decided voters).[18] The Nanos Research Poll asked 1021 "likely voters" from September 14 and 16 with Rob Ford receiving 34.4% of likely voters, Smitherman 16%, Joe Pantalone 12% and undecided voters at 25%.[19] A Global News Ipsos-Reid poll released Monday, September 27 showed Ford's lead diminishing at 28 per cent, with George Smitherman at 23 per cent, Joe Pantalone (who pledged to continue the policies of outgoing mayor David Miller) at 10 per cent, and Rocco Rossi and Sarah Thomson (who dropped from the race on September 28 and endorsed Smitherman) at seven per cent each.[20][21] On October 22, an EKOS Research Poll found Ford with an 8 per cent lead over second place Smitherman in decided voters; 43.9% to 35.6%.[22]

Ford also criticized Smitherman's previous record as provincial Minister of Health, where Smitherman had been responsible for approving most of the sole-sourced contracts before the scandal of eHealth Ontario erupted. A Ford spokesman said "the voters and the taxpayers of Toronto are going to get a very clear message from this information today that George Smitherman has no fiscal credibility to be mayor of Toronto. He is incapable of handling a budget".[23][24]

On October 12, the campaign became nasty when signs were posted on University Avenue with the slogan "Wife-beating, racist drunk for mayor!" The anonymous signs were a veiled attack at leading candidate Rob Ford. All the leading candidates declared their disgust about the signs that were quickly removed.[25] George Smitherman was also the subject of attack ads later in October, with a radio ad targeted to the Tamil Canadian community and a poster targeted to Muslim voters both suggesting that the communities had an obligation to support Ford, because he is married to a woman, over Smitherman, who is openly gay and married his partner in 2007.[26]

Spending

Ford spent $1,723,605.77 on his campaign, which exceeded the mayoral campaign spending limit of $1,305,066.65. Smitherman's campaign spent $2.2 million. Campaign rules exclude a wide range of fund-raising expenditures, accounting for the over-spending.[27] At the end of the campaign, the Ford campaign was $639,526.60 in debt, the Thomson campaign was $140,000 in debt and the Rossi campaign was $60,000 in debt, while the Smitherman campaign was debt-free. A special "Harmony" fund-raising dinner was held in January 2011 and the $1 million in proceeds used to pay off the debts.[28] Pantalone's campaign finished $55,000 in debt, and he held his own fund-raiser to cover the debt[28] after he declined to participate in the "Harmony" fund-raiser because of former premier Mike Harris's participation.[29]

In April 2011, John Lorinc of The Globe and Mail wrote an article about the Ford campaign finances, noting that $69,722.31 of campaign expenses were paid by Doug Ford Holdings, the Ford family firm. The family firm also paid for a $22,713.04 contract to rent the Toronto Congress Centre for a campaign kickoff event. Both expenses were repaid but the borrowing may have constituted an illegal corporate contribution to the campaign.[27] Activist Adam Chaleff-Freudenthaler and lawyer Max Reed filed a complaint about the Ford campaign's borrowing and over-spending to the City of Toronto Compliance Audit Committee.[30] In May 2011, the committee voted to proceed with an audit of the mayor's campaign finances.[31] Penalties under the Municipal Elections Act range from fines to removal from office.[31] Ford first appealed the decision to audit the campaign, then dropped the appeal in April 2012. The city contracted the firm Froese Forensic Partners to conduct the audit.[30] The audit found that the Ford campaign had overspent by $40,000, but the audit committee decided to not refer the violation to a special prosecutor.[32]

Results

 
Mayoral results by ward

Official results from the City of Toronto as of October 28, 2010.[33]

Candidate Number of votes % of popular vote
Rob Ford 383,501 47.114%
George Smitherman 289,832 35.607%
Joe Pantalone 95,482 11.730%
Rocco Rossi 5,012 0.616%
George Babula 3,273 0.402%
Rocco Achampong 2,805 0.345%
Abdullah-Baquie Ghazi 2,761 0.344%
Michael Alexander 2,470 0.304%
Vijay Sarma 2,264 0.277%
Sarah Thomson 1,883 0.232%
Jaime Castillo 1,874 0.231%
Dewitt Lee 1,699 0.209%
Douglas Campbell 1,428 0.176%
Kevin Clarke 1,411 0.173%
Joseph Pampena 1,319 0.162%
David Epstein 1,202 0.148%
Monowar Hossain 1,194 0.147%
Michael Flie 1,190 0.146%
Don Andrews 1,032 0.127%
Weizhen Tang 890 0.11%
Daniel Walker 804 0.098%
Keith Cole 801 0.098%
Michael Brausewetter 796 0.098%
Barry Goodhead 740 0.091%
Charlene Cottle 735 0.09%
Tibor Steinberger 733 0.09%
Christopher Ball 696 0.085%
James Di Fiore 655 0.08%
Diane Devenyi 629 0.078%
John Letonja 592 0.073%
Himy Syed 582 0.071%
Carmen Macklin 575 0.07%
Howard Gomberg 477 0.058%
David Vallance 444 0.055%
Mark State 438 0.054%
Phil Taylor 429 0.053%
Colin Magee 401 0.049%
Selwyn Firth 394 0.049%
Ratan Wadhwa 290 0.036%
Gerald Derome 251 0.031%
Total 813,984 100%

Issues

Several issues emerged early in the campaign. Transportation was one issue with debates over cycling and public transit. Bike lanes on streets such as Jarvis Street and University Avenue were one issue. Rocco Rossi[34] was strongly opposed to such bike lanes (insisting that bike lanes instead be placed on parallel sideroads) while Pantalone supported them, Mammoliti endorsed the bike lanes on Jarvis, and Ford stated he would not remove any such installations.

The debate over public transit focused on Mayor Miller's Transit City initiative. Rocco Rossi called for a halt to Transit City and instead pushed for more subways in a plan he called "Transit City Plus",[34][35] and also for the completion of the Allen Expressway in a tunnel along the cancelled Spadina Expressway alignment, to the Gardiner Expressway.[36] Ford had long opposed the Transit City plan.[37] Pantalone supported continuing the Transit City project. Sarah Thomson proposed replacing the planned LRT lines with subways paid for with road tolls.[38] Smitherman had an ambitious transit plan, calling for expansions both to subway lines and to the Transit City plan, though his projected funding sources faced criticism.[39]

Another important issue was how to pay for municipal services. One proposal was to sell city assets. Rossi proposed selling Toronto Hydro.[34] Sarah Thomson called for restructuring TCHC and a line by line review of every department at city hall.

Four mayoral candidates (Rocco Rossi, George Smitherman, Joe Pantalone and Rob Ford) signed a pledge to give faith-based groups a bigger role in municipal government.[40]

Candidates

There were six "major" candidates running who were included by the media in public opinion polls and mayoral debates during the campaign, although by election day only three remained as active contenders: Ward 2 councillor Rob Ford, deputy mayor and Ward 19 councillor Joe Pantalone and former Liberal cabinet minister George Smitherman.

Giorgio Mammoliti was also included in debates until his withdrawal from the contest.[41][42] Magazine editor Sarah Thomson announced on September 28, 2010, that she was ending her campaign, and former Liberal fundraiser Rocco Rossi dropped out of the campaign on October 13, 2010. Due to their late withdrawal, Thomson's and Rossi's names remained on the ballot.

Registered candidates

Candidates listed as registered on the City of Toronto website.[43]

Rocco Achampong

  • Date registered: January 4[44]

Achampong, 32, was president of the Students' Administrative Council at the University of Toronto in 2002–03.[45][46] Achampong is an alumnus of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. At 18, he drove a getaway car in an armed robbery. He spent a year in jail. He calls the incident the "mistake of his life" and is now a lawyer.[47]

He was one of two candidates, alongside the six "major" candidates and Keith Cole, selected by an online poll to participate in a debate on municipal voting reform sponsored by the civic advocacy group Better Ballots.[48] When Giorgio Mammoliti subsequently withdrew from the race on July 5, 2010, he encouraged the media to give Achampong his former space in the mayoral debates.[48]

Michael Alexander

  • Date registered: September 9

Don Andrews

  • Date registered: January 8

Andrews, 67, is a white supremacist and perennial candidate for mayor. He has run for Mayor of Toronto several times, most recently in 2003 when he came in tenth place with 0.17% of the vote, and has registered to run again in 2014. In 2003, two other party members ran unsuccessfully for Toronto city council. On one occasion, Andrews placed a distant second in the mayoralty race as no serious candidate ran against popular incumbent, David Crombie. As a result, the municipal law was changed so that the runner-up in the mayoralty contest no longer had the right to succeed to the mayor's chair should the position become vacant between elections.

George Babula

  • Date registered: January 15

Babula was the candidate of the "Parkdale Party".

Christopher Ball

  • Date registered: July 9

Michael Brausewetter

  • Date registered: September 9

Douglas Campbell

  • Date registered: January 4[44]

Campbell contested for the leadership of the federal and provincial New Democratic Party on five occasions, beginning in 1970. Campbell resurfaced in 1988 as a fringe candidate for mayor of North York. Most recently, Campbell has run for Mayor of Toronto in 2000, 2003 and 2006, receiving 1.2% and 0.3% of the vote in the first two contests respectively. During the 2006 campaign he was quoted as saying "the answer is public ownership of land. Businessmen are going to nuclearize the planet. If you vote for a capitalist candidate, you're voting to kill children".[49]

James Castillo

  • Date registered: February 23

Castillo is a supporter of multiculturalism.[50]

Kevin Clarke

  • Date registered: April 30

Clarke, 46, is a perennial candidate for public office in Toronto. For several years, he was also one of the most recognizable homeless persons in the city. He has over 90 convictions, with only two that weren't dismissed. The majority of these charges stem from his loud campaigns at large public events and busy street corners. He also claims to be the first arrest of the Toronto G-20 summit, a week in advance. Although he was taking off a rollerblade, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer who claimed he was urinating against a wall near the Rogers Centre attacked him by surprise and violently handcuffed him. He was not charged, but was told to leave the area, or be arrested.[51] He frequently sings and preaches on the streets of Toronto while wearing long, flowing blankets or robes, which he uses for warmth in case he is arrested and detained in prison. Clarke also campaigned for Mayor of Toronto in the 2000, 2003 and 2006 municipal elections. His primary issues are children's rights, homeless rights, street safety and water safety. He is also strongly against police corruption and abuse of authority. He ran the 2001 campaign out of a homeless shelter that he used every night.[52] He is known for crashing political debates, and disrupting his opponents' campaigns, which have gotten him banned from many political events. Clarke originally registered in January but withdrew his candidacy on March 31 before subsequently resubmitting his nomination.

Keith Cole

  • Date registered: February 16

Cole is an openly gay performance artist and female impersonator associated with the Buddies in Bad Times theatre.[53] His campaign focused on gay rights, cycling and the arts.[50]

Charlene Cottle

  • Date registered: May 20

Gerald Derome

  • Date registered: August 25

Diane Devenyi

  • Date registered: September 10

James Di Fiore

  • Date registered: August 10

Di Fiore is a hip-hop artist and freelance journalist best known for the controversy following a piece he wrote for Now Magazine exposing poor security at polling stations against voting multiple times in an election, a point he demonstrated by procuring multiple ballots in the 2004 federal election.[50] As a result, Di Fiore was charged under the Canada Elections Act and fined $250.[54]

David Epstein

  • Date registered: August 25

Epstein, 32, is a Toronto business owner, director of a not-for-profit organization, humanitarian and human rights activist. His campaign slogan was "Lead by Example". Epstein supported dramatic tax reductions for Toronto citizens.

Selwyn Firth

  • Date registered: January 29

A chemical engineer by profession. His campaign slogan was "science should trump emotions". Firth supported completion of the Spadina Expressway and trash incineration.[50]

Michael Flie

  • Date registered: June 30

Advocated European style bicycle lanes and better urban planning.[50]

Rob Ford

Ford, 40, had been an Etobicoke North city councillor for 10 years, was a conservative and Miller critic.[61] Campaign promises included repealing the vehicle registration tax, repealing the land transfer tax, making the Toronto Transit Commission an essential service, and working to cut the number of councillors on city council by half.[62]

Abdullah-Baquie Ghazi

  • Date registered: January 5

Ghazi ran for councillor from Ward 28 (Toronto Centre) in 2006 and received 3.3% of the vote. He proposed a reduction in the price of Metropasses, introducing toll roads, reducing property taxes and increasing the size of city council.[50]

Howard Gomberg

  • Date registered: January 15

Gomberg, 71, was an actor and rapper.[50]

Barry Goodhead

  • Date registered: August 13

Goodhead proposed cutting the Toronto police budget and allowing residents to elect the police chief.[50]

Monowar Hossain

  • Date registered: January 4[44]

Hossain had previously campaigned unsuccessfully for mayor in 2006, receiving 2,726 votes, and for the Toronto District School Board in 2000 and for Mayor of Toronto in 2003. He moved to Canada from India in 1983 due to what he describes as "political issues". He trained as a lawyer, later worked as a security officer, and was studying to be an investment adviser in 2003. Hossain's first mayoral campaign was highlighted by a promise to provide food and housing for Toronto's unemployed to bring them into the workforce.[63] In 2006, he described himself as the "Dealienation Advocate" and said that he would rescue people from "traps" like psychologists and laboratory experimentation.[64]

Dewitt Lee

  • Date registered: July 14

Lee campaigned as the city's Christian candidate.[50]

John Letonja

  • Date registered: January 4[44]

Letonja wanted to overhaul the TTC and turn Toronto into a hub for recycling.[46]

Carmen Macklin

  • Date registered: August 25

Colin Magee

  • Date registered: January 6

Magee was a Beer Store employee and supported increased civic engagement.[50]

Jim McMillan

  • Date registered: July 19

Joseph Pampena

  • Date registered: January 13

JP Pampena, a blind public relations agent, ran on the slogan "the man with the vision". He promised to raise revenue for the city by selling the naming rights of pools and recreation centres.[65] His ideas include listing the City of Toronto on the Toronto Stock Exchange. In the past he supported the vigilante Guardian Angels in their attempts to expand to Toronto.[50]

Joe Pantalone

Pantalone, 57, was deputy mayor under David Miller and had been a city councillor for what is now Trinity-Spadina for almost 30 years. He was also a former provincial NDP candidate.[71][72] Pantalone highlighted his experience in municipal politics compared to other candidates saying, "people are looking around at the outsiders and think their experience does not match mine," and said the approach to the city's finances should be "clinical as opposed to a sledgehammer."[72][73] He pledged to use the next four years "to solidify and protect our services".[74] Said he would build Transit City and partner with the private sector but would not privatize services.[75]

Vijay Sarma

  • Date registered: September 2

George Smitherman

Smitherman was the former Liberal MPP for Toronto Centre and former Deputy Premier of Ontario. Resigned from cabinet to run for mayor. Former chief of staff to former mayor Barbara Hall.[3][73][85][86][87][88][89] Smitherman said he would consider toll roads in order to raise revenue and the use of public-private partnerships in public works projects such as rapid transit expansion.[90] He also called for the reduction or elimination of the city's $60 motor registration fee.[91]

Mark State

  • Date registered: January 4[44]

State, 67, ran for mayor in 2006 and placed last with 194 votes.[92][93] A retired engineer, State wished to return Toronto to a state of economic self-sufficiency through capital investment and a more vigilant approach to planning.[94]

Tibor Steinberger

  • Date registered: June 3

Steinberger advocated floating houses as a solution to the city's housing problems, more red light cameras to catch driving infractions and electronic transit fares.[50]

Himy Syed

  • Date registered: May 25

Syed was a candidate for councillor in Ward 19 but withdrew to run for mayor. He was the founding editor of Torontopedia.ca, executive director of the Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties Association and described himself as an "Islamic banker".[95] Syed advocated "citizen's rights" as part of his platform.[50]

Weizhen Tang

  • Date registered: September 9

Tang was a former investment fund manager and self-proclaimed "Chinese Warren Buffett" who faced fraud charges for allegedly defrauding investors of $30 million in a Ponzi scheme.[96][97]

Phil Taylor

  • Date registered: July 12

Taylor was described as a self-help guru. He had five core principles he wanted the city to adopt.[50]

David Vallance

  • Date registered: June 10

Vallance advocated giving Toronto provincial status.[50]

Ratan Wadhwa

  • Date registered: April 6

Advocated the construction of casinos and the creation of a red light district.[50]

Daniel Walker

  • Date registered: July 6

Walker was a minister in the Church of the Universe and advocated the legalization of marijuana.[50]

Candidates who ended their campaigns after the withdrawal deadline

The last date to withdraw from the election was September 10. Candidates who ended their campaigns after that date remained on the ballot.

Rocco Rossi

Rossi, 47, was a Toronto-based federal Liberal Party organizer and senior advisor to Michael Ignatieff. He issued a statement denying interest in running in October 2009[61] but changed his mind, resigning in December as Liberal Party policy director to run for mayor.[103] He promised to reduce and freeze the mayor's salary and sell off Toronto Hydro and other city assets if he became mayor.[4] Rossi registered as a candidate on January 4[104] becoming the first candidate to file papers.[44] Rossi proposed to remove and prohibit bike lanes from major streets, freeze construction of rapid transit lines and replace the Toronto Transit Commission's board with private sector experts.[105]

Sarah Thomson
  • Endorsements: Former newspaper publisher Conrad Black.[106]
  • Date officially registered: January 4[44]
  • Campaign ended: September 28[107]

Thomson, 42, was CEO and founder of the Women's Post, a national magazine for business women.[108] She proposed to open up city services to competitive bidding from the private sector and build subway lines instead of the TTC's planned streetcar-based rapid transit lines which would be paid by a $5 rush hour toll on the Don Valley Parkway and Gardiner Expressway.[109] Previously, she ran unsuccessfully for city council in Hamilton, Ontario.[110] She was endorsed by former newspaper publisher Conrad Black.[111][112] An April 2010 poll by the Toronto Star stated that Thompson had the support of 7% of respondents.[41] On September 28, Thompson ended her campaign and threw her support to George Smitherman in order to defeat Rob Ford.

Candidates who withdrew

Andrew Barton
  • Date registered: January 11
  • Date withdrew: August 19

Barton, 27, is a science fiction writer and blogger.[46]

Wendell Brereton
  • Date registered: February 23
  • Date withdrawn: August 4

Rev. Brereton was a fundamentalist pastor in Toronto's Regent Park neighbourhood[113] and former 12-year veteran of the Ontario Provincial Police. Brereton was opposed to same-sex marriage and decriminalizing marijuana and believed the city had become too "progressive". Brereton withdrew from the mayoral contest on August 4, 2010, in order to run for city council in Ward 6, and threw his support to Rob Ford.[114]

Mark Cidade
  • Date registered: January 11
  • Date withdrawn: July 9
Stephen Feek
  • Date registered: January 4[44]
  • Date withdrawn: March 9
Mell Findlay
  • Date registered: February 25
  • Date withdrawn: March 25
Adam Giambrone

Giambrone, 32, was city councillor for Davenport, a Miller supporter, and chair of the Toronto Transit Commission. Former president of the New Democratic Party.[3][85] Giambrone announced his candidacy February 1[116] and announced nine days later that he was dropping out of the race after being involved in a sex scandal.[117]

Naseeb Husain
  • Date registered: January 25
  • Date withdrawn: March 26
Ange Maniccia
  • Date registered: January 4
  • Date withdrawn: January 5
Giorgio Mammoliti
  • Date registered: January 5
  • Date withdrawn: July 9

Mammoliti, 48, had been York West city councillor since 1995. Mammoliti served on Miller's executive committee.[118] The National Post described him as "a former union leader and New Democratic Party MPP, [who] has transformed himself into a 'right-of-centre' city councillor, who champions such law-and-order issues as calling in the army to crack down on drug crime and gangs."[119] More recently, Mammoliti was a member of the Liberal Party but will allow his membership to expire in 2010.[120] When announcing his candidacy he unveiled a platform that included building a casino, introducing a municipal lottery, reversing tax increases he had previously voted for and creating a red light district for prostitution.[118] He also promised budget cuts and intended to target the $40 million in annual city grants to arts, cultural and community groups but was opposed to cutting salaries for elected officials.[104] He also called for cars to be banned from the Gardiner Expressway, converting the thoroughfare into a garden, implementing road tolls.[121] Mammoliti announced his withdrawal on July 5 and made it official four days later.

Sonny Yeung
  • Date registered: January 8
  • Date withdrawn: September 10

Yeung, 35, ran for council in 2003 in Ward 41 (Scarborough-Rouge River) where he won 25.4% of the vote losing to Bas Balkissoon in a two-person contest. He ran in the same ward in 2006 and received 2.5% placing seventh in a ten candidate field. Yeung withdrew from the mayoral election in order to run for public school trustee.

Candidates who died

Tom Sullivan
  • Date registered: February 17
  • Died: April 7

Sullivan died at the age of 75.[122] According to his obituary, "Sullivan was born in London, Ontario on January 11, 1935 and moved to Toronto in the 1950s. He led a varied and productive working life which included accounting and taxi cab ownership."[122]

Possible candidates who did not run

The following potential candidates ruled themselves out of seeking the mayor's office or failed to indicate interest following media speculation of their potential candidacy:

  • Shelley Carroll – Don Valley East city councillor, Toronto Budget Chief and Liberal.[2] Considered a Miller supporter.[85][123] She told the National Post in October that she was "definitely considering” running for mayor.[124] On January 12, she told reporters that she will not be a candidate.[125] However, with the withdrawal of Giambrone from the race she was reportedly reconsidering.[126] She "couldn't be swayed to enter"[127] the mayoral contest and was re-elected as the city councillor for her ward.
  • Olivia Chow – Trinity Spadina NDP Member of Parliament and former city councillor from 1991 to 2005.[123] Expressed no interest.
  • Michael "Pinball" Clemons – ex-football player and currently vice-chair of the Toronto Argonauts. Neither a Canadian citizen nor a resident of Toronto.[2][123] Has expressed no interest.
  • Doug Holyday – Etobicoke Centre councillor and conservative subject of a "Draft Doug" movement during the garbage strike. Says he is not considering a bid.[61]
  • Gerard KennedyLiberal Party of Canada MP and former provincial cabinet minister, ruled out a run after rumours with his name surfaced.[128]
  • Frances Lankin – president and CEO of United Way Toronto. Former NDP MPP for Beaches—Woodbine (later Beaches—East York) and senior cabinet minister in the Bob Rae government.[129] Has expressed no interest in running and is not currently a resident of Toronto as she lives in Restoule, Ontario near North Bay with her husband.[130]
  • Jack Layton – leader of the federal New Democratic Party and, formerly, a long-time Toronto city councillor and runner-up in the 1991 mayoralty election. Layton has ruled out returning to municipal politics.[85][123]
  • Glen Murray – former mayor of Winnipeg and federal Liberal candidate, and CEO of the Canadian Urban Institute. Has lived in Toronto since 2004.[123][131] Ran for, and won, the February 4, 2010 byelection to succeed George Smitherman as MPP for Toronto Centre.
  • Peggy Nash – president of the New Democratic Party, Canadian Auto Workers official and former NDP MP for Parkdale—High Park.[129] Nash instead decided to return to federal politics and was re-elected to Parliament in the 2011 federal election.[132]
  • Robert Pritchard – former president of the University of Toronto. President of Metrolinx. Has denied having mayoral ambitions.[123]
  • Karen Stintz – Eglinton-Lawrence city councillor and leader of the conservative oppositional Responsible Government Group.[3][85] Dropped out October 19, 2009.[133] Following John Tory's announcement that he will not be a candidate Stintz reaffirmed her decision not to contest the mayoralty.[134]
  • Michael Thompson – Scarborough Centre city councillor, conservative, and Miller critic.[3][85][135]
  • John Tory – runner up to Miller in the 2003 mayoral election, former leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party and afternoon drive time host on CFRB radio. Tory announced on January 7 that he was not running in order to continue his radio show and also become head of the Toronto City Summit Alliance.[3][85][86][136][137] Tory re-iterated his decision not to run on August 5, 2010, after a week of speculation that he was going to enter the contest. After the election, Ford's staff revealed a targeted campaign involving a fake social media account intended to convince Tory not to run.[138]
  • Adam Vaughan – Trinity-Spadina city councillor and former municipal affairs reporter. In the wake of Miller's withdrawal from the campaign, Vaughan told reporters that he won't run for mayor because "I can't get inside the heads of those people who live in the suburbs", and because he wants to be around for his family.[139]

Satirical candidates

The 2010 election was also noted for the participation of two mock candidates who conducted satirical campaigns through social networking platforms. Murray4Mayor was spearheaded by National Post cartoonist Steve Murray,[140] while The Rebel Mayor was written in the persona of 19th century Toronto mayor William Lyon Mackenzie.[141] After the election it was revealed that The Rebel Mayor was written by Shawn Micallef, a journalist for Eye Weekly and Spacing.[142]

Opinion polls

Italics indicate those politicians who ended their campaigns before election day.

Polling Firm Date of Polling Link Rob Ford Joe Pantalone George Smitherman Rocco Rossi Sarah Thomson Other Sample Size % Undecided
EKOS 2010-Oct-20 – 2010-Oct-22 PDF 48.2 14.7 33.3 - - 3.8 275 15.1
EKOS 2010-Oct-13 – 2010-Oct-21 PDF 43.9 15.0 35.6 - - 5.5 433 15.9
Toronto Sun/Léger 2010-Oct-15 – 2010-Oct-18 HTML 31 10 30 - - 6 600 23
Ipsos Reid 2010-Oct-15 – 2010-Oct-17 HTML 33 13 31 - - - 500 20
Nanos Research 2010-Oct-14 – 2010-Oct-16 43.9 15.0 40.5 - - - 1000 18.5
Angus Reid 2010-Oct-14 – 2010-Oct-15 41 16 40 - - 3 1001 ?
Forum Research 2010-Oct-14 HTML 44 16 38 dropped out Oct. 13 - - 700 ?
Ipsos Reid 2010-Oct-09 – 2010-Oct-11 HTML 39.5 14.5 40.8 5.3 dropped out Sept. 28 - 400 25
Ipsos Reid 2010-Sep-24 – 2010-Sep-26 HTML 34 12 28 8 8 10 400 17
Nanos Research 2010-Sep-14 – 2010-Sep-16 HTML 45.8 16.8 21.3 9.7 6.4 - 1021 25
Toronto Star/Angus Reid 2010-Sep-14 – 2010-Sep-15 PDF[permanent dead link] 39 13 26 6 11 3 502 36[143]
Pollara 2010-Sep-08 – 2010-Sep-12 46 11 24 7 10 - 700 22
Forum Research 2010-Aug-30 – 2010-Aug-31 HTML 34 11 22 15 14 4 400 33
Toronto Star/Angus Reid 2010-Aug-25 – 2010-Aug-26 HTML 42 11 36 5 6 1 501 28
National Post/Ipsos Reid 2010-Aug-20 – 2010-Aug-22 HTML 41 11 27 13 11 - 400 21
Pollstra Research 2010-Jul-30 – 2010-Aug-05 HTML 37.6 15.5 28.7 7.9 10.3 - 432 32
Forum Research 2010-Jun-11 – 2010-Jun-13 HTML 26 12 29 10 17 Giorgio Mammoliti – 4 405 44
Nanos Research 2010-Jun-07 – 2010-Jun-11 HTML 29.2 16.6 26.1 14.8 9.5 Giorgio Mammoliti – 4.1 1000 40
Environics 2010-Apr-19 – 2010-May-08 HTML 27 9 34 13 14 Giorgio Mammoliti – 4 485 44
Angus Reid 2010-Apr-08 – 2010-Apr-12 HTML 27 14 34 13 7 Giorgio Mammoliti – 4 413 51
Vision Critical
(previously Angus Reid Strategies)
2010-Jan-08 – 2010-Jan-11 - 5 44 15 - Shelley Carroll – 5, Adam Giambrone – 17, Giorgio Mammoliti – 4 503 58
Angus Reid 2009-Oct-22 – 2009-Oct-25 - - 21 - - John Tory – 46, Adam Giambrone – 14, Glen Murray – 8, Denzil Minnan-Wong – 3, Giorgio Mammoliti – 1

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External links

  • City of Toronto election webpage

2010, toronto, mayoral, election, information, about, elections, city, councillor, toronto, municipal, election, 2010, held, october, 2010, elect, mayor, city, toronto, ontario, canada, mayor, seat, open, first, time, since, 2003, toronto, election, announceme. For information about elections for city councillor see Toronto municipal election 2010 The 2010 Toronto mayoral election was held on October 25 2010 to elect a mayor of the city of Toronto Ontario Canada The mayor s seat was open for the first time since the 2003 Toronto election due to the announcement by incumbent mayor David Miller that he would not seek a third term in office The nomination period for the 2010 municipal election opened on January 4 2010 and closed on September 10 2010 The result of the election was a victory for former city councillor Rob Ford He received 47 of the vote 1 2010 Toronto mayoral election 2006 October 25 2010 2010 10 25 2014 Opinion pollsTurnout50 55 Candidate Rob Ford George Smitherman Joe PantalonePopular vote 383 501 289 832 95 482Percentage 47 11 35 61 11 73 Mayor before electionDavid Miller Elected Mayor Rob FordA number of the mayoral candidates at a campaign forum in June 2010 Contents 1 Campaign 1 1 Spending 2 Results 3 Issues 4 Candidates 4 1 Registered candidates 4 2 Candidates who ended their campaigns after the withdrawal deadline 4 3 Candidates who withdrew 4 4 Candidates who died 4 5 Possible candidates who did not run 4 6 Satirical candidates 5 Opinion polls 6 References 7 External linksCampaign EditIn the 2006 Toronto election David Miller was easily reelected as mayor winning 57 of the vote and leading in 42 of the city s 44 wards On September 25 2009 Miller announced that he would not be running for re election Prior to Miller s announcement important figures had already been contemplating mayoral bids most notably Deputy Premier George Smitherman and former mayoral candidate and Progressive Conservative leader John Tory 2 Miller s withdrawal created an open race and the possibility of a wide field of candidates contesting the position 3 While there was speculation that Tory and Smitherman would both be contesting the race Tory announced in January that he would not be a candidate Tory s 2003 campaign manager and Liberal fundraiser Rocco Rossi announced he was running on December 14 2009 4 Smitherman announced on November 8 that he was resigning from the provincial cabinet in order to run for mayor 5 They were joined in the campaign by right wing councillors Giorgio Mammoliti and Rob Ford The left was initially split between two high profile candidates Deputy Mayor Joe Pantalone and TTC chair Adam Giambrone Giambrone formally launched his campaign on February 1 2010 but ended as sex scandal caused him to withdraw on February 10 2010 6 According to Ford campaign organizer Richard Ciano the campaign disregarded the conventional wisdom that conservatives don t win in Toronto The campaign rejected the conventional strategy of focussing on specific areas The campaign bypassed traditional media outlets and used telephone town hall events to call some 40 000 homes simultaneously and invite respondents to a talk radio style event hosted by Ford This created grassroots momentum and facilitated small donations and grew the campaign s database 7 Ford campaigned on ending wasteful spending at City Hall and campaign slogans such as Stop the Gravy Train and respect for taxpayers resonated with the public 8 His campaign s extensive internal polls showed that wasteful spending at City Hall was one of the biggest concerns among voters although that seemed to be the last thing any of the other candidates were talking about 7 Ford also pledged to do away with the city s century old fair wage policy which required that private contractors be paid the same as union employees It was said that Ford successfully tapped into recession weary ordinary people who comprise the bulk of the population of Toronto who were angry at perceived financial mismanagement at City Hall and powerful city employee unions with generous benefits and pension plans 9 Ford s message of putting taxpayers interests before that of labour and special interests was also said to have attracted wide support among diverse immigrant communities in the inner city and suburbs whose demographics contrast sharply with the urbane creative class of The Beach and the Annex neighborhoods By contrast people knew precisely nothing about what George Smitherman stood for according to a spokesman for George Smitherman who was considered Ford s chief opponent 7 10 11 Smitherman and other political opponents attempted to make an issue of Ford s past controversial statements and incidents However these did little to hurt Ford s popularity A pollster found that one middle aged woman explained that she would overlook personality failings in a mayor as long as he didn t waste her taxes 12 13 According to campaign staffers Richard Ciano and Nick Kouvalis these personal attacks were turned into advantages by the Ford campaign portraying rivals making these personal attacks as trying to keep the gravy train going 7 The barbs directed at Ford generated more donations to his campaign as did a deliberate lack of sophistication in style According to Kouvalis our polling said don t put him in a 2 000 suit 7 The revelation of Ford s DUI conviction in Florida and his subsequent public apology led to an increase in support for Ford 7 In June 2010 Ford and fellow councillors criticized retiring Councillor Kyle Rae for holding a retirement party at the Rosewater Club and billing the 12 000 cost to his office budget Rae said that unspent campaign funds he was forced to turn over the city more than covered the cost but critics pointed out that the campaign money was not his to spend This example was used by Ford as an example of the gravy train at City Hall 14 15 16 On August 17 2010 the National Post reported that a computer user inside the Toronto Star company made edits to the Wikipedia article about Ford that his campaign considered very serious libel and copyright infringement Bob Hepburn a Toronto Star spokesman denied responsibility for the edits The Toronto Star owns a couple of these IP portals and they come under Toronto Star Newspapers Limited which is a broader thing The Toronto Star itself has a separate portal said Hepburn 17 A Nanos Research poll published on September 19 2010 showed Ford doubling his lead from 12 to 24 5 over second place candidate Smitherman 45 8 to 21 3 of decided voters 18 The Nanos Research Poll asked 1021 likely voters from September 14 and 16 with Rob Ford receiving 34 4 of likely voters Smitherman 16 Joe Pantalone 12 and undecided voters at 25 19 A Global News Ipsos Reid poll released Monday September 27 showed Ford s lead diminishing at 28 per cent with George Smitherman at 23 per cent Joe Pantalone who pledged to continue the policies of outgoing mayor David Miller at 10 per cent and Rocco Rossi and Sarah Thomson who dropped from the race on September 28 and endorsed Smitherman at seven per cent each 20 21 On October 22 an EKOS Research Poll found Ford with an 8 per cent lead over second place Smitherman in decided voters 43 9 to 35 6 22 Ford also criticized Smitherman s previous record as provincial Minister of Health where Smitherman had been responsible for approving most of the sole sourced contracts before the scandal of eHealth Ontario erupted A Ford spokesman said the voters and the taxpayers of Toronto are going to get a very clear message from this information today that George Smitherman has no fiscal credibility to be mayor of Toronto He is incapable of handling a budget 23 24 On October 12 the campaign became nasty when signs were posted on University Avenue with the slogan Wife beating racist drunk for mayor The anonymous signs were a veiled attack at leading candidate Rob Ford All the leading candidates declared their disgust about the signs that were quickly removed 25 George Smitherman was also the subject of attack ads later in October with a radio ad targeted to the Tamil Canadian community and a poster targeted to Muslim voters both suggesting that the communities had an obligation to support Ford because he is married to a woman over Smitherman who is openly gay and married his partner in 2007 26 Spending Edit Ford spent 1 723 605 77 on his campaign which exceeded the mayoral campaign spending limit of 1 305 066 65 Smitherman s campaign spent 2 2 million Campaign rules exclude a wide range of fund raising expenditures accounting for the over spending 27 At the end of the campaign the Ford campaign was 639 526 60 in debt the Thomson campaign was 140 000 in debt and the Rossi campaign was 60 000 in debt while the Smitherman campaign was debt free A special Harmony fund raising dinner was held in January 2011 and the 1 million in proceeds used to pay off the debts 28 Pantalone s campaign finished 55 000 in debt and he held his own fund raiser to cover the debt 28 after he declined to participate in the Harmony fund raiser because of former premier Mike Harris s participation 29 In April 2011 John Lorinc of The Globe and Mail wrote an article about the Ford campaign finances noting that 69 722 31 of campaign expenses were paid by Doug Ford Holdings the Ford family firm The family firm also paid for a 22 713 04 contract to rent the Toronto Congress Centre for a campaign kickoff event Both expenses were repaid but the borrowing may have constituted an illegal corporate contribution to the campaign 27 Activist Adam Chaleff Freudenthaler and lawyer Max Reed filed a complaint about the Ford campaign s borrowing and over spending to the City of Toronto Compliance Audit Committee 30 In May 2011 the committee voted to proceed with an audit of the mayor s campaign finances 31 Penalties under the Municipal Elections Act range from fines to removal from office 31 Ford first appealed the decision to audit the campaign then dropped the appeal in April 2012 The city contracted the firm Froese Forensic Partners to conduct the audit 30 The audit found that the Ford campaign had overspent by 40 000 but the audit committee decided to not refer the violation to a special prosecutor 32 Results Edit Mayoral results by ward Official results from the City of Toronto as of October 28 2010 33 Candidate Number of votes of popular voteRob Ford 383 501 47 114 George Smitherman 289 832 35 607 Joe Pantalone 95 482 11 730 Rocco Rossi 5 012 0 616 George Babula 3 273 0 402 Rocco Achampong 2 805 0 345 Abdullah Baquie Ghazi 2 761 0 344 Michael Alexander 2 470 0 304 Vijay Sarma 2 264 0 277 Sarah Thomson 1 883 0 232 Jaime Castillo 1 874 0 231 Dewitt Lee 1 699 0 209 Douglas Campbell 1 428 0 176 Kevin Clarke 1 411 0 173 Joseph Pampena 1 319 0 162 David Epstein 1 202 0 148 Monowar Hossain 1 194 0 147 Michael Flie 1 190 0 146 Don Andrews 1 032 0 127 Weizhen Tang 890 0 11 Daniel Walker 804 0 098 Keith Cole 801 0 098 Michael Brausewetter 796 0 098 Barry Goodhead 740 0 091 Charlene Cottle 735 0 09 Tibor Steinberger 733 0 09 Christopher Ball 696 0 085 James Di Fiore 655 0 08 Diane Devenyi 629 0 078 John Letonja 592 0 073 Himy Syed 582 0 071 Carmen Macklin 575 0 07 Howard Gomberg 477 0 058 David Vallance 444 0 055 Mark State 438 0 054 Phil Taylor 429 0 053 Colin Magee 401 0 049 Selwyn Firth 394 0 049 Ratan Wadhwa 290 0 036 Gerald Derome 251 0 031 Total 813 984 100 Issues EditSeveral issues emerged early in the campaign Transportation was one issue with debates over cycling and public transit Bike lanes on streets such as Jarvis Street and University Avenue were one issue Rocco Rossi 34 was strongly opposed to such bike lanes insisting that bike lanes instead be placed on parallel sideroads while Pantalone supported them Mammoliti endorsed the bike lanes on Jarvis and Ford stated he would not remove any such installations The debate over public transit focused on Mayor Miller s Transit City initiative Rocco Rossi called for a halt to Transit City and instead pushed for more subways in a plan he called Transit City Plus 34 35 and also for the completion of the Allen Expressway in a tunnel along the cancelled Spadina Expressway alignment to the Gardiner Expressway 36 Ford had long opposed the Transit City plan 37 Pantalone supported continuing the Transit City project Sarah Thomson proposed replacing the planned LRT lines with subways paid for with road tolls 38 Smitherman had an ambitious transit plan calling for expansions both to subway lines and to the Transit City plan though his projected funding sources faced criticism 39 Another important issue was how to pay for municipal services One proposal was to sell city assets Rossi proposed selling Toronto Hydro 34 Sarah Thomson called for restructuring TCHC and a line by line review of every department at city hall Four mayoral candidates Rocco Rossi George Smitherman Joe Pantalone and Rob Ford signed a pledge to give faith based groups a bigger role in municipal government 40 Candidates EditThere were six major candidates running who were included by the media in public opinion polls and mayoral debates during the campaign although by election day only three remained as active contenders Ward 2 councillor Rob Ford deputy mayor and Ward 19 councillor Joe Pantalone and former Liberal cabinet minister George Smitherman Giorgio Mammoliti was also included in debates until his withdrawal from the contest 41 42 Magazine editor Sarah Thomson announced on September 28 2010 that she was ending her campaign and former Liberal fundraiser Rocco Rossi dropped out of the campaign on October 13 2010 Due to their late withdrawal Thomson s and Rossi s names remained on the ballot Registered candidates Edit Candidates listed as registered on the City of Toronto website 43 Rocco Achampong Date registered January 4 44 Achampong 32 was president of the Students Administrative Council at the University of Toronto in 2002 03 45 46 Achampong is an alumnus of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity At 18 he drove a getaway car in an armed robbery He spent a year in jail He calls the incident the mistake of his life and is now a lawyer 47 He was one of two candidates alongside the six major candidates and Keith Cole selected by an online poll to participate in a debate on municipal voting reform sponsored by the civic advocacy group Better Ballots 48 When Giorgio Mammoliti subsequently withdrew from the race on July 5 2010 he encouraged the media to give Achampong his former space in the mayoral debates 48 Michael Alexander Date registered September 9Don Andrews Date registered January 8Andrews 67 is a white supremacist and perennial candidate for mayor He has run for Mayor of Toronto several times most recently in 2003 when he came in tenth place with 0 17 of the vote and has registered to run again in 2014 In 2003 two other party members ran unsuccessfully for Toronto city council On one occasion Andrews placed a distant second in the mayoralty race as no serious candidate ran against popular incumbent David Crombie As a result the municipal law was changed so that the runner up in the mayoralty contest no longer had the right to succeed to the mayor s chair should the position become vacant between elections George Babula Date registered January 15Babula was the candidate of the Parkdale Party Christopher Ball Date registered July 9Michael Brausewetter Date registered September 9Douglas Campbell Date registered January 4 44 Campbell contested for the leadership of the federal and provincial New Democratic Party on five occasions beginning in 1970 Campbell resurfaced in 1988 as a fringe candidate for mayor of North York Most recently Campbell has run for Mayor of Toronto in 2000 2003 and 2006 receiving 1 2 and 0 3 of the vote in the first two contests respectively During the 2006 campaign he was quoted as saying the answer is public ownership of land Businessmen are going to nuclearize the planet If you vote for a capitalist candidate you re voting to kill children 49 James Castillo Date registered February 23Castillo is a supporter of multiculturalism 50 Kevin Clarke Date registered April 30Clarke 46 is a perennial candidate for public office in Toronto For several years he was also one of the most recognizable homeless persons in the city He has over 90 convictions with only two that weren t dismissed The majority of these charges stem from his loud campaigns at large public events and busy street corners He also claims to be the first arrest of the Toronto G 20 summit a week in advance Although he was taking off a rollerblade a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer who claimed he was urinating against a wall near the Rogers Centre attacked him by surprise and violently handcuffed him He was not charged but was told to leave the area or be arrested 51 He frequently sings and preaches on the streets of Toronto while wearing long flowing blankets or robes which he uses for warmth in case he is arrested and detained in prison Clarke also campaigned for Mayor of Toronto in the 2000 2003 and 2006 municipal elections His primary issues are children s rights homeless rights street safety and water safety He is also strongly against police corruption and abuse of authority He ran the 2001 campaign out of a homeless shelter that he used every night 52 He is known for crashing political debates and disrupting his opponents campaigns which have gotten him banned from many political events Clarke originally registered in January but withdrew his candidacy on March 31 before subsequently resubmitting his nomination Keith Cole Date registered February 16Cole is an openly gay performance artist and female impersonator associated with the Buddies in Bad Times theatre 53 His campaign focused on gay rights cycling and the arts 50 Charlene Cottle Date registered May 20Gerald Derome Date registered August 25Diane Devenyi Date registered September 10James Di Fiore Date registered August 10Di Fiore is a hip hop artist and freelance journalist best known for the controversy following a piece he wrote for Now Magazine exposing poor security at polling stations against voting multiple times in an election a point he demonstrated by procuring multiple ballots in the 2004 federal election 50 As a result Di Fiore was charged under the Canada Elections Act and fined 250 54 David Epstein Date registered August 25Epstein 32 is a Toronto business owner director of a not for profit organization humanitarian and human rights activist His campaign slogan was Lead by Example Epstein supported dramatic tax reductions for Toronto citizens Selwyn Firth Date registered January 29A chemical engineer by profession His campaign slogan was science should trump emotions Firth supported completion of the Spadina Expressway and trash incineration 50 Michael Flie Date registered June 30Advocated European style bicycle lanes and better urban planning 50 Rob Ford Endorsements Councillor Frances Nunziata 55 Councillor Mike Del Grande Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti 56 Councillor Peter Milczyn Councillor John Parker 57 Councillor Doug Holyday 58 59 former mayoralty candidate Wendell Brereton 60 Date registered March 25Ford 40 had been an Etobicoke North city councillor for 10 years was a conservative and Miller critic 61 Campaign promises included repealing the vehicle registration tax repealing the land transfer tax making the Toronto Transit Commission an essential service and working to cut the number of councillors on city council by half 62 Abdullah Baquie Ghazi Date registered January 5Ghazi ran for councillor from Ward 28 Toronto Centre in 2006 and received 3 3 of the vote He proposed a reduction in the price of Metropasses introducing toll roads reducing property taxes and increasing the size of city council 50 Howard Gomberg Date registered January 15Gomberg 71 was an actor and rapper 50 Barry Goodhead Date registered August 13Goodhead proposed cutting the Toronto police budget and allowing residents to elect the police chief 50 Monowar Hossain Date registered January 4 44 Hossain had previously campaigned unsuccessfully for mayor in 2006 receiving 2 726 votes and for the Toronto District School Board in 2000 and for Mayor of Toronto in 2003 He moved to Canada from India in 1983 due to what he describes as political issues He trained as a lawyer later worked as a security officer and was studying to be an investment adviser in 2003 Hossain s first mayoral campaign was highlighted by a promise to provide food and housing for Toronto s unemployed to bring them into the workforce 63 In 2006 he described himself as the Dealienation Advocate and said that he would rescue people from traps like psychologists and laboratory experimentation 64 Dewitt Lee Date registered July 14Lee campaigned as the city s Christian candidate 50 John Letonja Date registered January 4 44 Letonja wanted to overhaul the TTC and turn Toronto into a hub for recycling 46 Carmen Macklin Date registered August 25Colin Magee Date registered January 6Magee was a Beer Store employee and supported increased civic engagement 50 Jim McMillan Date registered July 19Joseph Pampena Date registered January 13JP Pampena a blind public relations agent ran on the slogan the man with the vision He promised to raise revenue for the city by selling the naming rights of pools and recreation centres 65 His ideas include listing the City of Toronto on the Toronto Stock Exchange In the past he supported the vigilante Guardian Angels in their attempts to expand to Toronto 50 Joe Pantalone Endorsements Mayor David Miller 66 Jack Layton MP for Toronto Danforth and NDP leader Rosario Marchese MPP for Trinity Spadina Councillor Howard Moscoe Councillor Cesar Palacio Councillor Gord Perks Councillor Paula Fletcher Councillor Sandra Bussin Councillor Maria Augimeri Councillor Mark Grimes 67 Councillor Janet Davis 68 John Laschinger 69 Mike Layton 68 Laborers International Union of North America Local 506 70 Date registered January 13Pantalone 57 was deputy mayor under David Miller and had been a city councillor for what is now Trinity Spadina for almost 30 years He was also a former provincial NDP candidate 71 72 Pantalone highlighted his experience in municipal politics compared to other candidates saying people are looking around at the outsiders and think their experience does not match mine and said the approach to the city s finances should be clinical as opposed to a sledgehammer 72 73 He pledged to use the next four years to solidify and protect our services 74 Said he would build Transit City and partner with the private sector but would not privatize services 75 Vijay Sarma Date registered September 2George Smitherman Endorsements Former mayors David Crombie 76 John Sewell 77 and Art Eggleton 57 Sarah Thomson former mayoral candidate Councillor Pam McConnell Councillor Joe Mihevc 78 Councillor Chin Lee 79 Councillor Adam Vaughan 57 Bob Rae Liberal MP for Toronto Centre and former premier of Ontario 68 Jeff Bangs former principal secretary to Ernie Eves 80 Ralph Lean Conservative and former fundraising chair for Miller and Tory 81 82 Former Ontario Conservative cabinet ministers Isabel Bassett Dan Newman and Charles Harnick Conservative Senator Nancy Ruth 83 Carpenters District Council of Ontario 84 Date registered January 8Smitherman was the former Liberal MPP for Toronto Centre and former Deputy Premier of Ontario Resigned from cabinet to run for mayor Former chief of staff to former mayor Barbara Hall 3 73 85 86 87 88 89 Smitherman said he would consider toll roads in order to raise revenue and the use of public private partnerships in public works projects such as rapid transit expansion 90 He also called for the reduction or elimination of the city s 60 motor registration fee 91 Mark State Date registered January 4 44 State 67 ran for mayor in 2006 and placed last with 194 votes 92 93 A retired engineer State wished to return Toronto to a state of economic self sufficiency through capital investment and a more vigilant approach to planning 94 Tibor Steinberger Date registered June 3Steinberger advocated floating houses as a solution to the city s housing problems more red light cameras to catch driving infractions and electronic transit fares 50 Himy Syed Date registered May 25Syed was a candidate for councillor in Ward 19 but withdrew to run for mayor He was the founding editor of Torontopedia ca executive director of the Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties Association and described himself as an Islamic banker 95 Syed advocated citizen s rights as part of his platform 50 Weizhen Tang Date registered September 9Tang was a former investment fund manager and self proclaimed Chinese Warren Buffett who faced fraud charges for allegedly defrauding investors of 30 million in a Ponzi scheme 96 97 Phil Taylor Date registered July 12Taylor was described as a self help guru He had five core principles he wanted the city to adopt 50 David Vallance Date registered June 10Vallance advocated giving Toronto provincial status 50 Ratan Wadhwa Date registered April 6Advocated the construction of casinos and the creation of a red light district 50 Daniel Walker Date registered July 6Walker was a minister in the Church of the Universe and advocated the legalization of marijuana 50 Candidates who ended their campaigns after the withdrawal deadline Edit The last date to withdraw from the election was September 10 Candidates who ended their campaigns after that date remained on the ballot Rocco RossiEndorsements Councillor Mike Feldman Councillor John Parker 55 Samuel Goldstein former federal Conservative candidate and former adviser to candidate Sarah Thomson 98 Rob Sinclair Red Tory and former David Miller campaigner 99 Andy Pringle former provincial Conservative candidate and chief of staff to John Tory 99 John Capobianco Peter C Newman 100 IUOE Local 793 101 Warren Kinsella Date registered January 4 Campaign ended October 13 102 Rossi 47 was a Toronto based federal Liberal Party organizer and senior advisor to Michael Ignatieff He issued a statement denying interest in running in October 2009 61 but changed his mind resigning in December as Liberal Party policy director to run for mayor 103 He promised to reduce and freeze the mayor s salary and sell off Toronto Hydro and other city assets if he became mayor 4 Rossi registered as a candidate on January 4 104 becoming the first candidate to file papers 44 Rossi proposed to remove and prohibit bike lanes from major streets freeze construction of rapid transit lines and replace the Toronto Transit Commission s board with private sector experts 105 Sarah ThomsonEndorsements Former newspaper publisher Conrad Black 106 Date officially registered January 4 44 Campaign ended September 28 107 Thomson 42 was CEO and founder of the Women s Post a national magazine for business women 108 She proposed to open up city services to competitive bidding from the private sector and build subway lines instead of the TTC s planned streetcar based rapid transit lines which would be paid by a 5 rush hour toll on the Don Valley Parkway and Gardiner Expressway 109 Previously she ran unsuccessfully for city council in Hamilton Ontario 110 She was endorsed by former newspaper publisher Conrad Black 111 112 An April 2010 poll by the Toronto Star stated that Thompson had the support of 7 of respondents 41 On September 28 Thompson ended her campaign and threw her support to George Smitherman in order to defeat Rob Ford Candidates who withdrew Edit Andrew BartonDate registered January 11 Date withdrew August 19Barton 27 is a science fiction writer and blogger 46 Wendell BreretonDate registered February 23 Date withdrawn August 4Rev Brereton was a fundamentalist pastor in Toronto s Regent Park neighbourhood 113 and former 12 year veteran of the Ontario Provincial Police Brereton was opposed to same sex marriage and decriminalizing marijuana and believed the city had become too progressive Brereton withdrew from the mayoral contest on August 4 2010 in order to run for city council in Ward 6 and threw his support to Rob Ford 114 Mark CidadeDate registered January 11 Date withdrawn July 9Stephen FeekDate registered January 4 44 Date withdrawn March 9Mell FindlayDate registered February 25 Date withdrawn March 25Adam GiambroneEndorsements John Laschinger Miller s campaign manager in 2003 and 2006 City councillors Maria Augimeri Glenn De Baeremaeker and Howard Moscoe 115 Date registered February 1 Date withdrawal announced February 10 Date withdrawn March 10Giambrone 32 was city councillor for Davenport a Miller supporter and chair of the Toronto Transit Commission Former president of the New Democratic Party 3 85 Giambrone announced his candidacy February 1 116 and announced nine days later that he was dropping out of the race after being involved in a sex scandal 117 Naseeb HusainDate registered January 25 Date withdrawn March 26Ange ManicciaDate registered January 4 Date withdrawn January 5Giorgio MammolitiDate registered January 5 Date withdrawn July 9Mammoliti 48 had been York West city councillor since 1995 Mammoliti served on Miller s executive committee 118 The National Post described him as a former union leader and New Democratic Party MPP who has transformed himself into a right of centre city councillor who champions such law and order issues as calling in the army to crack down on drug crime and gangs 119 More recently Mammoliti was a member of the Liberal Party but will allow his membership to expire in 2010 120 When announcing his candidacy he unveiled a platform that included building a casino introducing a municipal lottery reversing tax increases he had previously voted for and creating a red light district for prostitution 118 He also promised budget cuts and intended to target the 40 million in annual city grants to arts cultural and community groups but was opposed to cutting salaries for elected officials 104 He also called for cars to be banned from the Gardiner Expressway converting the thoroughfare into a garden implementing road tolls 121 Mammoliti announced his withdrawal on July 5 and made it official four days later Sonny YeungDate registered January 8 Date withdrawn September 10Yeung 35 ran for council in 2003 in Ward 41 Scarborough Rouge River where he won 25 4 of the vote losing to Bas Balkissoon in a two person contest He ran in the same ward in 2006 and received 2 5 placing seventh in a ten candidate field Yeung withdrew from the mayoral election in order to run for public school trustee Candidates who died Edit Tom SullivanDate registered February 17 Died April 7Sullivan died at the age of 75 122 According to his obituary Sullivan was born in London Ontario on January 11 1935 and moved to Toronto in the 1950s He led a varied and productive working life which included accounting and taxi cab ownership 122 Possible candidates who did not run Edit The following potential candidates ruled themselves out of seeking the mayor s office or failed to indicate interest following media speculation of their potential candidacy Shelley Carroll Don Valley East city councillor Toronto Budget Chief and Liberal 2 Considered a Miller supporter 85 123 She told the National Post in October that she was definitely considering running for mayor 124 On January 12 she told reporters that she will not be a candidate 125 However with the withdrawal of Giambrone from the race she was reportedly reconsidering 126 She couldn t be swayed to enter 127 the mayoral contest and was re elected as the city councillor for her ward Olivia Chow Trinity Spadina NDP Member of Parliament and former city councillor from 1991 to 2005 123 Expressed no interest Michael Pinball Clemons ex football player and currently vice chair of the Toronto Argonauts Neither a Canadian citizen nor a resident of Toronto 2 123 Has expressed no interest Doug Holyday Etobicoke Centre councillor and conservative subject of a Draft Doug movement during the garbage strike Says he is not considering a bid 61 Gerard Kennedy Liberal Party of Canada MP and former provincial cabinet minister ruled out a run after rumours with his name surfaced 128 Frances Lankin president and CEO of United Way Toronto Former NDP MPP for Beaches Woodbine later Beaches East York and senior cabinet minister in the Bob Rae government 129 Has expressed no interest in running and is not currently a resident of Toronto as she lives in Restoule Ontario near North Bay with her husband 130 Jack Layton leader of the federal New Democratic Party and formerly a long time Toronto city councillor and runner up in the 1991 mayoralty election Layton has ruled out returning to municipal politics 85 123 Glen Murray former mayor of Winnipeg and federal Liberal candidate and CEO of the Canadian Urban Institute Has lived in Toronto since 2004 123 131 Ran for and won the February 4 2010 byelection to succeed George Smitherman as MPP for Toronto Centre Peggy Nash president of the New Democratic Party Canadian Auto Workers official and former NDP MP for Parkdale High Park 129 Nash instead decided to return to federal politics and was re elected to Parliament in the 2011 federal election 132 Robert Pritchard former president of the University of Toronto President of Metrolinx Has denied having mayoral ambitions 123 Karen Stintz Eglinton Lawrence city councillor and leader of the conservative oppositional Responsible Government Group 3 85 Dropped out October 19 2009 133 Following John Tory s announcement that he will not be a candidate Stintz reaffirmed her decision not to contest the mayoralty 134 Michael Thompson Scarborough Centre city councillor conservative and Miller critic 3 85 135 John Tory runner up to Miller in the 2003 mayoral election former leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party and afternoon drive time host on CFRB radio Tory announced on January 7 that he was not running in order to continue his radio show and also become head of the Toronto City Summit Alliance 3 85 86 136 137 Tory re iterated his decision not to run on August 5 2010 after a week of speculation that he was going to enter the contest After the election Ford s staff revealed a targeted campaign involving a fake social media account intended to convince Tory not to run 138 Adam Vaughan Trinity Spadina city councillor and former municipal affairs reporter In the wake of Miller s withdrawal from the campaign Vaughan told reporters that he won t run for mayor because I can t get inside the heads of those people who live in the suburbs and because he wants to be around for his family 139 Satirical candidates Edit The 2010 election was also noted for the participation of two mock candidates who conducted satirical campaigns through social networking platforms Murray4Mayor was spearheaded by National Post cartoonist Steve Murray 140 while The Rebel Mayor was written in the persona of 19th century Toronto mayor William Lyon Mackenzie 141 After the election it was revealed that The Rebel Mayor was written by Shawn Micallef a journalist for Eye Weekly and Spacing 142 Opinion polls EditItalics indicate those politicians who ended their campaigns before election day Polling Firm Date of Polling Link Rob Ford Joe Pantalone George Smitherman Rocco Rossi Sarah Thomson Other Sample Size UndecidedEKOS 2010 Oct 20 2010 Oct 22 PDF 48 2 14 7 33 3 3 8 275 15 1EKOS 2010 Oct 13 2010 Oct 21 PDF 43 9 15 0 35 6 5 5 433 15 9Toronto Sun Leger 2010 Oct 15 2010 Oct 18 HTML 31 10 30 6 600 23Ipsos Reid 2010 Oct 15 2010 Oct 17 HTML 33 13 31 500 20Nanos Research 2010 Oct 14 2010 Oct 16 PDF 43 9 15 0 40 5 1000 18 5Angus Reid 2010 Oct 14 2010 Oct 15 HTML 41 16 40 3 1001 Forum Research 2010 Oct 14 HTML 44 16 38 dropped out Oct 13 700 Ipsos Reid 2010 Oct 09 2010 Oct 11 HTML 39 5 14 5 40 8 5 3 dropped out Sept 28 400 25Ipsos Reid 2010 Sep 24 2010 Sep 26 HTML 34 12 28 8 8 10 400 17Nanos Research 2010 Sep 14 2010 Sep 16 HTML 45 8 16 8 21 3 9 7 6 4 1021 25Toronto Star Angus Reid 2010 Sep 14 2010 Sep 15 PDF permanent dead link 39 13 26 6 11 3 502 36 143 Pollara 2010 Sep 08 2010 Sep 12 HTML 46 11 24 7 10 700 22Forum Research 2010 Aug 30 2010 Aug 31 HTML 34 11 22 15 14 4 400 33Toronto Star Angus Reid 2010 Aug 25 2010 Aug 26 HTML 42 11 36 5 6 1 501 28National Post Ipsos Reid 2010 Aug 20 2010 Aug 22 HTML 41 11 27 13 11 400 21Pollstra Research 2010 Jul 30 2010 Aug 05 HTML 37 6 15 5 28 7 7 9 10 3 432 32Forum Research 2010 Jun 11 2010 Jun 13 HTML 26 12 29 10 17 Giorgio Mammoliti 4 405 44Nanos Research 2010 Jun 07 2010 Jun 11 HTML 29 2 16 6 26 1 14 8 9 5 Giorgio Mammoliti 4 1 1000 40Environics 2010 Apr 19 2010 May 08 HTML 27 9 34 13 14 Giorgio Mammoliti 4 485 44Angus Reid 2010 Apr 08 2010 Apr 12 HTML 27 14 34 13 7 Giorgio Mammoliti 4 413 51Vision Critical previously Angus Reid Strategies 2010 Jan 08 2010 Jan 11 HTML 5 44 15 Shelley Carroll 5 Adam Giambrone 17 Giorgio Mammoliti 4 503 58Angus Reid 2009 Oct 22 2009 Oct 25 HTML 21 John Tory 46 Adam Giambrone 14 Glen Murray 8 Denzil Minnan Wong 3 Giorgio Mammoliti 1References Edit Ford defeats Smitherman in Toronto mayoral race The Globe and Mail October 25 2010 Archived from the original on October 29 2010 Retrieved October 25 2010 a b c George Smitherman was the Premier s enforcer Toronto Star November 9 2009 a b c d e f Who could be Toronto s next mayor Globe and Mail online edition September 25 2009 a b Rocco Rossi jumps into mayoralty race with pledge to sell Toronto Hydro permanent dead link National Post December 14 2009 Smitherman announces Toronto mayoral bid CTV News November 8 2009 Giambrone offers brief apology exits mayor s race Archived April 14 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Globe and Mail February 10 2010 a b c d e f Kohler Nicholas October 29 2010 How Rob Ford won Toronto Canada Macleans ca Retrieved March 19 2011 Kertzer Joshua Naymark Jonathan October 30 2010 Urban Scrawl Toronto not so divided after all National Post Toronto Ontario News nationalpost com Retrieved March 19 2011 Mitchell Rob October 27 2010 Emotion energized Ford s amazing run Toronto Star Retrieved March 19 2011 National Post editorial board October 27 2010 Toronto s angry non white voters National Post Toronto Archived from the original on July 10 2012 Retrieved March 19 2011 A matter of respect how Rob Ford swept into City Hall Eye Weekly Toronto Ontario October 26 2010 Retrieved March 19 2011 permanent dead link Michael John October 28 2010 The Globe tells us how it all went wrong for George Smitherman or five lessons for Adam Vaughan on how not to run for mayor torontolife com Archived from the original on April 25 2011 Retrieved March 19 2011 Loring John October 28 2010 How George Smithermans dead end run for Toronto mayor went wrong The Globe and Mail Toronto theglobeandmail com Retrieved March 19 2011 Peat Don Artuso Antonella June 12 2010 Rae should pay for party Ford Toronto Sun Rider David November 4 2010 Giambrone continued French studies on his way out Toronto Star thestar com Retrieved January 1 2011 Charlene Close November 4 2010 Council spending included trip to Brazil and private French lessons 680News Toronto Ontario Archived from the original on November 7 2010 Retrieved January 1 2011 Alcoba Natalie August 17 2010 Computer inside Toronto Star company edited Rob Ford s Wikipedia entry National Post Toronto Rider David September 19 2010 Rob Ford opens huge lead in mayor s race Toronto Star Ford holds commanding lead in Toronto Mayoral race PDF Nanos Research September 21 2010 Archived from the original PDF on March 7 2012 Mehler Paperny Anna September 28 2010 Frontrunner Rob Ford losing steam in Toronto mayoral race poll The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved September 28 2010 Grant Kelly September 29 2010 Contest grows tighter as Thomson drops out endorses Smitherman The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved September 29 2010 Ford back in driver s seat poll says The Toronto Sun October 22 2010 Retrieved October 23 2010 Benzie Robert October 9 2009 eHealth scandal dents Smitherman s mayoral run Toronto Star Toronto Smitherman linked to sole source contracts CBC News October 7 2010 1 Archived 2010 10 19 at the Wayback Machine CTV News October 12 2010 Smitherman condemns homophobic attacks Toronto Sun October 24 2010 a b Lorinc John April 6 2011 Ford s unique approach to campaign financing Borrow from family firm The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved December 10 2012 a b Rider David January 27 2011 Dining for dollars Harmony Dinner helps retire debts Toronto Star Retrieved June 3 2013 Kelly Grant January 25 2011 Ford s debt 150 000 more than estimated The Globe and Mail p A12 a b Kupferman Steve September 14 2012 A History of Formal Complaints Against Rob Ford torontoist com a b Peat Don May 13 2011 Ford s election campaign to undergo audit Toronto Sun Retrieved June 7 2011 Kupferman Steve February 25 2013 Mayor Rob Ford Won t Face Charges for Apparent Campaign Spending Violations Torontoist Election Results PDF August 22 2017 a b c Vanessa Lu Mayoral hopeful Rocco Rossi targets TTC unions Toronto Star Fri Jan 22 2010 Rocco Rossi http roccorossi com speeches statement by toronto mayoral candidate rocco rossi regardin E2 80 9Ctransit city plus E2 80 9D Archived July 10 2010 at the Wayback Machine Paperny Anna Mehler September 13 2010 Rossi pledges to tunnel Allen under downtown if elected The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved September 13 2010 John Goddard Mayoral candidates see silver lining in stalled transit funding Toronto Star Mar 26 2010 Greg Hudson Sarah Thomson s cure for Toronto s transit blues subways subways subways oh and road tolls Archived April 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine Toronto Life March 17 2010 Tess Kalinowski Smitherman promises new subways Toronto Star May 28 2010 Rider David City hall has left God Rossi declares Toronto Star May 10 2010 a b Rider David April 16 2010 Ford surges into second place in mayoral poll Toronto Star Retrieved January 25 2018 Marcus Gee Toronto s mayoral candidates face off for the first time The Globe and Mail March 29 2010 City of Toronto Elections Vote2010 Toronto Votes 2010 Archived from the original on January 10 2010 Retrieved April 16 2010 a b c d e f g h Mayoral candidate Rocco Rossi decries city council s inertia Toronto Star Tuesday January 5 2010 Between a Rocco and a hard place Non confidence vote has SAC president on the ropes Archived April 9 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Varsity January 30 2003 a b c The fringe festival permanent dead link eye weekly January 12 2010 2 Toronto Star a b Mammoliti quits mayoral race Toronto Star July 5 2010 NOW Magazine Newsfront in Toronto OCTOBER 12 18 2006 Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved April 16 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Mayoral mania eye weekly August 24 2010 permanent dead link Dalton McGuinty s secret law at G20 Canadian Charger Ward 31 race Kevin Clarke Archived from the original on December 14 2005 Retrieved August 20 2014 Keith Cole announces Toronto mayoral bid Archived July 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine Xtra February 19 2010 Di Fiore vs NOW the verdict is in eye weekly February 11 2008 a b Feldman endorses Rossi for mayor Toronto Star August 31 2010 Councillors shift support towards Ford Toronto Star September 21 2010 a b c Councillors choosing sides as Ford and Smitherman battle Toronto Star October 15 2010 Doug Holyday to endorse Ford Toronto Star October 17 2010 Holyday backs Ford in mayoral race Globe and Mail October 18 2010 Politics not religion unite Ford Brereton Toronto Sun August 5 2010 a b c Stintz cites uphill battle in bowing out National Post October 21 2009 Poll puts Ford in third place Globe and Mail February 1 2010 Brian Borzykowski and James Cowan They would be king National Post October 4 2003 TO11 Who s got what it takes Toronto Star November 6 2003 G3 Toronto mayoral race Toronto Star November 9 2006 G1 Blind PR agent is man with vision National Post January 14 2010 Miller endorses Pantalone for mayor CBC News October 5 2010 Panatalone fundraiser draws 600 Toronto Star March 25 2010 a b c City politics evolving into team sport experts National Post May 27 2010 http network nationalpost com NP blogs toronto archive 2010 03 22 grilling of mayoral hopefuls heats up aspx permanent dead link Grant Kelly March 22 2010 Pantalone s do over The Globe and Mail Toronto Jennifer Lewington and Brodie Fenlon Former Winnipeg mayor latest to eye Toronto s top job The Globe and Mail Tuesday Sep 29 2009 Joe Pantalone Ward 19 Trinity Spadina who says he too is mulling a possible run for mayor a b Deputy mayor Pantalone plans run for top job Globe and Mail November 28 2009 a b Smitherman joins race for mayor Toronto Star January 8 2010 Pantalone enters race for city mayor Toronto Star January 13 2010 Rob Ford poised to join mayoral race National Post March 25 2010 Former mayor David Crombie endorses Smitherman Toronto Star October 22 2010 Former mayor will head panel if Smitherman elected Toronto Star October 7 2010 Mihevc calls for strategic vote to beat Ford Toronto Star October 5 2010 That Ford bandwagon Not all are jumping on The Star Toronto September 22 2010 Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Former Tory aide switches sides Toronto Star January 5 2010 Ralph Lean backs Smitherman Globe and Mail January 14 2010 Mega fundraiser boosts Smitherman mayoral bid Toronto Star January 15 2010 38 Tories endorse Smitherman but not John Tory who says I m not endorsing for mayor Toronto Life September 16 2010 Archived from the original on September 18 2010 Retrieved September 22 2010 Carpenters Union Backs Smitherman Toronto Election News Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Retrieved April 16 2010 a b c d e f g A list of potential mayoral candidates permanent dead link National Post online edition September 25 2009 a b T O s Mayor Miller says he won t run for re election CTV News September 25 2009 Storytelling experiment PenTales comes to Toronto National Post March 30 2010 Toronto News Latest Headlines amp Breaking News Toronto Sun Radwanski Adam September 25 2009 Reinventing Smitherman The Globe and Mail Toronto Smitherman pledges TTC overhaul The Globe and Mail Toronto August 23 2012 Smitherman s two step The Star Toronto February 4 2010 City of Toronto Elections 2006 Toronto Votes 2006 election results Archived from the original on June 6 2011 Retrieved April 16 2010 toronto CBC News dead link REPAIRING TORONTO S BUDGET Toronto Election 2010 Archived from the original on April 23 2010 Retrieved April 16 2010 HiMY SYeD About Archived from the original on January 12 2010 Retrieved June 9 2010 Alleged Ponzi schemer joins T O mayor race Toronto Star September 20 2010 Alleged fraudster wants to run for Toronto mayor National Post September 20 2010 Thomson adviser decamps for Rossi camp Globe and Mail April 20 2010 a b Rocco Rossi s filling the bandwagon Levy Toronto Sun May 9 2010 Rocco Rossi endorsements Archived from the original on April 28 2010 Retrieved May 16 2010 High Crane Operators come out swinging for Toronto mayoral candidate Archived from the original on June 22 2010 Retrieved June 10 2010 Rocco Rossi drops out of Toronto mayoral race The Globe and Mail The Globe and Mail Toronto October 13 2010 Senior federal Liberal quitting to run for Toronto mayor Globe and Mail December 11 2009 a b Mammoliti enters race for mayor targets finances crime Toronto Star January 5 2010 Rossi woos centre right by targeting Transit City The Globe and Mail Toronto January 23 2010 Conrad Black endorses mayoral candidate 680News Archived from the original on April 21 2010 Retrieved April 18 2010 Thomson quits mayoral race Toronto Star September 28 2010 On your mark Race for change at City Hall begins Archived January 9 2010 at archive today National Post January 5 2010 Rob Ford wants subways not streetcars National Post April 28 2010 Women s Post boss running for mayor Sarah Thomson envisions city of managed competition Toronto Star January 27 2010 Convict Black wades into T O mayoral race Toronto Sun April 17 2010 Conrad Black backs candidate in T O mayoral race CTV News April 19 2010 Fundamentalist pastor drops out of mayoral race endorses Rob Ford National Post August 4 2010 Ford weighs in on same sex marriage Toronto Sun August 4 2010 Natalie Alcoba and Peter Kuitenbrouwer Is Giambrone just Miller 2 0 National Post February 1 2010 Sarah Thomson running for Toronto mayoralty CBC News January 26 2010 Rider David February 10 2010 Giambrone makes dramatic exit from race for mayor The Star Toronto a b Councillor unveils drastic platform for mayoral bid permanent dead link National Post October 15 2009 And now a trip to Mammolltiville permanent dead link National Post October 17 2009 Giorgio Mammoliti mayoral candidate for now anyway permanent dead link National Post blog January 6 2010 No cars on the Gardiner in Giorgio Mammoliti s waterfront plan Toronto Star June 8 2010 a b Tom Sullivan Toronto mayoral candidate dead at age 75 Archived April 29 2010 at the Wayback Machine Toronto Star April 24 2010 a b c d e f Contenders pretenders scramble for traction Globe and Mail September 26 2009 Add Shelley Carroll to the list of possible Toronto mayoral contenders permanent dead link National Post October 15 2009 Shelley Carroll is not running for mayor permanent dead link National Post blog January 12 2010 Carroll hints at possible mayoral run CBC News February 19 2010 Miller campaign chief joins Pantalone Globe and Mail March 19 2010 Fenlon Brodie October 15 2009 Gerard Kennedy for mayor Not likely The Globe and Mail Toronto a b The race for mayor October 21 2009 Ferenc Leslie February 19 2010 Passionate advocate moving on The Star Toronto Wanted Progressive Mayoral Candidates for 2010 Torontoist September 25 2009 Nomination meeting announcement peggynash ca Archived February 17 2004 at the Wayback Machine Brodie Fenlon Karen Stintz drops plan to seek Toronto mayoralty Globe and Mail October 19 2009 Karen Stintz I won t jump back into mayoral race permanent dead link National Post blog January 7 2010 Thompson has no plans to enter mayor s race Inside Toronto Jan 7 2010 Deibel Linda January 7 2010 John Tory won t make a second run for mayor source says Toronto Star Retrieved January 7 2010 It s official John Tory won t run for Toronto mayor Toronto Star online January 7 2010 Popplewell Brett December 10 2010 The brains behind Rob Ford Toronto Star Retrieved March 13 2014 Will the city s next mayor please stand up National Post September 26 2009 Steve Murray Hates Toronto and Wants to Be Your Mayor Torontoist October 1 2010 The best of Rebel Mayor the funniest quips from city hall s mystery tweeter who was unmasked sort of this week Archived July 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine Toronto Life May 20 2010 Revealed The true identity of Twitter s Rebel Mayor The Globe and Mail November 5 2010 Rider David September 23 2010 Thomson ponders dropping out to help stop Ford Toronto Star Retrieved September 27 2010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Toronto mayoral election 2010 City of Toronto election webpage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2010 Toronto mayoral election amp oldid 1108774281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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