2014 Toronto mayoral election

2014 Toronto mayoral election

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Opinion polls
Turnout54.7% (Increase 4.1 pp)
 
Mayor John Tory in Toronto at the Good Friday Procession - 2018 (27264606888) (cropped).jpg
Doug Ford portrait (cropped).jpg
Olivia Chow at Mayoral Candidates Roundtable 2014 (cropped).jpg
Candidate John Tory Doug Ford Olivia Chow
Popular vote 394,775 330,610 226,879
Percentage 40.3% 33.7% 23.2%


Mayor of Toronto before election

Rob Ford

Elected Mayor of Toronto

John Tory

The 2014 Toronto mayoral election took place on October 27, 2014. Incumbent Mayor Rob Ford initially ran for re-election, but dropped out after being diagnosed with a tumour - instead running for city council in Ward 2. Registration of candidates began on January 2, 2014, and ended September 12, 2014, at 2 pm.[1]

The election was won by former Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leader and 2003 mayoral runner-up John Tory, who defeated Ford's brother, city councillor Doug Ford, and former Trinity—Spadina MP Olivia Chow.[2] More than 980,000 Torontonians cast ballots in this election – a record turnout of around 55 percent.[3][4]

Results

Official results from the City of Toronto as of October 28, 2014.[5]

Candidate Number of votes % of popular vote
John Tory 394,775 40.28
Doug Ford 330,610 33.73
Olivia Chow 226,879 23.15
Ari Goldkind 3,912 0.40
Selina Chan 2,336 0.24
Rocco Di Paola 1,557 0.16
Don Andrews 1,012 0.10
Morgan Baskin 1,009 0.10
Ramnarine Tiwari 1,007 0.10
George Dedopoulos 941 0.10
Said Aly 800 0.08
Robb Johannes 756 0.08
Jonathan Glaister 747 0.08
Monowar Hossain 614 0.06
Mike Gallay 570 0.06
Sam Surendran 569 0.06
Michael Tramov 560 0.06
Kevin Clarke 547 0.06
Matthew Wong 491 0.05
Dewitt Lee 489 0.05
Hïmy Syed 465 0.05
Mark Cidade 453 0.05
Troy Young 411 0.04
Dave McKay 407 0.04
Michael Gordon 388 0.04
Christopher Ball 377 0.04
Ashok Sajnani 368 0.04
Matthew Crack 365 0.04
Frank Burgess 335 0.03
D!ONNE Renée 323 0.03
Michael Tasevski 319 0.03
Mohammad Okhovat 318 0.03
Chinh Huynh 312 0.03
Veerayya Kembhavimath 294 0.03
Jeff Billard 288 0.03
Pat Roberge 273 0.03
Lee Romanov 271 0.03
Radu Popescu 233 0.02
Jon Karsemeyer 232 0.02
Steven Lam 226 0.02
Jonathan Bliguin 207 0.02
Christina Van Eyck 203 0.02
Josh Rachlis 201 0.02
Carlie Ritch 194 0.02
Tibor Steinberger 188 0.02
Klim Khomenko 186 0.02
Leo Gambin 165 0.02
Daniel Walker 162 0.02
Ram Narula 156 0.02
Jamie Shannon 156 0.02
Michael Nicula 145 0.02
Gary McBean 135 0.01
Charles Huang 134 0.01
Russell Saunders 134 0.01
Diana Maxted 117 0.01
Jim Ruel 110 0.01
Erwin Sniedzins 104 0.01
Chai Kalevar 102 0.01
Matt Mernagh 102 0.01
Wally Schwauss 97 0.01
Donovan Searchwell 90 0.01
Ratan Wadhwa 73 0.01
René Viau 69 0.01
Oweka-Arac Ongwen 56 0.01
Jack Weenen 52 0.01
Total 980,177 100.00

Candidates

At the close of nominations on September 12, 2014, 67 candidates were registered as per the City of Toronto website.[6] Eighteen candidates had withdrawn including incumbent mayor Rob Ford. Two of the candidates who withdrew ended up re-registering and subsequently withdrawing again.

Registered candidates

Registered candidates
Name Date Registered Bio and Platform
Said Aly January 2
Don Andrews January 2 Andrews is a perennial candidate and white supremacist, the leader of the neo-Nazi Nationalist Party of Canada.[7][8]
Christopher Ball January 2
Morgan Baskin February 28 Baskin is a high-school student. She says she thinks she can win by bringing a new voice to municipal politics and vowing to end the divisive politics she says has plagued the city for far too long.[9][10]
Jeff Billard January 3
Jonathan Bliguin March 26
Frank Burgess May 29
Selina Chan April 28 Chan would like to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana and prostitution in cooperation with provincial and federal authorities, to reduce taxes elsewhere.[11]
Olivia Chow March 12 Chow was the New Democratic Member of Parliament for Trinity—Spadina from 2006 until March 2014 when she resigned to enter the mayoral race. She had been a Metro Toronto Councillor and then a Toronto City Councillor from 1991 to 2005.
Mark Cidade January 2 Cidade registered for the 2010 campaign, but withdrew due to undisclosed health reasons.[12]
Kevin Clarke May 9 Perennial candidate and leader of the People's Political Party of Ontario.
Matthew Crack June 26
George Dedopoulos January 3
Rocco Di Paola February 25
Doug Ford September 12 City councillor for Ward 2. Entered the race following his brother's withdrawal.[13]
Mike Gallay May 26
Leo Gambin February 19
Jonathan Glaister April 10
Ari Goldkind March 17 Goldkind is a criminal lawyer. He is advocating a toll on the Don Valley Parkway and higher property taxes in order to pay for subway expansion.[14]
Michael Gordon April 4
Monowar Hossain January 2 Campaigned for the Toronto District School Board in 2000 and for Mayor of Toronto in 2003, 2006 and 2010. 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.[15][16] In 2006, he described himself as the "Dealienation Advocate" and said that he would rescue people from "traps" like psychologists and laboratory experimentation.[17]
Charles Huang January 2
Chinh Huynh January 2
Robb Johannes January 6 Johannes is a Toronto-based musician and founding member of the band Paint.[18][19]
Chai Kalevar August 8
Jon Karsemeyer February 14
Klim Khomenko May 1
Steven Lam June 23
Dewitt Lee January 6
Diana-De Maxted January 2 Ran for mayor in 2000 and 2006. The founder of the Society Community Association Network (SCAN), which assists low income people and victims of crime and abuse.[17] She campaigned for mayor in 2000, and for Toronto's 31st council ward in a 2001 by-election. When Toronto Police Chief Julian Fantino organized a "meet and greet" for Toronto's gay community in 2001, Maxted presented him with a pair of earrings.[20] She wore a queen's gown, tiara and fairy wings to an all-candidates debate in 2006.[21] Her platform will include advocacy for seniors and disability issues.[22]
Veerayya Kembhavimath September 12
Gary McBean July 25
Dave McKay March 25 Under the stage name Sketchy the Clown, Dave McKay has satirized incumbent mayor Rob Ford.[23]
Matt Mernagh January 2 Mernagh is an author, medical marijuana user and activist.[24]
Ram Narula August 15
Michael Nicula April 2 43-year-old Toronto businessman, founder and leader of the federally registered Party for Accountability, Competency and Transparency. Wants to bring his party's three values to City Hall.[25]
Mohammad Okhovat September 11
Oweka-Arac Ongwen August 28
Radu Popescu January 6
Josh Rachlis June 9
D!ONNE Renée August 15 North York resident, describes herself as an entrepreneur. Kicked out of three mayoral debates that she was not invited to.[26]
Carlie Ritch March 20 Also known as 'Mizz Barbie Bitch' Ritch is a dominatrix who wants to "whip Toronto into shape."[27]
Pat Roberge September 5
Lee Romanov June 14
Jim Ruel July 23
Ashok Sajnani March 26 A 70-year-old physician, Sajnani was born in India and is a resident of Rosedale, Toronto.[citation needed]
Russell Saunders March 21
Wally Schwauss September 8 Withdrew on May 22; re-registered on July 4; withdrew again on August 19, and re-registered again on September 8.
Donovan Searchwell August 1
Jamie Shannon June 25
Erwin Sniedzins April 9
Tibor Steinberger April 10 Steinberger ran for mayor in 2010, receiving 733 votes.[28]
Sam Surendran February 19
Himy Syed July 25 Syed was also a mayoral candidate in 2010. He was the founding editor of Torontowiki.org, former executive director of the Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties Association and described himself as an "Islamic banker".[29] In 2010, Syed advocated "citizen's rights" as part of his platform.[30]
Michael Tasevski February 24
Ramnarine Tiwari February 14
John Tory February 24 Former leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario (2004-2009) and mayoral candidate in 2003; hosted a radio talk show on CFRB but resigned prior to registering as a candidate.[31][32] Tory has released a campaign launch video in which he states that building a Downtown Relief Line is his top priority.[33][34]
Michael Tramov January 2
Christina Van Eyck March 17
René Viau September 12
Ratan Wadhwa May 26
Daniel Walker February 19
Jack Weenen January 10
Matthew Wong February 21
Troy Young January 8

Withdrawn

  • Glenn Boque – withdrew on September 12
  • James Dalzell – withdrew on August 7
  • Ryan Doherty – withdrew on August 27
  • Ryan Emond – withdrew on August 22
  • Rob Ford – the incumbent mayor withdrew on September 12 after being hospitalized with an abdominal tumour and registered to run for city councillor in Ward 2. He endorsed his brother Doug Ford for mayor.[35]
  • James French – withdrew on September 11
  • Norm Gardner – former city councillor and Toronto Police Services chair, withdrew on September 4
  • Happy Happy – withdrew on April 16; re-registered on June 12 and then withdrew again on September 12
  • Greg Isaacs – withdrew on February 13
  • Robin Lawrance – withdrew on June 30
  • Jim McMillan – withdrew on June 30
  • Waldemar (Wally) Schwauss – withdrew on May 22; re-registered on July 4; withdrew again on August 19, and re-registered again on September 8.
  • Brent Smyth – withdrew on September 9
  • David Soknacki – withdrew September 10, saying that his support wasn't growing fast enough and it wouldn't be fair to continue asking volunteers to run an unsuccessful campaign[36]
  • Karen Stintz – Ward 16 city councillor and former TTC chair withdrew on August 21 without endorsing another candidate.[37]
  • Sarah Thomson – withdrew on September 9 and registered to run for city councillor in Ward 20.[38]
  • Richard Underhill – withdrew on September 12 and endorsed Olivia Chow

Declined to run

  • Margaret Atwood, a Canadian author. Member of the Green Party. Got into an altercation with Rob Ford in 2011–2012 over closings of several libraries. Stated she's "not running for mayor yet" and later said she would not run.[39]
  • Nikki Benz, adult film performer raised in Etobicoke. Announced that she intended to register on National Masturbation Day, May 28, however her expired Ontario driver's licence was not accepted as proof of address and her registration could not be processed.[40]
  • Shelley Carroll – Councillor for Ward 33 Don Valley East (2003–present), former Chair of the Budget Committee (2006–2010) and former Toronto District School Board trustee (2000–2003).[41] Carroll registered her candidacy for re-election as Councillor for Ward 33 on February 21, 2014.
  • Angela Kennedy, Toronto Catholic School Board Trustee for Ward 11 (2000–present), and former chair of the Board (2009–2010). Stated that she will not run for mayor, as she instead will be seeking the provincial seat of Don Valley East.[42]
  • Sheldon Levy, President and Vice Chancellor of Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) since 2005, who sparked interest from many when announcing that he was stepping down from that position, after 10 years, in 2015. He consistently denied the rumour that he was running for mayor.[43] Toronto Life magazine calls Levy "The Best Mayor Toronto Never Had".[44]
  • Denzil Minnan-Wong – Councillor for Ward 34 Don Valley East; first elected to Toronto City Council in 1997. Chair of the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee, a member of the Executive Committee and a supporter of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario. Was rumoured[45] to be considering running for mayor; registered to run for his council position on April 24, 2014.[46]
  • Bob Rae, former MP for Toronto Centre (2008–2013), interim leader of the Liberal Party of Canada (2011–2013), and Premier of Ontario (1990–1995), ruled out running for mayor of Toronto when he announced his resignation as an MP on June 19, 2013.[47]
  • George Smitherman, former MPP for Toronto Centre (1999–2010), Deputy Premier of Ontario (2007–2010), and 2010 mayoral candidate. Endorsed Olivia Chow.[48]
  • Adam Vaughan – Councillor for Ward 20 Trinity—Spadina (2006–present) and former Citytv/CP24 journalist.[41] Instead, ran and was elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the Trinity—Spadina federal by-election.[49]

Issues

According to Nanos Research opinion poll conducted in July 2014 during the election campaign, the main issues concerning the voters were: public transit, high property taxes, jobs and the local economy and traffic.[50]

Public transit

Chow's transit strategy focused on buses under the slogan of "Better bus service. Now." Some of the details included "more comfort and dignity" to bus commuters and adding 10% capacity during peak periods.[51] Rob Ford's plan revolved around subway expansion, building 32 km of subway at an estimated cost of $9 billion.[52] Doug Ford's policy mirrors mayor's pro-subway agenda.[53] Tory presented his SmartTrack plan for transit – a 53-kilometre, 22-stop network that would run on existing commuter rail tracks.[54]

Property taxes

Chow proposed a 1% hike on the levy charged to properties sold for over $2 million.[55] Rob Ford promised to keep property taxes "well below" the rate of inflation.[56] Tory pledged to keep property-tax increases within the rate of inflation.[57]

Jobs and economy

Chow plans to boost economic opportunities by making Toronto the main trading hub for the Chinese currency in North America and Tory considers the mayor's job to "be the principal sales person and ambassador for the city".[58]

Debates

List of Debates
Date Hosted by Participants Moderator Ref
February 5 Campus student union of University of Toronto Scarborough campus R. Ford, Gore, Johannes, Soknacki, and Underhill Vice-president of the student union [59]
March 26 Hosted and televised by CityNews Chow, R. Ford, Soknacki, Stintz and Tory Gord Martineau [60]
March 27 Ted Rogers School of Management at Ryerson University R. Ford, Soknacki, Stintz and Tory Ralph Lean [61]
May 27 National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada Baskin, Chow, Lee, Nicula, Sniedzins, Soknacki, Stintz, Thompson and Tory Tony Ruprecht [62]
June 3 Humber College Chow, Soknacki, Stintz and Tory Sean Mallen [63]
July 15 Canadian Tamil Congress Chow, R. Ford, Soknacki, Stintz and Tory Chris Selley [64][better source needed]
July 28 Parkview Hills Community Association of East York Chow, R. Ford, Soknacki, Stintz and Tory [65]
August 21 Heritage Toronto at the Cathedral Centre Chow, Soknacki and Tory [66]
August 29 The Diversity Advancement Network at the Novotel hotel in North York Chow, R. Ford, Lee, Renée, Soknacki and Tory [67]
September 4 Toronto Region Board of Trade and The Globe and Mail Chow, R. Ford, Soknacki and Tory [68]
September 9 National Congress of Italian-Canadians at a seniors' facility in North York Chow, R. Ford and Tory [69]
September 12 Ontario Home Builders’ Association at the Westin Prince Hotel Chow and Tory [70]
September 17 The National Club Chow and Tory [58]
September 23 York Memorial Collegiate Institute Chow, D. Ford and Tory [53]
September 26 The Empire Club Chow and Tory [71]
September 29 ArtsVote at TIFF Bell Lightbox Baskin, Chow, D. Ford, Goldkind and Tory [72]
October 1 Joseph J. Piccininni community centre in Corso Italia Chow, D. Ford, Goldkind and Tory [73]
October 5 UJA Federation of Greater Toronto and the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs at Tanenbaum Community Hebrew Academy of Toronto Chow, D. Ford, Goldkind and Tory [74]
October 8 Regent Park Chow, Goldkind and Tory [75]
October 8 George Brown College Chow, D. Ford and Tory [75]
October 14 Newstalk 1010 Chow, D. Ford and Tory [76]
October 16 CBC Chow, D. Ford and Tory Matt Galloway [77]

Opinion polls

Polling firm Last date of polling Link Chow D. Ford Tory Other Don't know/
Wouldn't vote
Forum Research October 25, 2014 PDF 21 32 44 3
Ipsos-Reid October 23, 2014 PDF 25 31 42
Mainstreet Technologies October 23, 2014 Scribd 20 32 38 3 7
22 34 42 3
Forum Research October 20, 2014 PDF 25 29 43 3
Mainstreet Technologies October 17, 2014 Scribd 22 29 38 3 8
24 32 43 3
Forum Research October 14, 2014 PDF 23 33 39 4
Forum Research October 6, 2014 PDF 22 37 39 2
Mainstreet Technologies October 5, 2014 Scribd 19 28 42 11
22 31 47
Forum Research September 29, 2014 PDF 20 33 43 3
Mainstreet Technologies September 28, 2014 Scribd 21 30 37 12
24 34 42
Ipsos-Reid September 26, 2014 PDF 26 26 48
Forum Research September 22, 2014 PDF 25 31 38 1 4
24 30 38 4 (Goldkind 3) 4
Mainstreet Technologies September 21, 2014 Scribd 25 23 40 11
28 26 46
Nanos Research September 20, 2014 PDF 22 25 46 8
24 27 49
Ipsos-Reid September 16, 2014 PDF 29 28 43
Mainstreet Technologies September 12, 2014 PDF 27 16 45 13
30 18 51
Forum Research September 12, 2014 PDF 19 34 41 3 3
Opinion polls prior to registration deadline
Polling firm Last date of polling Link Chow R. Ford Soknacki Stintz Tory Other Don't know/
Wouldn't vote
Forum Research September 8, 2014 PDF 30 57 9 4
24 30 41 2 3
21 28 6 40 1 4
Nanos Research August 31, 2014 PDF 26 28 3 42 Thomson 1
21 23 3 34 Thomson 1 17
Forum Research August 26, 2014 PDF 26 31 36 7
23 31 4 34 7
Forum Research August 6, 2014 PDF 28 30 38 4
25 27 5 4 35 4
Maple Leaf Strategies July 30, 2014 PDF Archived August 8, 2014, at the Wayback Machine 31 27 4 4 35
26 23 3 3 30 14
Forum Research July 21, 2014 PDF 35 27 32 3
29 27 5 5 28 4
Nanos Research July 5, 2014 PDF 33 22 1 4 39 Thomson 2
Forum Research July 2, 2014 PDF 36 26 4 3 27 4
36 4 4 38 18
38 28 30 4
40 42 18
Forum Research June 23, 2014 PDF 34 27 6 3 24 6
36 8 5 34 17
37 28 29 6
42 40 17
Forum Research May 21, 2014 PDF 36 24 3 3 27 6
37 4 4 26 D. Ford 20 8
39 6 4 36 15
40 5 4 33 Kelly 4 15
36 27 31 6
40 31 D. Ford 21 7
Forum Research May 1, 2014 PDF 40 25 29 7
34 6 6 32 22
33 22 5 6 27 7
Forum Research April 14, 2014 HTML 34 27 4 6 24 5
36 30 29 5
38 5 5 31 21
Forum Research March 27, 2014 PDF 33 32 4 5 21 5
34 5 7 32 22
Forum Research March 13, 2014 HTML 36 28 2 5 22
38 28 25
Forum Research February 24, 2014 HTML 31 31 2 6 27
33 5 15 39
32 32 33
Forum Research February 9, 2014 HTML 35 30 3 6 22
35 16 35
Forum Research January 22, 2014 PDF 31 30 4 7 24 4
Forum Research January 6, 2014 PDF 30 35 3 5 22 5
Forum Research November 24, 2013 HTML 34 31 3 7 20 Minnan-Wong 4 2
34 31 4 7 22 3
35 13 40 12
Ipsos-Reid November 12, 2013 PDF[permanent dead link] 33 14 52
22 7 30 41
44 28 7 22
36 20 3 13 28
Forum Research November 4, 2013 PDF 33 8 38 21
39 29 6 16 10
29 4 22 31 14
32 26 2 10 25 7
Forum Research August 29, 2013 PDF 57 33 10
33 50 17
40 44 16
39 Minnan-Wong 36 25
39 27 5 24 4
Forum Research May 13, 2013 PDF 57 36
34 35 11 Vaughan 13
33 50
44 27 25
Forum Research March 21, 2013 PDF 60 33
43 32 Vaughan 13
Thomson 7
47 32 Carrol 8
Thomson 6
Forum Research January 25, 2013 PDF 36 48
52 40
40 49
45 Vaughan 43
2010 Election October 25, 2010 HTML 47.11 52.89

Endorsements

Some of the candidates have been endorsed by the following prominent persons and media outlets:

Chow D. Ford Tory
Toronto Mayor and City Councillors
Media
Other

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External links

  • City of Toronto Elections website
  • 2014 poll-by-poll results for Mayor
  • 2014 Toronto Mayoral Collection – Web archive created by University of Toronto Libraries