Tuesday, June 27, 2023

PROGRESSIVE FEMINIST MAYOR
Toronto elects first woman of colour as mayor; Olivia Chow

She has promised to purchase more affordable housing


Web Desk Updated: June 27, 2023 13:03 IST
Toronto's newly elected mayor Olivia Chow celebrates her win at an election night event in Toronto on Monday, June 26, 2023 | AP

Canada's largest city, Toronto elected its first woman of colour as its mayor. Olivia Chow's being elected ends over a decade of conservative rule.

This is the first time a woman has been elected as mayor in the multicultural city. Toronto's former mayor John Tory resigned a few months into his third term after he admitted to having an affair with a staffer. Tory was elected mayor in October.

Tory was known as a straight-laced, button-down moderate conservative almost the polar opposite of previous Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, whose term was plagued by scandals involving public drinking and illegal drug use.

About 102 candidates contested the elections on Monday. Chow received 37 per cent of the votes, Ana Bailao came in close with 33 per cent votes. "It's a city where an immigrant kid from St. James Town can be standing in front of you as your new mayor," Chow said.

Chow represented a downtown district of Toronto at the federal level for eight years and was part of the city council for 13 years.


She has promised to purchase more affordable housing.

-- With PTI inputs


Olivia Chow wins election as Toronto’s first Chinese-Canadian mayor



Tuesday, 27 Jun 2023 

MONTREAL, June 27 — Olivia Chow won election yesterday to become the first Chinese-Canadian mayor of Toronto, vowing to pursue a more progressive approach in Canada’s largest city after ending more than a decade of conservative rule.

Hong Kong-born Chow, who emerged victorious from a record field of 102 candidates, has promised to raise property taxes and do more to support tenants to help tackle the city’s housing affordability crisis.

In her acceptance speech yesterday evening, Chow highlighted “the mandate for change” voters in Canada’s economic capital had given her.

“If you ever doubted what’s possible together, if you ever questioned your faith in a better future and what we can do with each other, for each other, tonight is your answer,” she told supporters shortly after the announcement of her victory.

Chow won with 37.2 per cent of the vote, ahead of Ana Bailao on 32.5 per cent. Former city police chief Mark Saunders came in third with 8.6 per cent.

An immigrant who arrived in Canada at the age of 13, Chow takes charge of Toronto at a time when the city of 2.7 million is struggling with a surge in rents, a massive budget deficit and public safety concerns.

The previous mayor of Toronto, John Tory, resigned in February after admitting to having had an extramarital affair with an employee.

During the election campaign, Ontario Premier Doug Ford had backed Saunders, saying a Chow victory would be an “unmitigated disaster”.

Yesterday evening, however, Ford congratulated Chow on her election as Toronto’s mayor.

“Throughout Olivia’s life, she has proven her desire and dedication to serving the city that many of us call home,” the conservative premier said.

“While we’re not always going to agree on everything, what we can agree on is our shared commitment to making Toronto a place where businesses, families, and workers can thrive,” he said in a social media post.

A former member of parliament for the New Democratic Party, Chow, 66, previously served as a city councillor in Toronto. 

— AFP

Olivia Chow wins crowded race for mayor of Toronto

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IMAGE SOURCE,TORONTO STAR VIA GETTY IMAGES

A left-wing progressive standard-bearer has won Toronto's mayoral election, triumphing in a historically crowded field of 102 candidates.

Olivia Chow, 66, said she will work to build a city that is "more caring, affordable and safe".

The race had focused largely on affordability and public safety.

It is the second time in eight months Torontonians voted for a mayor following the sudden resignation of incumbent John Tory.

The Hong Kong-born Ms Chow is a well-known veteran of Canadian progressive politics.

In her victory speech, she spoke of her immigrant roots, recalling coming to Canada at age 13.

Canada's most populous city is a place "where an immigrant kid can be standing in front of you as your new mayor".

"Toronto is a place of hope, a place of second chances," she said.

"While I've been knocked down, I always got back up," Ms Chow said. "Because the people of this city are worth the fight."

The mayoral byelection was launched after former mayor Mr Tory, 68, a moderate conservative, stepped down in February, hours after the Toronto Star newspaper reported he had an affair with a 31-year-old staffer during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Just months earlier, Mr Tory had cruised into a third term, securing over 60% of the vote.

This was Toronto's first mayoral race without an incumbent since 2014 and no clear centre-right successor to Mr Tory emerged.

Support failed to coalesce around those challengers - including former police chief Mark Saunders, who received some support from Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and former deputy mayor Ana Bailão, who received a last-minute endorsement from Mr Tory - giving Ms Chow a narrow path to victory.

She received about 37% of the vote in Monday's race.

With Ms Chow's win, it will be the first time in a decade that a progressive will lead the city, and her victory suggests potential future clashes with Mr Ford, the conservative premier who said earlier this month that she would be "an unmitigated disaster".

But on Monday Mr Ford congratulated Ms Chow on Twitter, saying "she has proven her desire and dedication to serving the city".

"I will work with anyone ready to work with our government to better our city and province," he said.

Once sworn in, Ms Chow will assume the new "strong mayor" powers granted last year by Mr Ford's provincial government.

These powers include hiring and firing power over senior city staff and - in certain instances - powers to pass bylaws with just one-third support of council.

She has said she will not use the new powers handed to a number of municipalities in the province.

Ms Chow served as a city councillor for downtown Toronto before being elected to federal parliament in 2006. She was married to the late federal NDP leader Jack Layton, who died in 2011.

She previously ran for mayor in 2014 but came in third.

Her campaign in this race focused on Toronto's housing affordability crisis, with promises to build homes on city-owned land and provide more support for renters.

Her platform included more help for the city's homeless population, such as adding more social housing and the creation of "respite spaces" - where Torontonians could access showers and meals, and other critical services - that would be open around the clock.

But she faced criticism for failing to reveal how much she would raise property taxes to pay for her promises.

The date for her swearing in has yet to be determined.

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