2014 Toronto mayoral election


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.
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. More than 980,000 Torontonians cast ballots in this election – a record turnout of around 55 percent.

Results

Official results from the City of Toronto as of October 28, 2014.
CandidateNumber of votes% of popular vote
John Tory394,77540.28
Doug Ford330,61033.73
Olivia Chow226,87923.15
Ari Goldkind3,9120.40
Selina Chan2,3360.24
Rocco Di Paola1,5570.16
Don Andrews1,0120.10
Morgan Baskin1,0090.10
Ramnarine Tiwari1,0070.10
George Dedopoulos9410.10
Said Aly8000.08
Robb Johannes7560.08
Jonathan Glaister7470.08
Monowar Hossain6140.06
Mike Gallay5700.06
Sam Surendran5690.06
Michael Tramov5600.06
Kevin Clarke5470.06
Matthew Wong4910.05
Dewitt Lee4890.05
Hïmy Syed4650.05
Mark Cidade4530.05
Troy Young4110.04
Dave McKay4070.04
Michael Gordon3880.04
Christopher Ball3770.04
Ashok Sajnani3680.04
Matthew Crack3650.04
Frank Burgess3350.03
D!ONNE Renée3230.03
Michael Tasevski3190.03
Mohammad Okhovat3180.03
Chinh Huynh3120.03
Veerayya Kembhavimath2940.03
Jeff 2880.03
Pat Roberge2730.03
Lee Romanov2710.03
Radu Popescu2330.02
Jon Karsemeyer2320.02
Steven Lam2260.02
Jonathan Bliguin2070.02
Christina Van Eyck2030.02
Josh Rachlis2010.02
Carlie Ritch1940.02
Tibor Steinberger1880.02
Klim Khomenko1860.02
Leo Gambin1650.02
Daniel Walker1620.02
Ram Narula1560.02
Jamie Shannon1560.02
Michael Nicula1450.02
Gary McBean1350.01
Charles Huang1340.01
Russell Saunders1340.01
Diana Maxted1170.01
Jim Ruel1100.01
Erwin Sniedzins1040.01
Chai Kalevar1020.01
Matt Mernagh1020.01
Wally Schwauss970.01
Donovan Searchwell900.01
Ratan Wadhwa730.01
René Viau690.01
Oweka-Arac Ongwen560.01
Jack Weenen520.01
Total980,177 100.00

Candidates

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 Eighteen candidates had withdrawn including incumbent mayor Rob Ford.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

Withdrawn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.
  • 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 30Waldemar 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
  • Karen Stintz – Ward 16 city councillor and former TTC chair withdrew on August 21 without endorsing another candidate.
  • Sarah Thomson – withdrew on September 9 and registered to run for city councillor in Ward 20.
  • Richard Underhill – withdrew on September 12 and endorsed Olivia Chow

Declined to run

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.

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. Rob Ford's plan revolved around subway expansion, building 32 km of subway at an estimated cost of $9 billion. Doug Ford's policy mirrors mayor's pro-subway agenda. Tory presented his SmartTrack plan for transit – a 53-kilometre, 22-stop network that would run on existing commuter rail tracks.

Property taxes

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

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".

Endorsements

Some of the candidates have been endorsed by the following prominent persons and media outlets:
ChowTory
Toronto Mayor and City Councillors
  • Mayor Rob Ford
  • Giorgio Mammoliti
  • John Filion
  • Jaye Robinson
  • Chin Lee
  • Gloria Lindsay Luby
  • James Maloney
  • Denzil Minnan-Wong
  • Media
  • Torontoist
  • Now
  • The Globe and Mail
  • Toronto Sun
  • Toronto Star
  • National Post
  • Other
  • Jon Stewart
  • Deepa Mehta
  • George Smitherman
  • Hossein Khosrow Ali Vaziri
  • Toronto & York Region Labour Council
  • Frances Lankin
  • MP Elizabeth May, Green Party of Canada leader
  • Senator Nancy Ruth
  • Judy Rebick
  • Michele Landsberg
  • Naomi Klein
  • Steve Munro, transit advocate
  • CUPE Local 416
  • Unifor
  • The Elementary Teachers of Toronto
  • Former MP John Nunziata
  • Mike Strobel
  • Charles “Spider” Jones
  • MPP Brad Duguid
  • Gordon Chong
  • Liberal MPP David Zimmer
  • Conservative MP Bernard Trottier
  • Liberal MPP Peter Milczyn
  • Liberal MP Judy Sgro
  • Liberal MP Arnold Chan
  • Liberal MP John McKay
  • Conservative MP and Transport Minister Lisa Raitt
  • Former Ontario NDP MPP and cabinet minister Zanana Akande