The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ex-chief planner aims to be Toronto mayor

Mayoral candidate Keesmaat discusses the election, changes to council

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — A profession­al urban planner from Hamilton considered a credible, if long-shot challenger to Toronto’s incumbent mayor in October’s municipal vote is set to hold her first campaign rally Thursday against a backdrop of unpreceden­ted interventi­on in the city’s election politics by Ontario’s rookie premier.

In fact, says Jennifer Keesmaat, it was Premier Doug Ford’s unilateral decision to slash council in half even after the contest had begun that tipped her from contemplat­ing a run for office to formally mounting a challenge to Mayor John Tory, who is seeking a second term.

“It’s a pretty dramatic thing to do in a supposedly modern sophistica­ted democracy to change the rules in the middle of the race,” Keesmaat said. “When I saw the tepid response of Mayor Tory, it became clear to me that we didn’t have a leader who was going to stand up for the city and that we needed strong leadership.”

Speaking with The Canadian Press this week at her central Toronto home, Keesmaat, 48, denounced Tory as weak. The mayor, the city’s former chief planner said, failed to come out swinging when Ford threw a figurative grenade into the ongoing campaign by slashing the city’s council from a planned 47 councillor­s to

25.

Had it been up to her, Keesmaat said, she would have pushed back hard — although it’s unclear what that would have achieved given Ford’s determinat­ion to push the change through.

“You sit down at the table and say, ’Whoa! Hold on a minute! This is not going to work for Torontonia­ns’,” Keesmaat said. “That’s what we do in a democracy. We don’t go, ‘Oh, well, the powers that be are going to do whatever they’re going to do.’ The minute we do that, we’ve got a dictatorsh­ip.”

Keesmaat, who has been described as an opportunis­t — a moniker she wears with some pride, said Tory was slow to denounce Ford’s action before floating the stillborn idea of a referendum on the size of council. He then got behind a legal challenge that experts suggest has little chance of succeeding given the province’s constituti­onal powers.

Myer Siemiatyck­i, a professor of politics at Ryerson University, said Ford’s action reverberat­ed far beyond Canada’s largest city because it could rewrite our understand­ing of provincial-municipal relations.

“I’m not sure there has ever been an election where the most fundamenta­l ground rules of how the election will be contested have been turned upside down, in this instance, by a provincial government interventi­on,” Siemiatyck­i said. “The outcome of this could be a setting of limitation­s on the powers that not only Ontario but any province has over its municipali­ties.”

Toronto’s mayoralty campaign, he said, will turn on who can best portray themselves as the principled and effective defender of the interests of the city.

Keesmaat is clearly pitching herself in that direction. For the past few weeks, her home has functioned as her campaign headquarte­rs. Shoes litter the entrance way as supporters plot platform and strategy. Her husband and son greet an incoming reporter.

Born in Hamilton, she has most recently been CEO of a national nonprofit group that aims to build affordable rental housing — one of the city’s biggest challenges in her view. What she isn’t, or at least has not been, she says repeatedly, is a politician. Nor does she have any ambition to make politics a career.

“When people started referring to me as a politician, I recoiled because it never occurred to me,” Keesmaat said. “I’m not a politician. I don’t want to approach this in a typical way.”

Keesmaat said Tory was elected because he was seen as a steady hand. She readily admitted he has been that, but said the game has now changed and more is needed.

Keesmaat, who says the city needs more revenue but has yet to say how she would achieve that, often found herself at odds with the mayor and councillor­s during her tenure as the city’s chief planner from 2012 to 2017. While she frequently garnered praise for her views, others denounced her as a polarizing figure and some have branded her a stooge of the radical left.

 ?? COLIN PERKEL THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An urban planner by profession, Jennifer Keesmaat, 48, was Toronto's chief planner for five years. Polls indicate she poses a credible, if long-shot threat, to incumbent mayor, John Tory.
COLIN PERKEL THE CANADIAN PRESS An urban planner by profession, Jennifer Keesmaat, 48, was Toronto's chief planner for five years. Polls indicate she poses a credible, if long-shot threat, to incumbent mayor, John Tory.

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