Toronto Star

‘New faces, new ideas’ vying for seats

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Boundary changes have made four new wards — three downtown and one in Willowdale. Those open seats will be augmented by others left by the late councillor­s Pam McConnell downtown and Ron Moeser in Scarboroug­h.

Further reducing incumbency is the June provincial election. Shelley Carroll has already resigned her Don Valley East council seat to run provincial­ly. Colleagues Denzil MinnanWong will not run in a neighbouri­ng Don Valley ward, or fellow veteran Chin Lee in Scarboroug­h, if they become MPPs.

Also new this time is an organized movement, Progress Toronto, to help get left-leaning citizens elected to council. Another group, Women Win TO, is helping train and prepare female council candidates to win so they can fight for “a more progressiv­e and equitable” city.

Myer Siemiatyck­i, a Ryerson University politics professor, says the ward races this election are shaping up to be more interestin­g, and potentiall­y more important, than the mayoral tilt.

“There could easily be doubledigi­t number of new faces around city council,” he says. “That’s something we haven’t seen in a very, very long time in this city. We can look for an injection of new faces, new ideas, coming into this election campaign.”

Tory retains high approval ratings but Siemiatyck­i says the new council could be a de facto referendum on his “monolithic and one-dimensiona­l” handpicked executive committee that often votes with a suburban-eyed view on the Scarboroug­h subway, the Gardiner and more.

Michal Hay, the former aide to Councillor Mike Layton who founded Progress Toronto, says: “One of things exciting about Toronto is the mayor is only one vote and council is supreme.”

She adds: “The majority of our city is made up of both women and people of colour but only a third of councillor­s are women, only one of them is a woman of colour, and I don’t think millionair­e mayors help with the disconnect that I’m describing.”

A less competitiv­e mayoral race should mean more media focus on council candidates, and more of a chance for challenger­s to overcome incumbents’ big advantage of name recognitio­n, Hay says.

Progress Toronto aims to help candidates in the suburbs as well as downtown run on issues including more affordable child care and housing, expanded, inexpensiv­e transit options and increasing city recreation opportunit­ies.

The group’s first target will be open seats, Hay says. “Then we’ll look at wards represente­d by what we’ll probably be calling “villains” — somebody not representi­ng the needs of their constituen­ts at all. Some (councillor­s) represent the most low-income and racialized Torontonia­ns but they vote in ways that only perpetuate and widen the gap people are experienci­ng.”

In the last election, Dyanoosh Youseffi, a Humber College law studies professor, finished third in the Eglinton-Lawrence ward won by Tory-endorsed Christin Carmichael Greb with just 17 per cent of the vote. Youseffi plans Tuesday to launch her campaign for what will now be called Ward 14.

“People want a councillor who is engaged and responsive,” Youseffi says. “Residents of my ward want a vibrant, inclusive city with transit that’s integrated and comprehens­ive, and council making decisions based on long-term impacts.”

She is promising a different tack, including opposition to the Tory-backed Scarboroug­h subway extension. Still, Youseffi, whose Jewish Iranian family arrived in Canada when she was 12, knows she faces an uphill battle and not just against the power of incumbency.

“Studies show when you have aname that sounds different, or is difficult to pronounce, or is alphabetic­ally at the bottom of the ballot, those are challenges,” she says. “But I’m confident we’ll overcome that by going to every door and meeting even more people this time.” Unknowns between now and the late-October vote include how the outcome of the Ontario election will impact civic voters’ views, and whether Tory himself will run a slate of supportive council candidates or, like last time, just endorse a handful.

Amanda Galbraith, a volunteer on Tory’s re-election campaign, says no decisions have been made about supporting council candidates.

“This is an important election, there’s been a lot of work done for the city on everything from the King St. pilot project to SmartTrack, and those things cross political lines,” says Galbraith, a former Tory communicat­ions director.

“It’s great to have other voices involved. That’s the better for the city. I think the mayor would welcome that and is happy to have a big fulsome discussion about what’s right for Toronto.”

 ??  ?? Humber College professor Dyanoosh Youssefi plans to launch her campaign Tuesday for what will now be called Ward 14.
Humber College professor Dyanoosh Youssefi plans to launch her campaign Tuesday for what will now be called Ward 14.

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