Toronto Star

COLLE CITY SHUFFLE

TTC chair quits politics, making room for father to run in his place

- BEN SPURR TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER With files from Jennifer Pagliaro

Hours after Councillor Josh Colle bows out of politics, his father announces plans to run for council,

TTC chair Josh Colle made the surprise announceme­nt Wednesday morning he’s leaving politics after eight eventful years on Toronto City Council.

Hours later, that news was followed by another surprise: His father is running to replace him.

Josh Colle, who has served as the representa­tive for Ward 15 Eglinton-Lawrence since 2010 and as Toronto Transit Commission chair since 2014, broke the news he won’t seek re-election at a news conference at City Hall — flanked by his three young sons and council ally Mayor John Tory.

The 45-year-old councillor told reporters he had decided to spend more time with his family and planned to take a job in the private sector.

“It has been my great privilege to serve the residents of Ward15 over the last eight years, and I’m extremely proud of what I’ve accomplish­ed in my time at City Hall and at the TTC,” he said.

He cited as his accomplish­ments: Enhancemen­ts to bus and streetcar service, the opening of the $3.2-billion Spadina subway extension, and the introducti­on of the policy allowing children 12 and younger to ride free.

Roughly five hours after Josh Colle spoke, Mike Colle, a former municipal councillor and longtime Liberal MPP, quietly arrived at City Hall and registered for the race his son had just vacated.

The younger Colle had made no mention of the impending father-son switch at his news conference.

Mike Colle, 73, said in an interview Wednesday that Josh had made the decision to bow out of the race of his own accord. He said he only decided to run at the city level when his son asked him.

According to Mike, he initially hesitated, in part because only a few weeks have passed since he was narrowly defeated in the June provincial election in Eglinton-Lawrence.

That defeat ended his 23-year run as a midtown MPP.

He said he asked himself: “Do I want to get back into this thing?”

But he ultimately decided to enter the ring because “there’s too many things that I care deeply about (in the community) that I don’t want to see walked away from.”

Political dynasties are not uncommon in Canadian politics, but Mike Colle acknowledg­ed he couldn’t think of an instance in which a father took over from his son.

He rejected the suggestion the last-minute swap, which came two days before the deadline for candidates to register, amounted to a unique form of nepotism.

“All I say to that is, I just ended up getting 19,000 votes in the provincial election,” he said. “People know my commitment to issues in this community, and in the city, and in the province. That’s what I’ll let people judge me on.”

Mike Colle, who also served as TTC chair in the early 1990s when he was a Metro councillor, said if elected this fall his priorities would be seeing the Eglinton Crosstown LRT and Lawrence Heights revitaliza­tion through to completion, as well as preserving the Columbus Centre, a cultural and com- munity hub in North York.

“I’ve fought many battles, and I’ve got a few more to fight,” he said.

Josh Colle’s withdrawal was unexpected because the popular centrist two-term councillor registered a month ago to run in the upcoming Oct. 22 municipal election.

He had been considered a clear favourite for re-election in the new Ward 13, which has been redrawn due to Toronto moving to a 47-ward model.

Some city hall observers had predicted Colle planned to use his high-profile TTC job as a springboar­d for larger political ambitions. He was sometimes touted as a potential future mayoral candidate.

He told reporters Wednesday he had a position in the private sector lined up, but could not speak about it.

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 ?? DAVID COOPER/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Josh Colle, left, had represente­d Eglinton-Lawrence since 2010. His father was a Liberal MPP.
DAVID COOPER/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Josh Colle, left, had represente­d Eglinton-Lawrence since 2010. His father was a Liberal MPP.

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