Toronto Star

Mihevc, Matlow get heated in debate

‘Ethics’ of Tory’s robocall supporting subway ally is source of contention

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

Incumbents Josh Matlow and Joe Mihevc made their case to a crowd of Toronto-St. Paul’s voters at the lone ward debate Monday night.

They both acknowledg­ed early on in the evening that neither of them chose to be in this situation — a council shrunk to 25 wards from 44 that has pitted them against one another within much larger boundaries.

But things became heated when an audience question challenged Mihevc directly on the “ethics” of John Tory’s robocall endorsing the longtime councillor.

On Monday, Tory told reporters that Mihevc sought out his endorsemen­t. Tory’s campaign spokespers­on earlier told the Star the call was paid for by Mihevc’s campaign.

“He is the mayor of the city of Toronto and his voice is important,” Mihevc said in front of more than100 people gathering in the auditorium of the Timothy Eaton Memorial Church on St. Clair Ave., rejecting that there were any ethical issues and noting other endorsemen­ts he has received.

“The mayor has said to me that he is supporting me because I can work with him. Because we can get things done.”

Matlow said he didn’t think the endorsemen­t said as much about Tory’s relationsh­ip with Mihevc as it did about the incumbent mayor’s desire to get rid of Matlow, noting his ongoing fight against the controvers­ial, more-than-$3.35-billion Scarboroug­h subway, which Tory supports.

“I’m not seeking anyone’s endorsemen­t who I can’t strongly support as a leader of the city,” he said. “I will work with the mayor when he does good things ... When they do things I don’t agree with, I think all of us should take a stand.”

He challenged Mihevc on not supporting the opening of federal armouries during a shelter capacity crisis last winter, instead proposing a plan worked on with the mayor’s office to open hundreds of new beds over several years. Tory, weeks later, agreed to request the armouries be opened.

The evening debate included candidates Elizabeth Cook and Ian Lipton, and saw Matlow and Mihevc sharing similar views on providing express buses, building new affordable housing and supporting supervised injection sites as a needed life-saving service.

“I honestly don’t have a plan B,” Mihevc said to an audience question about what the candidates would do to serve the community if they lose on election day. “I’m really committed to this work.”

Matlow, similarly, said he was dead-set on winning. “My focus is on being our councillor,” he said. “My focus has been on what I want to do to build a progressiv­e caring city.”

The debate followed Tory’s Friday endorsemen­t of Mihevc that surprised some TorontoSt. Paul’s voters and Mihevc supporters. It’s only one of two endorsemen­ts in ward races that Tory has made. He said Monday no others are currently planned. Mihevc, along with other left-leaning colleagues who have in recent days publicly endorsed Jennifer Keesmaat for mayor, signed her nomination papers to run for that office. Mihevc said Friday he is not endorsing any mayoral candidate.

Matlow, responded to the situation over the weekend, tweeting: “I know that in politics it’s far easier to toe the line. But I don’t accept that we should always support John Tory or Doug Ford just because they say we should. I will continue to strongly challenge any decision that doesn’t put the residents we serve before politics.”

The election is Oct. 22.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL/BERNARD WEIL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTOS ?? Incumbents Joe Mihevc and Josh Matlow are running against each other in the newly combined ward of Toronto-St. Paul’s.
STEVE RUSSELL/BERNARD WEIL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTOS Incumbents Joe Mihevc and Josh Matlow are running against each other in the newly combined ward of Toronto-St. Paul’s.

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