Calgary Herald

Clock ticking on push to oust mayor by petition

- SCOTT STRASSER

The Calgarian behind the bid to recall Mayor Jyoti Gondek said he's faced some hurdles in the first 30 days, but vows to see through the petition campaign he says has captured more public interest than he anticipate­d.

Landon Johnston, the owner of an HVAC business, recently passed the halfway mark of his 60-day effort to obtain more than half a million signatures — a threshold required through provincial recall legislatio­n — to oust Calgary's mayor.

“A lot of people are on the fence about this, thinking it's not going to change anything,” Johnston said. “But look at what one HVAC guy with no real skills other than fixing furnaces was able to do?

“I'm trying to tell people, this is your opportunit­y to make a change, to make your city better, your life better. In my opinion, getting the mayor gone is going to make it better for everybody, whether you agree with her social politics or not.”

Johnston filed his notice of petition to the city on Jan. 30. The city confirmed it was compliant with the provincial Recall Act the following week.

The small-business owner said his motivation for starting the petition was a growing frustratio­n with Gondek, but also the performanc­e of city council as a whole. When submitting the petition, he told media he felt the mayor had lost the confidence of Calgarians.

“This is about her lack of leadership and ability to unite this city,” he said.

“I don't think this mayor is the right person for the job, regardless of what powers she has in the grand scheme of things.”

To formally recall Gondek, Johnston would need signatures from at least 40 per cent of Calgary's population — more than 514,000 people — by April 4. That's more than 120,000 more signatures than the approximat­ely 390,000 Calgarians who voted in the mayoral race during the 2021 municipal election.

The signatures must also be handwritte­n and notarized by a commission­er of oath — digital forms are not allowed — and only eligible Calgary voters can sign it.

Mount Royal University political science professor Duane Bratt previously told Postmedia the petition “won't pass, and won't even come close to passing,” but will expose flaws in the province's recall legislatio­n.

In the five weeks since starting the campaign, Johnston said he has been busy promoting the petition, co-ordinating public events, mobilizing volunteers and collecting signatures himself.

While he can't say for sure how many signatures have been collected, Johnston claims he personally has amassed at least 1,500. But he also said he's signed up hundreds of volunteers who have been canvassing for signatures on his behalf.

His website — recallmayo­rgondek.com — highlights 27 locations where Calgarians can meet with commission­ers to sign the petition. The website also promotes upcoming signing events, including rallies near Calgary's municipal building.

“There are some super passionate volunteers out there who just keep bringing me thousands and thousands of petitions every time we collect them,” he said, noting there's a crew of volunteers canvassing the Plus-15 network every day.

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