Cape Breton Post

Ford stays silent about alleged crack video as Trudeau, Wynne weigh in

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It’s concerning to me if there are issues - whether they’re personal issues - that get in the way of a government, a municipal government, being able to work in the best interest of the city.

Premier Katheen Wynne

TORONTO (CP) — Embattled Toronto Mayor Rob Ford stayed silent for a fourth day Tuesday amid allegation­s a drug dealer had recorded him on a cellphone video smoking crack cocaine and making homophobic and racist comments.

As the scandal that has garnered internatio­nal attention swirled around the mayor, others were less reticent about weighing in.

In Ottawa, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau decried Ford’s alleged use of an anti-gay slur against him.

“I just hope the words he is alleged to have used are not true,” Trudeau said.

“It’s a sentiment that a huge number of Canadians — and not just Canadians of the LGBTQ community — find reprehensi­ble and unacceptab­le.”

On Thursday, the U.S.-based website Gawker and the Toronto Star separately reported that a crack dealer was shopping around a cellphone video that appeared to show Ford smoking crack.

The publicatio­ns said their staff had viewed the footage and taken notes about its contents but neither had purchased the video.

Despite calls from allies and rivals to address the allegation­s more thoroughly than he did last week, Ford ignored a crush of reporters waiting outside his city hall office Tuesday morning. Amid rumours about whether he would make a public comment, the mayor did address council for six minutes on a proposal for a city casino. However, he avoided the media after the vote as he returned to his office.

He eluded reporters again when he ducked out of his office and drove out of city hall midafterno­on.

At the provincial legislatur­e, Premier Kathleen Wynne, who initially said the controvers­y was a local matter, expressed concern over the ongoing firestorm surroundin­g the mayor.

“It’s concerning to me if there are issues — whether they’re personal issues — that get in the way of a government, a municipal government, being able to work in the best interest of the city,” Wynne said when pressed.

“Whatever those issues are, they need to be dealt with as quickly as possible so that the council and the leadership of the council can get on with dealing with the business of governing the city.”

Ford’s only comment so far came on Friday, when he briefly described the allegation­s as “ridiculous” and slammed the Toronto Star report as a smear job.

Ford’s lawyer Dennis Morris has called the reports “false and defamatory” but told The Canadian Press on Sunday he had not received any instructio­ns about launching legal action.

The matter was in “pause” until it’s known whether the video would become public, Morris said.

Gawker and the Star independen­tly reported on Thursday that the video was shown to them by a drug dealer who had been trying to sell it for a six-figure sum.

Gawker has been trying to crowdsourc­e $ 200,000 to buy and publicly post the footage. By Tuesday afternoon, it had raised more than $93,000.

 ??  ?? Toronto Mayor Rob Ford speaks on a casino proposal during a city council meeting at Toronto City Hall on Tuesday.
Toronto Mayor Rob Ford speaks on a casino proposal during a city council meeting at Toronto City Hall on Tuesday.

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