‘Not a politician:’ Ex-chief planner sets sights on Toronto mayoralty
TORONTO — A professional urban planner considered a credible, if long-shot challenger to Toronto’s incumbent mayor in October’s municipal vote is set to hold her first campaign rally Thursday against a backdrop of unprecedented intervention in the city’s election politics by Ontario’s rookie premier.
In fact, says Jennifer Keesmaat, it was Premier Doug Ford’s unilateral decision to slash council in half even after the contest had begun that tipped her from contemplating a run for office to formally mounting a challenge to Mayor John Tory, who is seeking a second term.
“It’s a pretty dramatic thing to do in a supposedly modern sophisticated democracy to change the rules in the middle of the race,” Keesmaat says. “When I saw the tepid response of Mayor Tory, it became clear to me that we didn’t have a leader who was going to stand up for the city and that we needed strong leadership.”
Speaking with The Canadian Press this week at her central Toronto home, Keesmaat, 48, denounced Tory as weak. The mayor, the city’s former chief planner said, failed to come out swinging when Ford threw a figurative grenade into the ongoing campaign by slashing the city’s council from a planned 47 councillors to 25.


