Toronto municipal election, 2010

For information about the election for mayor, see Toronto mayoral election, 2010.
Toronto municipal election, 2010
Toronto
October 25, 2010

The ward boundaries for the 2010 election. The Mayor and French school board trustees are elected across the city, councillors in their respective wards, and English public and Catholic trustees on a ward or dual-ward basis.

The municipal election was held on October 25, 2010 to elect a mayor and 44 city councillors in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. In addition, school trustees were elected to the Toronto District School Board, Toronto Catholic District School Board, Conseil scolaire de district du Centre-Sud-Ouest and Conseil scolaire de district catholique Centre-Sud. The election was held in conjunction with those held in other municipalities in the province of Ontario (see Ontario municipal elections, 2010). Candidate registration opened on January 4, 2010 and ended on September 10. Advance polls were open October 5, 6, 7, 8 and 12, 13, 16 and 17.

There were a number of open seats as two sitting councillors, Rob Ford and Joe Pantalone, ran for mayor, while incumbents Case Ootes, Kyle Rae, Adam Giambrone, Michael Walker, Mike Feldman, Brian Ashton, and Howard Moscoe did not seek re-election. This was the first election to take place in Toronto since the enactment of a new fund raising by-law whereby unions and corporations could not donate to candidates. The nomination period for the 2010 municipal election opened on Monday, January 4, 2010 and closed on Friday, September 10, 2010.

In the 2010 election, a record number of women was elected to council, with 15 female councillors comprising exactly one third of all council members.[1]

With this election, voting day moved to the fourth Monday of October from the second Monday of November which had been election day since 1978.

Mayor

The mayor's seat was open for the first time since the 2003 Toronto election, due to the announcement by incumbent mayor David Miller that he would not seek a third term in office. At the end of the campaign there were three major candidates who were included by the media in public opinion polls and mayoral debates: winner Rob Ford, Joe Pantalone, and George Smitherman.[2][3] Four other candidates, Rocco Rossi, Sarah Thomson, Adam Giambrone and Giorgio Mammoliti, were considered major candidates when they launched their campaigns but later dropped out of the campaign.

City council

City councillors were elected to represent Toronto's 44 wards at Toronto City Council. There were a number of open seats, as sitting councillors Joe Pantalone and Rob Ford chose to run for mayor, while long-serving incumbents Case Ootes, Kyle Rae, Adam Giambrone, Mike Feldman, Michael Walker, Brian Ashton and Howard Moscoe announced their retirements.

Five incumbent councillors were defeated, in wards 1, 13, 25, 32, and 35:. Vincent Crisanti beat Suzan Hall, Sarah Doucette beat Bill Saundercook, Jaye Robinson beat Cliff Jenkins, Mary-Margaret McMahon beat Sandra Bussin, and Michelle Berardinetti beat Adrian Heaps respectively.

School boards

School trustees were elected to the Toronto District School Board, Toronto Catholic District School Board, Conseil scolaire de district du Centre-Sud-Ouest and Conseil scolaire de district catholique Centre-Sud.

Participation initiatives

Continuing a tradition established by City Idol in 2006, grassroots activist groups established a number of initiatives to encourage greater interest and participation in municipal politics.

One notable initiative in 2010 was Better Ballots, an advocacy group which sponsored a debate concerning municipal voting reform on June 1. Preparations for that debate included an online ballot to name two of the "minor" mayoral candidates to the debate panel, in addition to the six "major" ones. The winners of the online vote were Rocco Achampong and Keith Cole.[4] When Giorgio Mammoliti withdrew from the mayoral race on July 5, he singled out Achampong as a candidate who "needs to be heard", and asked the media to give Achampong his former space in the debates.[5]

Another initiative was So You Think You Can Council, an event hosted by comedian Maggie Cassella which featured Ward 27's council candidates answering questions about Toronto's municipal government in a game show format.[6]

Satire

The campaign was also noted for the creation of two mock campaigns which posted satirical comments on the election through social networking platforms. Murray4Mayor was spearheaded by National Post cartoonist Steve Murray,[7] while The Rebel Mayor, which was eventually revealed as the creation of journalist Shawn Micallef, was written in the persona of 19th century Toronto mayor William Lyon Mackenzie.[8]

Ward 9 York Centre and TDSB Ward 4 election irregularities

On March 29, 2011, a judge of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice invalidated the election results for Ward 9 and TDSB Ward 4 because of "several “irregularities” in the voters list". The civil lawsuit was brought forward by Gus Cusimano. He lost by 89 votes and was the runner-up. There were missing signatures of electoral officers on 426 of 1,143 forms that allowed election-day changes to the voter list.[9][10]

Initially the city's legal staff said they would be appealing the decision but on May 13 it was announced that the city would not launch an appeal. City Clerk, Uli Watkiss said in a statement, "The decision to proceed with a by-election and resolve this matter as quickly as possible is in the best interest of the public, the individuals directly affected, and the workings of Council."[11] The mayor's office supported the decision. Rob Ford's press secretary Adrienne Batra said, "Obviously the mayor supported (Cusimano) during the general election and once the by-election gets under way he will be fully supporting him again."[12]

On May 16, Maria Augimeri announced that she would be appealing the decision herself. She said the by-election would cost $525,000.[nb 1] She said, "The clerk’s advice not to appeal does harm to taxpayers as well as to the integrity of our electoral system."[13] On August 4, the city reversed its decision and decided to join the appeal which will be held in September 2011.[14] On December 19, the court ruled in Augimeri's favour. A three judge panel ruled that although 300 ballots were unsigned by electoral officers the people voting were very likely eligible to vote and that this would have no effect on the election. In a related judgement, they also ruled that Cusimano incorrectly voted in the Ward 9 election because he lived in another riding. They decided that no further action was necessary.[15]

Ward 1: Etobicoke North

Ward 1
Candidate Votes %
Vincent Crisanti 5,505 40.736%
Suzan Hall 4,996 36.969%
Omar Farouk 1,573 11.64%
Sharad Sharma 883 6.534%
Ted Berger 388 2.871%
Peter D'Gama 169 1.251%
Total13,514 100%

Ward 2: Etobicoke North

Ward 2
Candidate Votes %
Doug Ford, Jr. 12,660 71.679%
Cadigia Ali 2,346 13.283%
Luciano Rizzuti 828 4.688%
Rajinder Lall 736 4.167%
Andrew Saikaley 637 3.607%
Jason Pedlar 455 2.576%
Total 17,662 100%

The seat was open because incumbent Rob Ford ran for mayor.

Ward 3: Etobicoke Centre

Ward 3
Candidate Votes %
Doug Holyday13,521 71.92%
Peter Kudryk 2,684 14.277%
Ross Vaughan 1,585 8.431%
Roger Deschenes 1,010 5.372%
Total18,800 100%

Ward 4: Etobicoke Centre

Ward 4
Candidate Votes %
Gloria Lindsay Luby 9,789 46.902%
John Campbell 9,480 45.422%
Daniel Bertolini 1,602 7.676%
Total 20,871 100%

Ward 5: Etobicoke—Lakeshore

Ward 5
Candidate Votes %
Peter Milczyn 9,778 41.16%
Justin Di Ciano 9,669 40.701%
Morley Kells 2,725 11.471%
John Chiappetta 1,245 5.241%
Rob Therrien 339 1.427%
Total23,756 100%

Ward 6: Etobicoke—Lakeshore

Ward 6
Candidate Votes %
Mark Grimes 12,228 60.421%
Jem Cain 5,847 28.891%
Michael Laxer 717 3.543%
Wendell Brereton 605 2.989%
Cecilia Luu 466 2.303%
David Searle 375 1.853%
Total 20,238 100%

Ward 7: York West

Ward 7
Candidate Votes %
Giorgio Mammoliti 5,338 43.797%
Nick Di Nizio 3,601 29.545%
Victor Lucero 1,038 8.517%
Sergio Gizzo 706 5.793%
Sharon Joseph 547 4.488%
Chris MacDonald 491 4.029%
Larry Perlman 249 2.043%
Scott Aitchison 129 1.058%
Stefano Tesoro 89 0.73%
Total 12,188 100%

Ward 8: York West

Ward 8
Candidate Votes %
Anthony Perruzza 4,724 41.464%
Peter Li Preti 4,372 38.374%
Antonius Clarke 1,487 13.052%
Arthur Smitherman 268 2.352%
Naseeb Husain 243 2.133%
John Gallagher 129 1.132%
Ramnarine Tiwari 117 1.027%
Gerardo Miniguano 53 0.465%
Total 11,393 100%

Ward 9: York Centre

Ward 9
Candidate Votes %
Maria Augimeri 5,452 44.332%
Gus Cusimano 5,363 43.609%
Gianfranco Amendola 1,082 8.798%
Wilson Basantes 259 2.106%
Stefano Picone 142 1.155%
Total 12,298 100%

Ward 10: York Centre

Ward 10
Candidate Votes %
James Pasternak 3,159 19.156%
Nancy Oomen 2,777 16.839%
Brian Shifman 2,632 15.96%
Igor Toutchinski 2,605 15.796%
Konstantin Toubis 1,887 11.443%
Magda Gondor Berkovits 935 5.67%
Jarred Friedman 850 5.154%
Joseph Cohen 535 3.244%
Eric Plant 355 2.153%
Edward Zaretsky 326 1.977%
Robert Freedland 244 1.48%
Drago Banovic 186 1.128%
Total 16,491 100%

Incumbent Mike Feldman did not run for re-election.

Ward 11: York South—Weston

Ward 11
Candidate Votes %
Frances Nunziata 10,544 66.789%
Fulvio Sansone 2,290 14.506%
Leo Marshall 1,718 10.882%
Abdi Hashised 1,235 7.823%
Total 15,787 100%

Ward 12: York South—Weston

Ward 12
Candidate Votes %
Frank Di Giorgio 3,636 27.056%
Nick Dominelli 3,214 23.915%
Steve Tasses 2,748 20.448%
Vilma Filici 2,204 16.4%
Richard Gosling 1,073 7.984%
Joe Renda 343 2.552%
Angelo Bellavia 221 1.644%
Total 13,439 100%

Ward 13: Parkdale—High Park

Ward 13
Candidate Votes %
Sarah Doucette 10,100 47.045%
Bill Saundercook 7,893 36.765%
Nick Pavlov 2,109 9.823%
Redmond Weissenberger 1,139 5.305%
Jackelyn Van Altenberg 228 1.062%
Total 21,469 100%

Ward 14: Parkdale—High Park

Ward 14 council hopefuls at an all candidates meeting in Parkdale
Ward 14
Candidate Votes %
Gord Perks 8,542 51.811%
Ryan Hobson 2,798 16.971%
Michael Erickson 2,434 14.763%
Bill Vrebosch 668 4.052%
Cullen Simpson 531 3.221%
Gus Koutoumanos 529 3.209%
Barry Hubick 342 2.074%
Jules-José Kerlinger 331 2.008%
István Tar 177 1.074%
Jimmy Talpa 135 0.819%
Total 16,487 100%

Ward 15: Eglinton—Lawrence

Ward 15
Candidate Votes %
Josh Colle 6,668 40.375%
Rob Davis 5,399 32.691%
Ron Singer 2,275 13.775%
Tony Evangelista 1,173 7.103%
Giuseppe Pede 472 2.858%
Eva Tavares 464 2.81%
William Reitsma 64 0.388%
Total 16,515 100%

Long-time incumbent Howard Moscoe did not seek re-election.[29]

Ward 16: Eglinton—Lawrence

Ward 16
Candidate Votes %
Karen Stintz 11,607 60.763%
Terry Mills 4,243 22.212%
Michael Coll 1,799 9.418%
Roy Macdonald 1,453 7.607%
Total 19,102 100%

Ward 17: Davenport

Ward 17
Candidate Votes %
Cesar Palacio 6,154 42.813%
Jonah Schein 4,827 33.581%
Tony Letra 2,035 14.158%
Ben Stirpe 751 5.225%
Maria Marques 388 2.699%
Brian Bragason 125 0.87%
Kar Rasaiah 94 0.654%
Total 14,374 100%

Ward 18: Davenport

Ward 18
Candidate Votes %
Ana Bailão 6,277 43.754%
Kevin Beaulieu 4,911 34.233%
Frank de Jong 869 6.057%
Hema Vyas 776 5.409%
Joe MacDonald 669 4.663%
Kirk Russell 326 2.272%
Nha Le 154 1.073%
Ken Wood 106 0.739%
Mohammad Muhit 94 0.655%
Joanna Teliatnik 70 0.488%
Doug Carroll 52 0.362%
Abdirazak Elmi 42 0.293%
Total 14,346 100%

Incumbent Adam Giambrone dropped out of the mayor's race on February 10 and subsequently announced he would not run for re-election in Ward 18.[33]

Ward 19: Trinity—Spadina

Mike Layton being interviewed by a television reporter on election night.
Ward 19
Candidate Votes %
Mike Layton 9,125 45.387%
Karen Sun 4,207 20.925%
Sean McCormick 3,650 18.155%
Jim Likourezos 1,313 6.531%
David Footman 518 2.576%
Karlene Nation 417 2.074%
Rosario Bruto 398 1.98%
George Sawision 356 1.771%
Jason Stevens 121 0.602%
Total 20,105 100%

Open seat as incumbent Joe Pantalone ran for mayor.

Ward 20: Trinity—Spadina

Ward 20
Candidate Votes %
Adam Vaughan 16,486 74.523%
Mike Yen 3,601 16.278%
Dean Maher 1,233 5.574%
Roman Polochansky 487 2.201%
Ken Osadchuk 315 1.424%
Total 22,122 100%

Ward 21: St. Paul's

Ward 21
Candidate Votes %
Joe Mihevc 9,824 56.246%
Shimmy Posen 5,328 30.505%
Peter Nolan 921 5.273%
Beth McLellan 644 3.687%
Alex Freedman 454 2.599%
Marius Frederick 295 1.689%
Total 17,466 100%

Ward 22: St. Paul's

Ward 22
Candidate Votes %
Josh Matlow 11,892 52.392%
Chris Sellors 8,037 35.408%
Elizabeth Cook 1,900 8.371%
William Molls 869 3.829%
Total 22,698 100%

Incumbent Michael Walker did not run for re-election.

Ward 23: Willowdale

Ward 23
Candidate Votes %
John Filion 13,666 65.857%
Dusan Kralik 2,456 11.836%
Peter Clarke 2,129 10.26%
John Whyte 1,445 6.964%
Charles Sutherland 1,055 5.084%
Total 20,751 100%

Ward 24: Willowdale

Ward 24
Candidate Votes %
David Shiner 10,523 58.387%
Sonny Cho 4,986 27.665%
Eugene Loo 1,611 8.939%
Bob Nahiddi 903 5.01%
Total 18,023 100%

Ward 25 Don Valley West

Ward 25
Candidate Votes %
Jaye Robinson 9,258 45.494%
Cliff Jenkins 8,756 43.027%
Joanne Dickins 1,968 9.671%
Tanya Hostler 368 1.808%
Total 20,350 100%

Ward 26: Don Valley West

Ward 26
Candidate Votes %
John Parker 6,203 31.278%
Jon Burnside 5,788 29.185%
Mohamed Dhanani 5,627 28.373%
Yunus Pandor 1,452 7.322%
Tanvir Ahmed 377 1.901%
Shaukat Malik 216 1.089%
Nawab Salim Khan 169 0.852%
Total 19,832 100%

Ward 27: Toronto Centre

Ward 27
Candidate Votes %
Kristyn Wong-Tam 7,527 28.277%
Ken Chan 7,065 26.541%
Chris Tindal 3,447 12.949%
Simon Wookey 2,128 7.994%
Joel Dick 1,667 6.262%
Robert Meynell 1,223 4.594%
Enza Anderson 1,127 4.234%
Ella Rebanks 838 3.148%
Ben Bergen 380 1.428%
Susan Gapka 367 1.379%
Gary Leroux 283 1.063%
Paul Spence 243 0.913%
Jonas Jemstone 142 0.533%
Ram Narula 108 0.406%
Perry Missal 74 0.278%
Total 26,619 100%

Veteran councillor Kyle Rae, who held a seat on council since 1991, announced that he would not be running for re-election.[42]

Ward 28: Toronto Centre

Ward 28
Candidate Votes %
Pam McConnell 11,883 62.856%
Howard Bortenstein 3,730 19.73%
Dennis Hollingsworth 1,128 5.967%
Raj Rama 969 5.126%
Daniel Murton 633 3.348%
Eric Brazau 562 2.973%
Total 18,905 100%

Ward 29: Toronto—Danforth

Ward 29
Candidate Votes %
Mary Fragedakis 7,430 41.814%
Jane Pitfield 4,966 27.948%
Jennifer Wood 4,269 24.025%
Chris Caldwell 885 4.981%
John Richardson 138 0.777%
Mike Restivo 81 0.456%
Total 17,769 100%

Incumbent Case Ootes retired.[53]

Ward 30: Toronto—Danforth

Ward 30
Candidate Votes %
Paula Fletcher 8,766 45.356%
Liz West 8,507 44.016%
Andrew James 620 3.208%
Mark Dewdney 518 2.68%
Mihaly Varga 313 1.619%
Angie Tingas 262 1.356%
Andreas Bogojevic 198 1.024%
Gary Walsh 143 0.74%
Total 19,327 100%

Ward 31: Beaches—East York

Ward 31
Candidate Registered Votes % Notes
Janet Davis January 4 11,177 63.27% Incumbent, first elected 2003
Robert Walker March 17 1,945 11.01%
Peter Agaliotis August 23 1,468 8.31%
Brenda MacDonald May 25 1,412 7.99%
Rasal Rahman September 8 1,065 6.03%
Donna Braniff January 27 505 2.86%
Leonard Subotich February 3 93 0.53%
Total 17,665 100.00%

Ward 32: Beaches—East York

Ward 32
Candidate Votes %
Mary-Margaret McMahon 15,159 65.144%
Sandra Bussin (incumbent) 5,998 25.776%
Keith Begley 753 3.236%
Bruce Baker 477 2.05%
Brad Feraday 354 1.521%
Martin Gladstone 210 0.902%
Neil Sinclair 190 0.817%
Albert Castells 66 0.284%
Kieron Pope 63 0.271%
Total 23,270 100%

Ward 33: Don Valley East

Ward 33
Candidate Votes %
Shelley Carroll 7,946 57.659%
Fil Giannakopoulos 2,787 20.223%
Mike Ihnat 1,886 13.686%
David Raines 1,162 8.432%
Total 13,781 100%

Ward 34: Don Valley East

Ward 34
Candidate Votes %
Denzil Minnan-Wong 8,743 53.418%
Peter Youngren 6,484 39.616%
Stephan Stewart 1,140 6.965%
Total 16,367 100%

Ward 35: Scarborough Southwest

Ward 26
Candidate Votes %
Michelle Berardinetti 8,293 50.453%
Adrian Heaps 6,020 36.625%
Malik Ahmad 850 5.171%
Victoria Doyle 429 2.61%
Ed Green 253 1.539%
John Lewis 183 1.113%
Jay Burnett 173 1.053%
Peter Tijiri 90 0.548%
John Morawietz 76 0.462%
Jason Woychesko 70 0.426%
Total 16,437 100%

Ward 36: Scarborough Southwest

Ward 36
Candidate Votes %
Gary Crawford 4,392 25.249%
Robert Spencer 3,970 22.823%
Diane Hogan 2,341 13.458%
Sean Gladney 2,233 12.837%
Eddy Gasparotto 1,727 9.928%
Marvin Macaraig 866 4.978%
Vicki Breen 663 3.811%
Robert McDermott 518 2.978%
Tony Ashdown 475 2.731%
Roman Danilov 210 1.207%
Total 17,395 100%

Incumbent Brian Ashton did not seek re-election.

Ward 37: Scarborough Centre

Ward 37
Candidate Votes %
Michael Thompson 15,129 83.636%
Isabelle Champagne 1,571 8.685%
Fawzi Bidawi 1,014 5.606%
Sergio Otoya Salazar 375 2.073%
Total 18,089 100%

Ward 38: Scarborough Centre

Ward 38
Candidate Votes %
Glenn De Baeremaeker 11,166 62.443%
Glenn Middleton 4,541 25.394%
Tushar Shah 824 4.608%
Kirk Jensen 708 3.959%
Sandip Vora 643 3.596%
Total 17,882 100%

Ward 39: Scarborough—Agincourt

Ward 39
Candidate Votes %
Mike Del Grande 9,931 68.184%
Kevin Xu 3,640 24.991%
Caldwell Williams 994 6.825%
Total 14,565 100%

Ward 40: Scarborough—Agincourt

Ward 40
Candidate Votes %
Norm Kelly 12,458 74.001%
Ken Sy 1,935 11.494%
Bryan Heal 1,862 11.06%
Cheng-Chih Tsai 580 3.445%
Total 16,835 100%

Ward 41: Scarborough—Rouge River

Ward 41
Candidate Votes %
Chin Lee 12,557 70.616%
Patricia Sinclair 2,718 15.285%
Danny Chien 2,507 14.099%
Total 17,782 100%

Ward 42: Scarborough—Rouge River

Ward 42
Candidate Votes %
Raymond Cho 10,811 52.93%
Neethan Shan 6,873 33.65%
Shamoon Poonawala 586 2.869%
Mohammed Ather 474 2.321%
Namu Ponnambalam 443 2.169%
Ruth Tecle 437 2.14%
George Singh 353 1.728%
Leon Saul 323 1.581%
Venthan Ramanathavavuniyan 125 0.612%
Total 20,425 100%

Ward 43: Scarborough East

Ward 43
Candidate Votes %
Paul Ainslie 9,334 60.559%
John Laforet 4,440 28.807%
Bhaskar Sharma 758 4.918%
Benjamin Mbaegbu 489 3.173%
Samuel Getachew 392 2.543%
Total 15,413 100%

Ward 44: Scarborough East

Ward 44
Candidate Votes %
Ron Moeser 10,185 47.456%
Diana Hall 9,901 46.133%
Mohammed Mirza 749 3.49%
Heath Thomas 627 2.921%
Total 21,462 100%

References

Notes

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Toronto municipal election, 2010.
  1. The cost of the ward 9 by-election is estimated at $175,000. The court decision also affected a school trustee election and that election would cost $350,000 since it spans two wards.

Citations

  1. "Porter: Female breakthrough on Toronto city council". Toronto Star, October 27, 2010.
  2. David Rider "Ford surges into second place in mayoral poll" Toronto Star Fri Apr 16 2010
  3. Marcus Gee "Toronto's mayoral candidates face off for the first time" The Globe and Mail. Mar. 29, 2010
  4. "Better Ballots hosts mayor's debate". insidetoronto.com, June 3, 2010.
  5. "Mammoliti quits mayoral race", Toronto Star, July 5, 2010
  6. "So You Think You Can Council?". Toronto Star, June 10, 2010.
  7. "Steve Murray Hates Toronto, and Wants to Be Your Mayor". Torontoist, October 1, 2010.
  8. rom-city-halls-mystery-tweeter-who-was-unmasked-sort-of-this-week/ "The best of Rebel Mayor: the funniest quips from city hall’s mystery tweeter, who was unmasked (sort of) this week". Toronto Life, May 20, 2010.
  9. "By-election ordered for Augimeri's Ward 9 York Centre and TDSB Ward 4". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. 21 April 2011. Archived from the original on April 23, 2011. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
  10. Nickle, David (2011-02-04). "Ward 9 to be challenged in court". Inside Toronto. Toronto Community News. Retrieved 2011-02-16.
  11. "Augimeri to face new vote". CBC Toronto. Canadian Broadcasting Company. 2011-05-13. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  12. Peat, Don (2011-05-13). "Byelection a go in Augimeri's Ward 9". Toronto Sun. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  13. Alcoba, Natalie (2011-05-16). "Councillor Augimeri to appeal byelection decision". National Post. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  14. Rider, David (2011-08-04). "Mississauga asks to join Augimeri-Cusimano appeal". Toronto Star. TorStar. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  15. Dale, Daniel (2011-12-19). "Ward 9 byelection rejected, Augimeri to stay". Toronto Star. TorStar. Retrieved 2011-12-19.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 CBA.ca Toronto Votes
  17. "Usual suspects line up for municipal vote", Toronto Sun, January 5, 2010
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  19. "Rob Ford's brother joins race", Toronto Sun, August 5, 2010
  20. "Politics, not religion, unite Ford, Brereton", Toronto Sun, August 5, 2010
  21. "And now, a trip to Mammolltiville", National Post, October 17, 2009
  22. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "5 tight city council races to watch", Toronto Star, September 10, 2010
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  24. "Smitherman's brother runs for council, backs Ford", Toronto Star, September 8, 2010
  25. , Town Crier, June 15. 2010
  26. , Shalom Life, August 13, 2010
  27. "Oomen says she's ready for council seat", Town Crier, August 16, 2010
  28. "Why I'm Running", Toronto Star, September 11, 2010
  29. 1 2 "Howard Moscoe calls it quits", Toronto Star August 31, 2010
  30. 1 2 "Municipal election feature: The vacant wards", National Post, October 2, 2010
  31. "Demolition proposal leads to heightened emotions at Ward 15 debate", Toronto Observer, October 7, 2010
  32. 1 2 3 "Campaign trail mix", Now Magazine, September 30-October 7, 2010
  33. "Giambrone unlikely to run for his council seat", Globe and Mail, February 12, 2010
  34. "Kevin Beaulieu named new executive director of Pride Toronto". Xtra!, October 27, 2011.
  35. "Mike Layton: chip off the old block?". cbc.ca, February 26, 2010.
  36. "Sean McCormick's endorsements". Sean McCormick
  37. http://www.sharenews.com/local-news/2010/09/22/ctv%E2%80%99s-karlene-nation-running-city-council
  38. "Rossi first to jump into race to replace Miller", Globe and Mail, January 5, 2010
  39. http://www.karensun.ca/?page_id=75
  40. The Star. Toronto http://www.thestar.com/article/876714--star-election-choices-for-city-council#comments. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  41. http://kscheuer.wordpress.com/2010/03/01/mohamed-dhanani-rematch-with-parker/
  42. "Council veteran Kyle Rae won't run for re-election". Toronto Star, December 11, 2009.
  43. "Enza Anderson to run for city council in 2010". CP24, November 25, 2009.
  44. 1 2 http://votebenbergen.ca/wordpress/issues-policy/
  45. "Former Cop, UK Advisor Running to Replace Rae", January 12, 2010.
  46. http://www.votekenchan.ca/endorsements.html
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  48. "Seasoned candidate enters race for councillor of Ward 27", January 19, 2010.
  49. "Politics not as usual in Ward 27". The Globe and Mail, February 27, 2010.
  50. Toronto Sun, Tuesday September 23, 2010, "The Other Face of Ward 27 Frontrunner" by Sue-Ann Levy, http://www.torontosun.com/comment/columnists/sueann_levy/2010/09/23/15457101.html
  51. "Reading the Labour Council tea leaves". The Globe and Mail, July 15, 2010.
  52. http://wookey.ca/index.php/whotopmenu/42-biographycategory/51-biographyarticle, January 30, 2010.
  53. "Giorgio Mammoliti's in, Case Ootes calls it quits" Toronto Star. Wed Jan 06 2010
  54. Richard Warnica, Wards to watch: Toronto-Danforth mainstay Paula Fletcher faces opponents right, left and centre (October 8, 2014).
  55. Why are Some Cities Climate Change Policy Leaders?: The Case of Toronto, paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association (2015), p. 9.
  56. "The next Adam Vaughan?", Globe and Mail, August 25
  57. "Gladstone to run for Toronto city council", Xtra, August 24, 2010
  58. "Mug full of frustration spills at Boardwalk Pub", Globe and Mail, September 12, 2010
  59. 1 2 The Star. Toronto http://www.thestar.com/news/elections/article/876321--john-tory-endorses-bussin-rival. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  60. "Council pays for suit settlement", Toronto Sun, December 11, 2009
  61. "Mayoral candidate Rocco Rossi decries city council's 'inertia'", Toronto Star, Tuesday January 5, 2010
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