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==Personal life==
==Personal life==
Ford is a lifelong resident of Toronto. He is the son of [[Doug Ford (Ontario politician)|Doug Ford]], who was a [[Member of Provincial Parliament (Ontario)|Member of the Ontario Legislature]]. The Ford family runs a printing business. Ford studied [[political science]] at [[Carleton University]] but dropped out after the first year.<ref name="ConfusingUniversity">{{cite news|first=David|last=Rider|work=Toronto Star|title=Rob Ford’s confusing university life|url=http://www.thestar.com/news/torontocouncil/article/910648--rob-ford-s-confusing-university-life|date=December 21, 2010|accessdate=January 2, 2011}}</ref>
Ford is a lifelong resident of Toronto. He is the son of [[Doug Ford (Ontario politician)|Doug Ford]], who was a [[Member of Provincial Parliament (Ontario)|Member of the Ontario Legislature]] in the Conservative government of [[Mike Harris]], and the founder of the printing business that made the family rich.<ref>http://www.thestar.com/Obituary/AtoG/article/108295</ref> Ford studied [[political science]] at [[Carleton University]] but dropped out after the first year.<ref name="ConfusingUniversity">{{cite news|first=David|last=Rider|work=Toronto Star|title=Rob Ford’s confusing university life|url=http://www.thestar.com/news/torontocouncil/article/910648--rob-ford-s-confusing-university-life|date=December 21, 2010|accessdate=January 2, 2011}}</ref>


He resides in [[Etobicoke, Ontario|Etobicoke]] with his wife Renata and their daughter and son. Ford is a supporter, volunteer and/or member of the [[Salvation Army]]'s Red Shield Appeal, [[Terry Fox Foundation]], [[Heart and Stroke Foundation]], Etobicoke [[Chamber of Commerce]], [[Toronto Board of Trade]] and the Toronto West [[Rotary Club]].<ref name="FordCityOfToronto" />
He resides in [[Etobicoke, Ontario|Etobicoke]] with his wife Renata and their daughter and son. Ford is a supporter, volunteer and/or member of the [[Salvation Army]]'s Red Shield Appeal, [[Terry Fox Foundation]], [[Heart and Stroke Foundation]], Etobicoke [[Chamber of Commerce]], [[Toronto Board of Trade]] and the Toronto West [[Rotary Club]].<ref name="FordCityOfToronto" />

Revision as of 03:11, 17 November 2011

Robert Ford
64th Mayor of Toronto
Assumed office
December 1, 2010
Preceded byDavid Miller
Toronto City Councillor for (Ward 2) Etobicoke North
In office
November 14, 2000 – October 25, 2010
Preceded byElizabeth Brown
Succeeded byDoug Ford, Jr.
Personal details
Born (1969-05-28) May 28, 1969 (age 55)
Etobicoke, Ontario
Political partyIndependent (2000 – present) Note: Municipal politicians in Toronto run on a Nonpartisan basis
Other political
affiliations
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario[1]
SpouseRenata
Children2
ResidenceToronto
ProfessionBusinessman

Robert Bruce "Rob" Ford (born May 28, 1969) is the 64th and current Mayor of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He was first elected to city council in the 2000 Toronto municipal election, and was re-elected to his council seat in 2003 and again in 2006. In 2010, Ford was elected Mayor in a hotly contested election, and took office on December 1.

Personal life

Ford is a lifelong resident of Toronto. He is the son of Doug Ford, who was a Member of the Ontario Legislature in the Conservative government of Mike Harris, and the founder of the printing business that made the family rich.[2] Ford studied political science at Carleton University but dropped out after the first year.[3]

He resides in Etobicoke with his wife Renata and their daughter and son. Ford is a supporter, volunteer and/or member of the Salvation Army's Red Shield Appeal, Terry Fox Foundation, Heart and Stroke Foundation, Etobicoke Chamber of Commerce, Toronto Board of Trade and the Toronto West Rotary Club.[4]

Ford actively supports high school football programmes in Toronto. He donated $20,000 to equip Don Bosco Catholic Secondary School's football team, which he has also coached since 2001, and has started a foundation to fund teams at other struggling schools.[5]

City councillor

Ford was elected to Toronto City Council in 2000, when he defeated incumbent Elizabeth Brown.[4] He was re-elected in 2003 to his Etobicoke North seat, with 80 percent of the vote. In the 2006 election, he won again, this time with 66 percent of the vote.[6]

In 2003, Ford supported increased funding for the TTC. He also supported the inquiry into the MFP scandal.[7]

Ford has been a strong critic of the perks that are afforded to city politicians.[8] He regularly proposed motions to cut back such spending. All of his proposed cutbacks have been defeated. He has also made headlines by claiming the least amount of money budgeted for councillor office expenses.[9] Ford has consistently filed an expense budget of $0 or close to it.[9] As of 2007, councillors are allowed a maximum office budget of $53,100. In November, 2007, Ford was investigated by the city's integrity commissioner over his spending habits. In a report to the Executive Committee, the commissioner concluded that Ford had failed to report office expenses that he had paid for out of his own pocket. He also printed flyers at his family's printing business for distribution to his constituents, again at his own expense. City policy requires that these expenses must be paid through the councillor's budget rather than with personal funds even though this would likely entail Rob Ford paying himself for the use of his own printing facility.[10] As of November 27, Ford refused to comply with the city's policy.[11]

In March 2007, Ford opposed providing city funds to build bicycle lanes on roads. During the 2007 city budget debate, he said, "I can't support bike lanes. Roads are built for buses, cars, and trucks. My heart bleeds when someone gets killed, but it's their own fault at the end of the day."[12][13] At the May 25, 2009 Council meeting to discuss reducing Jarvis St. from five lanes of traffic to four, Ford called cyclists "a pain in the ass" for motorists.[14]

In May 2010, the city's integrity commissioner recommended that Ford be reprimanded for breaching confidentiality. In August 2009, he revealed the price of a residential sale on an AM 640 talk show that was still a confidential discussion. Commissioner Janet Leiper wrote in her report that "Ford failed to read the report, failed to check his assumption that the matter had been debated and could be revealed in public, and recklessly revealed confidential information to the public on the radio broadcast." The sale of the house was delayed a year due to Ford's indiscretion. This was the fourth time that Ford has violated council's code of conduct. In the previous minor breaches, Ford was not reprimanded.[15]

Ford brought the tax free status of councillors perks up for discussion at council and also brought it to the attention of Revenue Canada, which looked into the issue and found the perks should have been taxable. Ford, who has long spoken out against councillors' "perks," said the CRA is right to crack down on free passes for councillors. "All these perks, one right after the other. And I've tried to get rid of them at budget meetings and they just laugh at me," he said. "I think it's great that they're forcing us to show who's used [a pass], and how many times you've used it. And if you have used it, you have to pay taxes on it, 'cause it is an income." Mr. Ford said he has filed numerous complaints with the CRA, and, "finally, somebody up there's listening."[16] On April 30, 2010, Gary Webster, the TTC chief general manager said a Revenue Canada audit of the City of Toronto for 2006 and 2007 found they should have been paying taxes on their TTC pass freebie worth about $1,100 a year. Toronto city councillors have now been told to surrender their free Metropasses immediately or risk paying back taxes on them after the Canada Revenue Agency deemed them a taxable benefit. Happy with decision, Ford told the Toronto Star, "It took 10 years but, at the end of the day, councillors will have to pay to get on the bus like everyone else."[17]

Toronto mayoral election

Rocco Rossi and Rob Ford at the Parkview Hills Community Association Mayoral Debate.

Ford declared his candidacy for Mayor of Toronto in the 2010 election on March 26, 2010.[18] The Toronto Star's Royson James noted that Ford's was the most raucous, jubilant, and enthusiastic campaign launch of the 2010 Toronto mayoralty race. Councillor Mike Del Grande says of Ford: "He’s very popular with ‘Joe Public.’ He’s definitely a contender, not a wild card."[19] At the campaign kickoff meeting, Ford laid out his platform, organized into four main themes: "putting people and families first, focusing on the fundamentals, reducing waste and eliminating unnecessary taxes." Among his campaign promises, he said that he would repeal the vehicle registration and land transfer taxes implemented by current mayor, David Miller, and make the Toronto Transit Commission an essential service. He said there was "enough fat and inefficiency to slash costs while dramatically improving customer service." He also said he would work to cut the number of councillors on city council by half.[18] In describing Ford’s vision for Toronto, the candidate said: "It’s going to be spotless. You go downtown now, you see all the graffiti – you aren’t going to have any graffiti there." Ford promised to improve services for residents of the city's low-cost housing, as he has done in his own ward,[20] and to help bring homeless people in off the streets. He said "We’re going to help the people you see laying on the streets. A lot of them are drug addicts or alcoholics."[21]

Ford's campaign used a novel approach for Toronto which worked effectively, despite “the conventional wisdom [that] conservatives don’t win in Toronto”. His staff disregarded the conventional strategy of placing emphasis on target seats and focusing only on certain areas, which is used at the national, provincial and mainstream party level. Instead, his campaign bypassed traditional media outlets, using telephone town halls to call some 40,000 homes simultaneously and invite respondents to a talk-radio-style event hosted by Ford. This created grassroots momentum and facilitated small donations and grew the campaign’s database.[22]

Ford campaigned on ending wasteful spending at City Hall, and his slogans such as "Stop the Gravy Train" and “respect for taxpayers” resonated with the public.[23] His campaign's extensive internal polls showed that wasteful spending at City Hall was one of the biggest concerns among voters, although that "seemed to be the last thing any of the other candidates were talking about”. Ford also pledged to do away from the city's century-old fair-wage policy, which required that private contractors be paid the same as union employees. Several of Ford's policies were in reaction to then-current Mayor David Miller's inability to deal with the unions during the 2009 garbage strike. It was said that Ford successfully tapped into recession-weary “ordinary” people who comprise the bulk of the population Toronto, who were angry at perceived financial mismanagement at City Hall and powerful city employee unions with generous benefits and pension plans.[24] Ford's message of putting taxpayers’ interests before that of labour and special interests was also said to have attracted wide support among diverse immigrant communities in the inner-city and suburbs (who demographics contrast sharply with the "urbane creative class" of The Beach and the Annex neighborhoods). By contrast, "people knew precisely nothing about what George Smitherman stood for", according to a spokesman for George Smitherman who was considered Ford's chief opponent.[22][25][26]

Rival George Smitherman and other political opponents attempted to make an issue of Ford's past controversial statements and incidents. However, these did little to hurt Ford's popularity. A pollster found that "one middle-aged woman explained that she would overlook personality failings in a mayor – as long as he didn’t waste her taxes".[27][28] According to a staffer, these personal attacks were turned into advantages by the Ford campaign, who portrayed rivals making these personal attacks as trying to keep the gravy train going".[22]

On May 6, 2010, Ford fired a worker on his campaign team for sending a twitter message. The tweet attacked fellow mayoral candidate George Smitherman over recent comments about AIDS. The message read "Smitherman should spend less time attacking Ford for telling truth about AIDS, more time coming up with actual policies." The message relates to astatement Ford made in council in 2006 about AIDS being "very preventable. If you are not doing needles and you are not gay, you wouldn’t get AIDS probably, that’s the bottom line."[29]

On August 17, 2010, The National Post reported that a computer user inside the Toronto Star company made edits to the Wikipedia article about Ford that his campaign considered "very serious libel" and copyright infringement. Bob Hepburn, a Toronto Star spokesman, denied responsibility for the edits. "The Toronto Star owns a couple of these IP portals and they come under Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, which is a broader thing. The Toronto Star itself has a separate portal," said Hepburn.[30]

On August 26, 2010, the Toronto Star reported that an E-mail enquiry from a prospective voter was answered through the mechanism of a computerised form letter, and when filling out the form letter, someone apparently forgot to replace a bolded entry field in the second paragraph of the letter reading "Insert vague response on policy".[31][32]

Ford strongly criticized a sole sourced contract signed by city council giving the owners of the Boardwalk Pub a 20 year lease extension to run the restaurant which is in Ashbridges Bay Park in the city's east end. On July 29, Ford was asked about the deal on a radio interview. He said "I truly believe they are, and that’s my personal opinion, and when I see all these donations, going through campaigns, it stinks to high heaven, we tried to re-open it, and they wouldn’t re-open it." On August 12, Ford was quoted as saying the deal "smacks of civic corruption." The owner, George Foulidis, said that he gave Ford a chance to apologize for the remarks but Ford refused to do so. Foulidis said he had no choice but to launch the lawsuit for $6 million.[33] The criticism over the non-bid contract of the Boardwalk Pub was said to be a key factor in the landslide defeat of incumbent councilor Sandra Bussin who supported the deal.[34]

During the 2010 mayoral election Ford, in an interview with the Toronto Star seemed to imply that he graduated from Carleton University in Ottawa.[35] Shortly after publication Ford's deputy communications director, Fraser Macdonald, issued a clarification that “While Rob did attend Carleton University for political science, he actually left school two credits short of graduating when his sister fell upon hard times”.[3] In December 2010, it was reported that Ford left Carleton after only one year and Rob Ford said that he went on to York University after leaving Carleton where he took six continuing education courses between 1990 and 1991.[3]

Ford garnered controversy again in August 2010 after endorsing Pastor Wendell Brereton, who is running for city councillor in Ward 6. Pastor Brereton has suggested online that same-sex marriage could “dismantle” a “healthy democratic civilization.” Ford has said in regards to Pastor Brereton that “We’re together. We have the same thoughts." Ford also has noted that he opposes same-sex marriage. "I always have," he stated. "But if people want to, to each their own. I’m not worried about what people do in their private life. I look out for taxpayers’ money."[36][37]

A Nanos Research poll, published on September 19, 2010, showed Ford doubling his lead from 12% to 24.5% over second-place candidate Smitherman (45.8% to 21.3% of decided voters).[38] The Nanos Research Poll asked 1021 "likely voters" from September 14 and 16 with Rob Ford receiving 34.4% of likely voters, Smitherman 16%, Joe Pantalone 12% and undecided voters at 25%.[39] A Global News Ipsos-Reid poll released Monday, September 27 showed Ford's lead diminishing at 28 per cent, with George Smitherman at 23 per cent, Joe Pantalone at 10 per cent, and Rocco Rossi and Sarah Thomson (who dropped from the race on September 28) at seven per cent each.[40][41] On October 22., an EKOS Research Poll found Ford with an 8 per cent lead over second place Smitherman in decided voters; 43.9% to 35.6%.[42]

Ford was elected mayor with 380,201 votes (47%) over Smitherman's 287,393 (35.6%) and Pantalone with 94,840 (11.7%). The voter turnout was around 52% of registered voters, the highest in Toronto's post-amalgamation history. Ford's 11% margin of victory was the largest for any incoming mayor in post-amalgamation history, roughly double that of Mel Lastman in 1997 and David Miller in 2003.[26] While ward-by-ward electoral results showed that Ford had won all the suburbs compared to Smitherman who topped (old Toronto) districts, Ford also received significicant support (80000 votes) from the "Downtown 13” wards which made up over 20% of his total votes. By contrast, 60% of Smitherman's strongholds were located in Ward 27 and 28, which makes up his former provincial MPP riding.

Mayor

In his inauguration, Ford had Mississauga resident Don Cherry introduce him. Cherry garnered some controversy with his references to "left wing pinkos" and "kooks".[43]

In May 2011, a three-member panel unanimously voted to proceed with an audit of the Mayor's campaign finances after election fraud complaints were made.[44]

In June 2011, Ford yet again stirred up controversy when he refused to attend Toronto's annual Pride Parade or any Pride festivities in the week leading up to the Pride Parade breaking a more than decade long tradition of Toronto Mayors supporting the city's LBGQT community.[45]

On September 16, 2011, a poll conducted by Toronto market research firm Forum Research revealed that only 27% of Toronto's residents indicated they would reelect Ford, were an election held around that date. A series of unpopular cuts proposed by Ford contributed to the downslide in his popularity. According to another Forum study, approximately 67% of Toronto residents approved of Ford's leadership during his first six months in office.

Political views

In 2002, Ford strenuously objected to the possibility that a homeless shelter would open in his suburban Etobicoke ward.[46][47] Later in the same year, he was quoted while berating an anti-poverty activist, "Do you have a job, sir? I'll give you a newspaper to find a job, like everyone else has to do between 9 and 5."[48] In 2005, Ford told a homeless protestor, "I'm working. Why don't you get a job?"[49]

About the 2010 G-20 Toronto summit protests he said, “If I was the chief, I would have moved in Saturday afternoon and cleaned house” "I don't think there should be an inquiry or review... . I think our police force was too nice."[50]

In March 2011, Ford said that he will not allow city funding for the 2011 Toronto Pride Parade if organizers allow the controversial group Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (QuAIA) march again this year. “Taxpayers dollars should not go toward funding hate speech,” Ford said.[51] In April 2011, QuAIA announced that it would not participate in the Toronto Pride Parade.[52]

Ford criticized the city-owned Toronto Community Housing Corporation : "They treat people worse like animals . . . There needs to be a good cleaning at TCHC, and I’m the one to do it.”[35] The same article claims Ford reports he has not "smoked pot in 25 years" and that he denies having told a woman at a public event to go to Iran to be "raped and shot".

Controversies

Ford and fellow councillor Giorgio Mammoliti, who occupies a neighbouring ward, have often scrapped with each other and these exchanges have made headlines in local newspapers.[53] Controversy erupted when several councillors reportedly heard Ford call Mammoliti "Gino boy" in the debate over the 2002 budget.[54] Mammoliti filed a complaint for the ethnic slur.[55] Mammoliti's son Michael filed his papers to run against Ford in the 2003 municipal election, but withdrew at the last moment.[56] In March 2003, in a debate over the budget of the Toronto Zoo, Ford called Mammoliti, who chairs the zoo board, a "snake" and a "weasel" in council.[57][58] In September 2010, Mammoliti endorsed Ford for Mayor.[59] Mammoliti has since become one of Ford's staunchest allies and supporters, even going as far as to defend Ford's policies to the media.

In 2006, allegations arose of his conduct at a Toronto Maple Leafs game. Two audience members alleged Ford instigated a shouting match.[60] Security at the Air Canada Centre later ejected Ford from the venue. Initially, Ford denied involvement, claiming mistaken identity. The following day, Ford confirmed the allegations and announced his apology to the couple.[61] He cited personal problems as a reason for his behaviour.[62]

Further controversy erupted in a Toronto City Council session when Ford argued against the city spending $1.5 million on AIDS prevention programmes. Ford stated that "(AIDS) is very preventable," and that "if you are not doing needles and you are not gay, you wouldn't get AIDS probably, that's bottom line."[63] With respect to the increasing rates of women contracting the disease, Ford said; "How are women getting it? Maybe they are sleeping with bisexual men."[63] During a June 2005 council debate, Ford said, "I don't understand a transgender," asking "is it a guy dressed up like a girl or a girl dressed up like a guy?"[64]

Again sparking controversy during a March 2008 debate at City Hall, Ford said, "Those Oriental people work like dogs. They work their hearts out ... that's why they're successful in life. ... I'm telling you, Oriental people, they're slowly taking over, because there's no excuses for them. They're hard, hard workers." He drew criticism for those remarks from Mayor David Miller, budget chief Shelley Carroll and other councillors.[65][66]

In 1999, Ford was arrested in Miami for driving under the influence (DUI) and marijuana possession charges.[67] According to the statement recorded by the arresting officer, Ford was acting nervous, had blood shot eyes and had "a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage on his breath". Ford threw his hands up in the air and told the police officer, "Go ahead, take me to jail."[68] Until he was questioned by reporters,[69] Ford said that the marijuana charge had "completely, totally slipped my mind" because the more serious issue during that arrest was the DUI charge.[70] Ford initially denied the DUI charge, claiming instead he was arrested because he "refused to give a breath sample".[71]

On October 24, 2011, Ford was confronted at his home by Mary Walsh, a cast member of the satirical show This Hour Has 22 Minutes, in costume as her character Marg Delahunty. Walsh has frequently conducted "ambush" interviews of Canadian politicians as this character, a housewife who dresses in an outfit inspired by Xena: Warrior Princess. Ford called 911 twice, reportedly shouting at the dispatcher "You … bitches! Don't you fucking know? I'm Rob fucking Ford, the mayor of this city!" Ford denied directing "foul and derogatory comments" at the dispatcher but apologized for his use of profanity.[72][73][74] Toronto police Chief Bill Blair released a statement shortly afterwards stating that he had reviewed three emergency calls involving the mayor and that their content had been 'misrepresented'. According to the chief, the word 'bitches' was never used nor did the mayor describe himself as originally claimed.[75]

References

  1. ^ Richard Gilbert, "When will Ford's honeymoon end?", Toronto Star, December 30, 2010, A23.
  2. ^ http://www.thestar.com/Obituary/AtoG/article/108295
  3. ^ a b c Rider, David (December 21, 2010). "Rob Ford's confusing university life". Toronto Star. Retrieved January 2, 2011.
  4. ^ a b "Toronto city councillors, Rob Ford". City of Toronto, Accessing City Hall. 2007. Retrieved April 26, 2007.
  5. ^ Grossman, David (September 13, 2009). "Rob Ford a team player to schools". Toronto Star.
  6. ^ Grant, Kelly (March 25, 2010). "Right-winger Ford really a social liberal, brother says", The Globe and Mail, p. A12.
  7. ^ "10 Worst Councillors". NOW Magazine. July 3, 2003.
  8. ^ "Councillor Blames Politicians' Perks For Your Tax Hike". City News. April 24, 2007.
  9. ^ a b Vincent, Donovan (March 19, 2007). "Who are big spenders at city hall?". Toronto Star.
  10. ^ Griffiths, Jeff (November 8, 2007). "Councillors Office Expenses – Councillor Ford and Councillor Holyday" (PDF).
  11. ^ Vincent, Donovan (November 27, 2007). "Reveal expenses, Ford told". The Toronto Star.
  12. ^ Byers, Jim (March 8, 2007). "City decays as debt climbs". Toronto Star. Retrieved April 26, 2007. I can't support bike lanes... {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ "Recording of Toronto council session during which Rob Ford comments on cyclists". August 3, 2010. Retrieved September 24, 2010.
  14. ^ Hume, Christopher (May 26, 2009). "One small lane for mankind". The Star. Toronto. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
  15. ^ Grant, Kelly (May 8, 2010). "Reprimand Ford for confidentiality breach, integrity commissioner says". Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved May 8, 2010.
  16. ^ "Ottawa's attempt to tax councillors' perks, expense budgets rejected by city". Globe and Mail. Canada.
  17. ^ Rider, David (April 30, 2010). "Councillors ordered to return free transit passes". Toronto Star.
  18. ^ a b David Rider. Rob Ford kicks off mayoral campaign. Toronto Star. March 26, 2010.
  19. ^ Royson James. Rob Ford proves popular at mayoral campaign launch. Toronto Star March 29, 2010.[1]
  20. ^ Notes for an Address by Rob Ford, Candidate for Mayor of Toronto to supporters at the Toronto Congress Centre 650 Dixon Road, Toronto, Ontario on March 26, 2010
  21. ^ David Rider. Rob Ford's bid for mayor will tilt campaign to the right. Toronto Star. March 22, 2010 [2]
  22. ^ a b c Kohler, Nicholas. (2010-10-29) How Rob Ford won Toronto – Canada. Macleans.ca. Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  23. ^ Urban Scrawl: Toronto not so divided after all | Posted Toronto | National Post. News.nationalpost.com. Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  24. ^ Emotion energized Ford’s amazing run. thestar.com (2010-10-27). Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  25. ^ National Post editorial board: Toronto’s angry (non-white) voters | Full Comment | National Post. Fullcomment.nationalpost.com (2010-10-27). Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  26. ^ a b A matter of respect: how Rob Ford swept into City Hall. Eyeweekly.com (2010-10-26). Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  27. ^ Michael, John. (2010-10-28) The Globe tells us how it all went wrong for George Smitherman (or, five lessons for Adam Vaughan on how not to run for mayor) | Mayor May Not. torontolife.com. Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  28. ^ This page is available to GlobePlus subscribers. Theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  29. ^ Rider, David (May 6, 2010). "Ford punishes campaign worker for Twitter message". Toronto Star.
  30. ^ Alcoba, Natalie (August 17, 2010). "Computer inside Toronto Star company edited Rob Ford's Wikipedia entry". National Post. Canada.
  31. ^ Poisson, Jayme (August 26, 2010). "Yours vaguely, Rob Ford". Toronto Star. Retrieved August 31, 2010.
  32. ^ "Rob Ford issues "vague" policy response: Toronto mayoral frontrunner slips up yet again". Macleans. August 27, 2010. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  33. ^ Ford sued for $6 million by Boardwalk Pub owner Toronto Star. October 12, 2010.
  34. ^ This page is available to GlobePlus subscribers. Theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  35. ^ a b Diebel, Linda (April 23, 2010). "Rob Ford's complicated life". Toronto Star. Retrieved January 2, 2011.
  36. ^ Grant, Kelly (August 5, 2010). "'Ford's endorsement of pastor for council stokes fear among gays'". Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved September 25, 2010.
  37. ^ Alcoba, Natalie (August 4, 2010). "'Fundamentalist pastor drops out of mayoral race, endorses Rob Ford'". National Post. Canada. Retrieved September 25, 2010.
  38. ^ Rider, David (September 19, 2010). "Rob Ford opens huge lead in mayor's race". Toronto Star.
  39. ^ "Ford holds commanding lead in Toronto Mayoral race" (PDF). Nanos Research. September 21, 2010.
  40. ^ "Frontrunner Rob Ford losing steam in Toronto mayoral race: poll". Globe and Mail. Canada. September 28, 2010. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
  41. ^ "Contest grows tighter as Thomson drops out, endorses Smitherman". Globe and Mail. Toronto. September 29, 2010. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  42. ^ ".Ford back in driver's seat, poll says". The Toronto Sun. October 22, 2010. Retrieved October 23, 2010.
  43. ^ Rider, David (December 7, 2010). "Don Cherry rips 'left-wing pinkos' at council inaugural". Toronto Star. Retrieved June 12, 2011.
  44. ^ "Ford's election campaign to undergo audit", Don Peat. Toronto Sun. May 13, 2011. Accessed June 7, 2011
  45. ^ Church, Elizabeth (June 22, 2011). "Foes blast Ford over decision to skip Pride parade", The Globe and Mail. Retrieved July 5, 2011.
  46. ^ "Not in My Ward". Toronto NOW online edition. Retrieved April 26, 2007. This is an insult to my constituents to even think about having a homeless shelter in their ward...
  47. ^ "Recording of Toronto council session during which Rob Ford comments on preferring a "public lynching" to having a public meeting to discuss a homeless shelter in his ward". August 9, 2010. Retrieved September 25, 2010.
  48. ^ Moloney, Paul. Councillors to activists: Get a job --- Noisy expulsion follows protest over housing sale. Toronto Star. October 30, 2002, p. B04
  49. ^ Porter, Catherine. Protestors storm council; OCAP denounces homeless plan Clarke shouts, Miller leaves. Toronto Star February 2, 2005 p. B03
  50. ^ Bilton, Chris (July 7, 2010). "Beware the unmuzzled Rob Ford". Eye Weekly.
  51. ^ Toronto mayor lays down Pride parade law
  52. ^ Queers Against Israel Apartheid quits Toronto parade
  53. ^ Cowan, James. Ford is known for his outbursts. National Post. February 28, 2003 p. A11
  54. ^ Wanagas, Don. "Sorry, Wrong Number". Toronto NOW online edition. Retrieved April 26, 2007. ...hardcore Conservative Ford allegedly called neo-Liberal Mammoliti a 'Gino boy'...
  55. ^ Lu, Vanessa. City hall verbal scuffle is over. Toronto Star, April 15, 2003, p. B02 The city spent $30,000 investigating Mammoliti's complaint.
  56. ^ No Byline. Ford hopes new team has 'right' stuff. The Toronto Star. October 13, 2003, p. B02
  57. ^ No Byline. Childish behaviour. Toronto Star. March 1, 2003, p.E06
  58. ^ "Recording of March 2003 council session". September 21, 2010. Retrieved September 24, 2010.
  59. ^ ". Mammoliti endorses Ford for mayor". CBC News. September 22, 2010. Retrieved October 1, 2010.
  60. ^ James, Royson. Ford can forget his mayoral dreams. He was on private time, Ford says. Toronto Star. May 3, 2006. B05. Ford's statements include, "You right-wing communist bastards," and "My sister was a heroin addict and was shot in the head."
  61. ^ "Ford admits lying to media about drunken outburst". CBC News, Toronto. May 3, 2006. Retrieved April 26, 2007. I reflected on it last night, and talked to my family. I came forward and admitted (that I lied to the media about not being at the game). That's all I can do. I mean, I'm not perfect
  62. ^ Hannon, Gerald (October 2010). "Mr. Popular" (PDF). Toronto Life. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  63. ^ a b "Councillor Rob Ford Under Fire Over AIDS Comments". CHUM Television, CityNews, Toronto. June 29, 2006. Retrieved April 26, 2007.
  64. ^ Jill Mahoney In Quotes: Rob Ford and a decade of controversy The Globe and Mail August 19, 2010
  65. ^ Lu, Vanessa (March 6, 2008). "Ford rebuked for Asian comments". Toronto Star. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  66. ^ Gray, Jeff (March 6, 2008). "Ford draws rebuke, saying Oriental people are taking over". Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  67. ^ Dempsey, Amy (August 19, 2010). "'Go ahead take me to jail,' Ford told police". Toronto Star. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
  68. ^ Rob Ford Arrest Report. Scribd.com (2010-08-19). Retrieved on March 19, 2011.
  69. ^ Jenkins, Jonathan (August 18, 2010). "Ford dodges pot bust in Florida". Toronto Sun. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
  70. ^ Grant, Kelly (August 19, 2010). "Ford forgot marijuana charge, confuses impaired driving charge". Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
  71. ^ Lamberti, Rob (August 19, 2010). "'Go ahead, take me to jail': Ford during 1999 arrest". Toronto Sun. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
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