Etobicoke byelection will likely impact city hall - Action News
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Toronto

Etobicoke byelection will likely impact city hall

The Etobicoke-Lakeshore byelection set for tomorrow is a provincial race that everyone at Toronto's city hall will be watching, with two prominent councillors the apparent front-runners.

Mayor Rob Ford's involvement in Etobicoke-Lakeshore a campaign issue

The Etobicoke-Lakeshore byelection is likely to leave a seat open at city hall with the two councillors the apparent front-runners. (Michelle Siu/Canadian Press)

The Etobicoke-Lakeshore byelection set forThursdayisa provincial race that everyone at Toronto's city hall will be watching.

The two apparent front-runnersLiberal candidatePeter Milczyn and Conservative candidate Doug Holyday are both prominent city councillors,and Mayor Rob Ford's open campaigning for Holyday has become an issuein itself.

Meanwhile, the NDP candidate, P.C. Choo, said the race is reminiscent ofa 1994vote he won against twosupposed front-runners when he became a public school trustee.

Holyday, who is the deputy mayor, said he has no issues withFord's support or how it might impact the relationship between the province and the city. Even if the Conservatives winall fiveupcoming Ontario byelections, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne will still be in power with a minority government.

"I fully expect the mayor to support me," he told CBC host Matt Galloway on Metro Morning Wednesday. "I've supported him."

He said any souring of the relationship between the city andthe provincewould be the fault of the Liberals, who sent out a flyer criticizing the Fords during the campaign.

Milczyn, a member of the mayor's executive committee, has been critical of Ford's involvement in the campaign. But he told Galloway on Wednesday that he's not concerned about it. "At the end of the day that might be helping me," he said.

Talking points

The candidates for the three main parties debated at a forum on social policy Tuesday night, fielding questions from the audience about issues such as poverty.

But CBC's Queen's Park reporter Genevieve Tomney said they used every opportunity to focus on the talking points that they hope will win votes.

Holyday referred to Liberal scandalsinvolvingeHealthand cancelledgas plants, while Milczyn questioned whether the Conservatives had a plan to back up their call for change.

Milczyn said scandals haven't dogged him as he knocks door-to-door. "I only hear about gas plants maybe one door in 20," he said. "It's notthe first topic of conversation."

Choo said both candidates are "fixated on their party's program of austerity and cuts" and that the NDP is the alternative to the two city hall veterans.

The Green Party is also fielding a candidate: Angela Salewsky.