afransen
Senior Member
I look forward to her actually telling us what she wants to do at some point.If Chow can change the city for the better I'll support her.
But if Toronto remains unchanged (or gets worse) I hope she's a 1-termer
I look forward to her actually telling us what she wants to do at some point.If Chow can change the city for the better I'll support her.
But if Toronto remains unchanged (or gets worse) I hope she's a 1-termer
Promise tracker: https://www.cp24.com/news/promise-t...o-s-mayoral-race-are-pledging-to-do-1.6414976I look forward to her actually telling us what she wants to do at some point
My take:
Knowing how the Layton-Chow household operated and operates, I'd imagine it'd be more about healing divides than Ford-style settling of scores.A Scarborough and Downtown alliance to defeat Etobicoke and North York?
Me too. Of course those that vote for populists, including Trump and fascists like Hitler think exactly the same. Kick the old guard, bring in the new.I am very pleased with Olivia Chow’s victory. For many reasons, of course, but my top reason is the symbolic one: a kick in the shins to the old guard.
Chow's share is in the ballpark, but Bailao is overshooting substantially.
So it would appear she did become the anybody but Chow candidate. She's showing what, 10 points over who her best poll?
600Did the dog get many votes?
It seems I was right the first time.Hmm... I guess I was wrong on my prediction. I thought it'd be Chow #1, Bailao #2, and the others further down in the polls. Guess not.
0.08%, which puts that doggie in the top 5th of candidates.Did the dog get many votes?