‘Not trying to be on the front page:’ Toronto Mayor John Tory on re-election bid
TORONTO — Headlines and TV highlight clips are overrated, Mayor John Tory is saying at a Toronto diner shortly after he took his mother to vote in front of photographers ahead of Monday’s municipal election.
At 64, Tory, who by most accounts is set to cruise to a re-election victory that will give him another four years in the city’s highest office, is comfortable with his track record, and himself.
“The politics of excitement, the politics of polarization, the politics of show business are actually of not much interest to me,” Tory says. “I’m not trying to be on the front page of every newspaper with some pronouncement every day with giant headlines. I just really want to get things done.”
While his opponents criticize just how much the former corporate executive and longtime politician has accomplished since winning the mayoralty on his second attempt four years ago, it’s harder to argue with the contention that he, and by extension Toronto, are no longer the butt of late-night TV jokes.