Vincent Crisanti

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Preceded byRose Milczyn
Preceded bySuzan Hall
Succeeded byWard dissolved
Born1953 (age 7273)
Vincent Crisanti
Crisanti in 2010
Toronto City Councillor
for Ward 1 Etobicoke North
Assumed office
November 15, 2022
Preceded byRose Milczyn
In office
December 1, 2010  December 1, 2018
Preceded bySuzan Hall
Succeeded byWard dissolved
Personal details
Born1953 (age 7273)

Vincent Crisanti (born 1953[1]) is a Canadian politician who was elected to represent Ward 1 Etobicoke North on Toronto City Council following the 2022 municipal election. He previously represented a former ward by the same name from 2010 to 2018.

Early runs and 2010 election

Crisanti ran unsuccessfully in the 1997 municipal election for councillor in Ward 5, Rexdale Thistletown. Crisanti ran again in both the 2000 municipal election and the 2003 municipal election for councillor for Ward 1 Etobicoke North losing both times to Suzan Hall; the first time by only 97 votes.[citation needed]

Crisanti successfully ran a fourth time for councillor for Ward 1 in the 2010 municipal election defeating Hall by 509 votes.[citation needed]

Toronto Transit Commission board

On December 8, 2010, he was appointed to the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) board by the city council.[2]

In March 2012, Crisanti was one of five councillors removed from the TTC board. He had been one of five councillors on the board who had voted to terminate the services of the TTC General Manager Gary Webster.[citation needed]

Andy Byford was hired as Webster's replacement.[3] As a result of the decision to terminate Webster, the five councillors who supported Webster's termination and his replacement by Byford, including Crisanti, were removed from the TTC board by the city council on March 5, 2012, before the end of their appointed term as a result of a motion by the Chair of the TTC Board, Councillor Karen Stintz.[4][5]

Crisanti was re-elected as councillor for Ward 1 in the 2014 municipal election,[6] and he was re-appointed to the TTC board after the election of Mayor John Tory.[7] Under Byford's leadership the TTC subsequently won the 2017 American Public Transportation Association's (APTA) award for Transit System of the Year.[8]

Deputy mayor

Crisanti was named a deputy mayor of Toronto by John Tory on December 1, 2014.[9]

On September 8, 2017, at the "Ford Fest" BQQ event where Doug Ford announced his candidacy for mayor of Toronto in 2018, Crisanti was quoted as publicly saying “If anybody out there doubts the power of Ford Nation, just come here tonight … I got first elected in 2010 with the support of Rob Ford and I’m here today because of the Fords and I want to thank them.”[10] As a result of Crisanti's statement, which was interpreted as support for Doug Ford's candidacy for mayor in the 2018 municipal election, John Tory removed Crisanti as deputy mayor, replacing him with Stephen Holyday.[11]

2018 election

Crisanti stood for re-election to Toronto City Council in the 2018 municipal election in the newly expanded Ward 1 Etobicoke North, created as a result of the Toronto ward boundary changes imposed by the Ontario government of Doug Ford. The new Ward 1 had the same boundaries as the federal and provincial ridings. In the campaign, Premier Ford announced his support for his nephew Michael Ford, to whom Crisanti would lose.[12]

2022 election

Crisanti was elected as councillor for Etobicoke North in October 2022, the first time since 1997 the north Etobicoke ward elected a councillor not a member of the Ford family.[13]

Electoral history

References

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