Rob Ford knocks councillor down during yet another chaotic day

  • 10 years ago
City council is debating a resolution to strip Rob Ford of more of his mayoral powers in a session that at one point turned into a shouting match between the mayor and members of the public.

The besieged mayor seemed to charge a heckler, but instead knocked down another councillor.

The speaker called a recess as security tried to clear the public gallery and his brother yelled "punk!'' at someone.

Ford's body guard also filmed those in the gallery, as the crowd chanted "for shame!''

One man made a rude gesture at the mayor, while others leaned out of their seats to take pictures of him.

Earlier in the day, Ford challenged city council to call a snap election.

Blasting what he called a "coup d'etat,'' Ford said voters should be able to pass judgment on him, not his fellow councillors.

"If they want me out, they should just call a snap election,'' Ford told radio station AM640.

"In three months, let's have an election, right now.''

Ford had little to say on his arrival at city hall.

However, a legal expert called the vote challenge "bluster,'' while the provincial government showed little appetite to get involved.

Lawyer John Mascarin said the province could amend legislation to allow for an early election, or it could step in if council was unable to hold a meeting for 60 days because not enough councillors showed up.

At the provincial legislature, Finance Minister Charles Sousa called the "antics'' in Toronto distressing but said council had a job to do.

"The last thing we want is for more disruption,'' Sousa said.

If passed, Monday's motion would, among other things, see most of Ford's office and budget essentially put under the deputy mayor's control.

City staff said they believed the motion would withstand court scrutiny.

Ford has already threatened legal action after councillors overwhelmingly passed a pair of motions on Friday stripping him of his ability to appoint key committee chairs or to exercise emergency powers.

Ahead of the special vote, Coun. Denzil Minnan-Wong said councillors would not be intimidated.

"We're not going to roll over to the threats,'' Minnan-Wong said.

Ford has previously admitted to smoking crack cocaine "in a drunken stupor,'' but in excerpts of an interview aired on CNN's ``New Day'' Monday, he admitted to having "smoked some crack sometimes.''

Asked by reporter Bill Weir why he finally made those admissions, Ford said he was "sick and tired'' of the allegations.

"I'm not going to run around and be phoney and lie,'' Ford said.

"I'm not going to have someone try to blackmail me and say they got videos of this.''

The mayor said he hadn't smoked crack in over a year and again denied he's an addict.

Ford also boasted about his parenting skills in light of allegations to police in court documents that he was with his children while severely intoxicated. The allegations have not been proven in court.

"I'm the best father around,'' Ford told Weir.