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Does John Tory Have the Right Stuff To Face Off Against Olivia Chow?

If Tory thinks that he can pick some issues from Column A and other issues from Column B, then I guarantee that Tory will alienate Toronto voters from both the right and the left. And he will achieve a record-breaking sixth political loss. Alternatively, I suggest that Tory has to come out now -- hard, fast and negative against Olivia Chow.
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As expected, a recent Forum Research poll has Olivia Chow leading as initial front runner with 36 per cent.

Mayor Ford is second with 28 per cent, his support still holding strong.

The big surprise is the third place finish of John Tory, at 22 per cent. In a previous hypothetical match up between Chow, Ford and Tory, Forum Research had Tory at 27 per cent in a February poll.

I propose to offer some hard-nosed political advice as to how Tory can kick start his faltering campaign.

But first, a brief explanation as to why Tory finds himself in third place.

Lorne Bozinoff, President of Forum Research, interpreting the most recent poll results above, concluded:

"These findings represent relative stability for Ford since the company polled him at 31 per cent in February, "while John Tory, who had just entered the race the last time we polled, has seen his vote decline from 27 per cent."

Marcus Gee of The Globe and Mail attributed Tory's weak numbers to the fact "Ms. Chow is a strong candidate with an appealing personal story and she is off to a fast start. She can count on the city's well-organized left."

As to Ford's support, Gee concluded, "Mr. Ford has a core of supporters that seems to stick with him whatever he does. Mr. Tory has no such natural base."

I have already written a series of Huffington Post articles that explain the unwavering support of Ford supporters, who are sticking with Ford, despite all the allegations, videos and Ford's personal demons.

My conclusion is that Ford's support is rock solid. But support for Chow, the new politico on the block, is much softer.

And if John Tory wants to grow his numbers, he cannot wait for seven months to connect to the voters.

As Tory claimed in his kick off speech at a downtown Toronto rally this past week.

I believe that that Tory has four to eight weeks to make a forceful and compelling impression on Toronto voters.

Marcus Gee suggests that Tory can be successful in this mayoral race by trying to occupy the happy middle between hard right Ford and tax and spend Chow on the left.

Gee stated: "The essence of Mr. Tory's message is that he would give voters Mr. Ford's respect for taxpayers without the divisiveness and the sideshow and Ms. Chow's care for the disadvantaged without the hard left swing and the reversion to "tax-and-spend." That would position him neatly in the middle as a caring conservative, the candidate who would take Toronto "not left, not right, but forward."

In other words, John Tory, wants to present himself as a "Red Tory."

I have four words for Mr. Tory and his illustrious brain trust: "Joe Clark/Alison Redford."

Red Toryism is dead federally (Joe Clark/Peter McKay), provincially (has Tory already forgotten his provincial losses in the provincial ridings of Don Valley West and Dufferin/Peel/Wellington/Grey, and the disastrous 2007 provincial campaign as Ontario PC leader?) and even, municipally.

Today, there is no happy middle in Toronto city politics.

There is the right, which is: pro Scarborough subway, pro Porter Air, pro Porter Air expansion, pro taming unions, pro garbage privatization, pro privatization, pro minimum increase in taxes, anti-government expansion and pro business/private sector.

And the left which is: pro Scarborough LRT, anti-Porter Air, anti-Porter Air expansion, anti-privatization, pro unions, pro larger increase in taxes, pro government expansion and cool to business/private sector.

If Tory thinks that he can straddle these two political poles, and pick some issues from Column A and other issues from Column B, then I guarantee that Tory will alienate Toronto voters from both the right and the left.

And he will achieve a record-breaking sixth political loss.

Alternatively, I suggest that Tory has to come out now -- hard, fast and negative against Olivia Chow. He needs to "Harperize" Chow and define her in the public eye, before she defines herself. In order to wrest Chow's soft supporters, who really do not know the real Olivia Chow, from the Chow camp.

Because Olivia Chow does not come to this city race, without some major political baggage.

Frankly, I am surprised that Nick Kouvalis, Tory's own answer to Chow's political attack dog, Warren Kinsella, has not done a better job in the media and the social media of raising serious questions of Chow's subsidized co-op housing arrangement in the 1980s at the Hazelburn Co-op Apartments.

Chow, in an interview on Sun TV, with her own advisor, the above-mentioned Kinsella, once again stated that she did nothing wrong because she paid "market rent" of $800 for a three-bedroom apartment from 1988-1990.

The Tory campaign should also question whether Chow's anti-Scarborough subway, pro Scarborough LRT position, is in reality, just Chow pandering to her downtown Toronto SWAG/ leftist elitist base.

Chow has many weaknesses.

The question for John Tory is does he have the toughness and cojones to attack and fight Chow and take support away from her, in order to be the next mayor of Toronto?

ALSO ON HUFFPOST:

Olivia Chow Through The Years
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Mayoral candidate Olivia Chow marches in the WorldPride Parade on Yonge Street, Toronto, Ont., June 29, 2014. (credit:THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Michael Hudson)
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Toronto City Councillor Olivia Chow (centre) has her hair painted various colours by a professional body painter and people hired to promote the event with their bodies covered in paint at the corner of Bay and King St. Chow agreed to have here hair painted for charity which was sponsored by Xerox Canada in an effort to raise awareness about the benefits of using colour in the workplace. Photo by Louie Palu/The Globe and Mail March 30, 2005 (credit:CP)
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MAY 26, 1991 -- Toronto city councillor Jack Layton with his wife Olivia Chow. Photo by Erik Christensen / The Globe and Mail. Originally published Sept. 28, 1991 (credit:CP)
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Federal NDP leader Jack Layton and his wife Olivia Chow react to supporters in Toronto on Wednesday, May 26, 2004. at Chow's nomination meeting in the riding of Trinity-Spadina. (CP PHOTO/Andrew Vaughan) (credit:CP)
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Federal NDP leader Jack Layton kisses his wife Olivia Chow as they meet up in Toronto on Wednesday, May 26, 2004. Chow is running for the NDP in the Toronto riding of Trinity-Spadina. (CP PHOTO/Andrew Vaughan) (credit:CP)
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Federal NDP Leader Jack Layton embraces his wife Olivia Chow at his nomination meeting in the riding of Toronto-Danforth in Toronto on Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005. Chow's nomination meeting, in the riding of Trinity-Spadina, is on Wednesday. The federal election will be held on Jan. 23, 2006.(CP PHOTO/Andrew Vaughan) (credit:CP)
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NDP Leader Jack Layton and his wife Olivia Chow ride through Chow's riding as the make their way to her campaign headquarters in Toronto Tuesday, December 20, 2005. They made three campaign stops on a city bus after Layton made an announcement about city transit.(CP PHOTO/Chuck Stoody) (credit:CP)
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NDP Trinity-Spadina candidate Olivia Chow celebrates her win in Toronto Monday, Jan. 23, 2006. (CP PHOTO/Aaron Harris) (credit:CP)
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NDP Leader Jack Layton and his wife Olivia Chow, NDP candidate in Trinity-Spadina, escort her mother Ho Sze Chow to the polling station to vote in the federal election in Toronto on Monday, Jan. 23, 2006. (CP PHOTO/Andrew Vaughan) (credit:CP)
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NDP MP Olivia Chow (Trinity Spadina) holds a press conference in Ottawa, Wednesday April 12 to highlight flaws in the Conservative government’s childcare promise to Canadians. Using a stack of $5 bills, Chow illustrates the net value of the $1200 Allowance at different income levels, based on taxes and benefits applicable in Ontario. (CP PHOTO/Fred Chartrand) (credit:CP)
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New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton, holding onto his bible and a long eagle feather, and his wife Olivia Chow share a moment before being sworn-in as Members of Parliament at a ceremony on Parliament Hill in Ottawa Monday Feb. 13, 2006. (CP PHOTO/Tom Hanson) (credit:CP)
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NDP leader Jack Layton, right, receives a flower from his wife Olivia Chow before speaking on Much Music during a campaign stop on Monday, Oct. 13, 2008 in Toronto. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette (credit:CP)
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NDP MP Olivia Chow rises during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa Tuesday June 9, 2009. Adrian Wyld/TCPI/The Canadian Press (credit:CP)
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NDP MP Olivia Chow shows a creation by the designer Peach Beserk during Dare to Wear Show which closed Toronto Fashion Week on Friday October 23, 2009. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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NDP Leader Jack Layton and his wife Olivia Chow wave as they walk the Via Dolorosa procession as part of Good Friday celebrations Friday, April 22, 2011 in Toronto. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot (credit:CP)
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New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton and wife Olivia Chow and granddaughter Beatrice watch election results prior to their parties election event in Toronto, Ont., on Monday, May 2, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan (credit:CP)
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New Democratic Party MP Olivia Chow celebrates her re-election as she talks to supporters at the NDP election event in Toronto, Ont., on Monday, May 2, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese (credit:CP)
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New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton and NDP MP Olivia Chow receive the keys as they arrive to Storonoway, the house of the leader of the opposition in Ottawa, on Wednesday, June 15, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick (credit:CP)
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NDP Leader Jack Layton and wife Olivia Chow, MP participate at the 31st Annual Pride Parade in Toronto on July 3, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Dominic Chan (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow stands by the casket of her late husband, NDP leader Jack Layton, as his body lies in state at Parlament Hill in Ottawa, Wednesday, August 24, 2011 in Ottawa.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow, wife of NDP Leader Jack Layton, along with stepdaughter Sarah Layton and stepson Mike Layton (left to right) acknowledge members of the public as they wait in line to pay their respects to her husband in Ottawa, Wednesday, August 24, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Fred Chartrand (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow, wife of the late NDP leader Jack Layton, looks at a photo at Toronto City Hall on Friday, Aug. 26, 2011. Layton's body is lying in repose pending Saturday's state funeral. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz (credit:CP)
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MP Olivia Chow holds up a pair of eagle feathers her late husband Jack Layton use to have on his desk before handing them to NDP interim Leader Nycole Turmel, on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at a pre-session caucus in Quebec City. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot (credit:CP)
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NDP Leadership Convention at the National Trade Centre-Exhibition Place. After delivering the New Leader's Address, newly elected Federal NDP Leader, Jack Layton hugs his wife, Olivia Chow. Pictures taken on Jan.26/03 Photo by Tibor Kolley (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow speaks during a tribute to her late husband and NDP leader Jack Layton, who passed away last year, during the NDP leadership convention in Toronto on Friday, March 23, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Pawel Dwulit (credit:CP)
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NDP MP Olivia Chow takes part in the Grand Parade at the Scotiabank Caribbean Carnival in Toronto on Saturday, August 4, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Michelle Siu (credit:CP)
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NDP leader Thomas Mulcair and Olivia Chow widow of former NDP leader Jack Layton talk at the newly opened Jack Layton park in the town of Hudson, Que., Saturday, June 23, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow (left) hugs Michael Layton, the son of late husband Jack Layton as crowds gather to mark the one year anniversary of the former NDP Federal Leader's passing in Toronto on Wednesday August 22, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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Trinity-Spadina MP Olivia Chow talks about Ramsay Hunt syndrome type 2 that afflicts the left side of her face, at her office in Toronto on Friday, January 4, 2013. The temporary disorder of the nerves controls the movement of muscles in the face. THE CANADIAN PRESS - Matthew Sherwood (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow pauses before chatting with a television crew at a reception for the made-for-television movie "Jack," about late New Democratic Party Leader Jack Layton in Toronto on Monday March 4, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow is seen with a newly unveiled statue of her late husband Jack Layton in Toronto, Ontario Thursday, August 22, 2013. (Kevin Van Paassen/The Globe and Mail) (credit:CP)
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Olivia Chow reads an extract of her autobiography "My Journey" at a book launch in Toronto on Wednesday January 22 , 2014. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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Mayoral candidate Olivia Chow marches in the WorldPride Parade on Yonge Street, Toronto, Ont., June 29, 2014. (credit:THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Michael Hudson)
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