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Doug Ford Mulling Run For Ontario PC Leadership

Ford May Run For Ontario PC Leader

Doug Ford is very much considering a run for the leadership of the Ontario Progressive Conservatives.

Ford, who finished a strong second in the Toronto mayoral race this week, has long been rumoured to have provincial ambitions. However, he announced last February he wouldn't pursue a Tory nomination ahead of the Ontario election because he was focused on his brother's mayoral re-election bid.

But with all that behind him, it appears Ford could be gearing up for a run to lead a party he famously said needed "an enema from top to bottom" after its thrashing from Ontario Liberals in June.

In fact, Ford told The Toronto Star he is the only candidate who can beat Kathleen Wynne next time around.

"I can honestly say I wouldn’t rule that out right now," he told the newspaper, adding that he appeals to "blue-collar people." Ford said three-quarters of the 330,600 voters who backed him this week "would never vote PC in their lives."

Ford told The Globe and Mail much the same thing, suggesting his "well-oiled" campaign machine would give him a big advantage over the other candidates in the leadership race.

"Our campaign is ready to go. Our people are itching to get involved. We are miles ahead of the other candidates," he said.

Ontario PCs have struggled mightily to win Canada's largest city in the past decade and were completely shut out of all Toronto ridings as Wynne Liberals rolled to a majority government last spring.

But Ford's huge success in Etobicoke and Scarborough on Monday could make him a real contender. At the provincial level, all Etobicoke and Scarborough ridings are currently represented by Liberals.

Former PC leader Tim Hudak told reporters Wednesday that Ford "got a lot of votes" this week in areas where he did not.

In some ways, Ford's potential entry into the race will come as no surprise.

Rob Ford told radio host John Oakley last November that "Doug will be provincial, he will be premier one day."

And in a speech to council in August, back when Doug Ford had said he wouldn't run for re-election as councillor, Rob Ford dropped another hint about his brother's future.

"And all I can say is… Queen's Park, you have no idea what's coming up to you next," he said.

The patriarch of the Ford family, Doug Ford Sr., was an MPP under the government of Mike Harris. The PCs approached Doug Ford about running in 2011, but he chose to stay at city hall, The National Post reports. Last year, as his brother was engulfed in the crack video scandal, PCs were less enthusiastic about courting Doug Ford.

If he joins the fray, Doug Ford will be up against MPP Christine Elliott, the widow of late Ford family friend, Jim Flaherty. Other declared candidates include Conservative MP Patrick Brown, MPPs Lisa MacLeod, Vic Fedeli, and Monte McNaughton.

If he becomes leader, Doug Ford will be following in the footsteps of rival John Tory, who became Ontario PC leader in 2004 after finishing a strong second in his 2003 run for Toronto mayor.

The deadline for candidates to file nomination papers is Jan. 30. The new leader of the Ontario PCs will be chosen in May according to the party's one-member one-vote system.

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With previous files

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The Fords Through The Years
Long Before He Was Mayor(01 of30)
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This photo was posted to Reddit by a user who said his aunt went to middle school with Rob Ford. Can you spot him in this Grade 7 class picture? (credit:Reddit)
Doug Ford's High School Years(02 of30)
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The high school years of Rob and his oldest brother, Doug, became the subject of scrutiny later in their political lives. Doug Ford is alleged to have sold hashish for several years in the 1980s, The Globe and Mail reported.

Ford denied the allegations.
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Coach Ford(03 of30)
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Starting in 2001, Ford coached the Don Bosco Eagles, a high school football team in Etobicoke. In 2013, he was dismissed by the school after saying in an interview that many players “come from gangs." (credit:Christopher Drost/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
Football Runs In The Family(04 of30)
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Doug Ford's daughter Krista was captain of the Toronto Triumph in the Lingerie Football League, The Toronto Sun reported. The team suspended operations in 2013. (credit:CP)
Mayor Rob Ford(05 of30)
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Rob Ford with his wife Renata on election day at his parents' home in Toronto on October 25, 2010. The couple married in 2000 and have two children, Stephanie and Douglas. (credit:Peter Power/The Globe and Mail/CP)
Kathy And Diane Ford(06 of30)
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Rob and Doug's sister Kathy and their mother Diane Ford sat down for a TV interview after Rob admitted in late 2013 to using crack.Kathy, who was later videotaped watching her brother smoke crack, defended her brother’s decision to stay in office despite the revelations.“Robbie is not a drug addict,” she said.“I know because I’m a former addict.” (credit:CP24)
The Fords At City Hall(07 of30)
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Doug Ford followed his brother to city hall, winning Rob's Ward 2 council seat when Rob became mayor in 2010. (credit:CP)
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Councillor Doug Ford and his brother Mayor Rob Ford gets into a shouting match with members of the public in chambers at City Hall in Toronto on November 18, 2013 during a special council meeting to limit more of his powers. (Deborah Baic/The Globe and Mail) (credit:CP)
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Toronto City Councillor Doug Ford makes his way to the council chamber as councillors look to pass motions to limit the powers of his brother, Mayor Rob Ford, in Toronto on Monday November 18, 2013.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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Councillor Doug Ford reads a prepared statement to the media outside his brother Rob's office at Toronto city hall on May 22 2013. Rob Ford, the mayor of Toronto, is at the centre of a scandal stemming from a video allegedly showing him smoking a crack pipe. (Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail) (credit:CP)
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Toronto city councillor Doug Ford leaves a radio station where he has a program with his brother, Mayor Rob Ford, in Toronto on Sunday May 26, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Aaron Vincent Elkaim (credit:CP)
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Toronto City Councillor Doug Ford reads a statement to journalists at Toronto City Hall on May 22, 2013. The man who has most strongly defended Toronto Mayor Rob Ford against allegations he was filmed smoking crack cocaine is vehemently denying a claim that he himself once dealt in hashish. The Globe and Mail alleges in a story published Saturday that the mayor's brother, Coun. Doug Ford, was once a drug dealer in '80s -- a claim denounced by his lawyer as false. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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City councillor Doug Ford defends his brother, Mayor Rob Ford, at city council in Toronto on Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette (credit:CP)
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Renata Ford attends a news conference as her husband Toronto Mayor Rob Ford speaks to the media on Thursday November 14, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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Mayor Rob Ford's wife Renata Ford, centre, is escorted to her car by staff after attending a press conference with her husband at city hall in Toronto on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette (credit:CP)
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Mayor Rob Ford's wife Renata Ford, second left, is escorted to her car by staff after attending a press conference with her husband at city hall in Toronto on Thursday, Nov. 14, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette (credit:CP)
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Toronto Mayor Rob Ford stands at an elevator door as he tries to escort his wife Renata out of a news conference on Thursday November 14, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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Toronto Mayor Rob Ford (centre) jostles with the media as he tries to escort his wife Renata (left) out of a news conference in Toronto on Thursday November 14, 2013. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (credit:CP)
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Rob Ford on election day at his family's (mom and dad's) home in Toronto on October 25, 2010, watching as the results come up on the TV announcing him as the winner, and shortly afterwards, hearing that his brother Doug won as well. Hugs from his mother, Diane, and his wife Renata.This is when he found out his brother had won as well. Renata, Rob's wife, threw her arms up, as did mom, Diane, at left. (Photo by Peter Power/The Globe and Mail) (credit:CP)
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Mayor-elect Rob Ford being greeted by his supporters and making his speech at theToronto Congress Centre in Toronto on October 25, 2010, after winning the election. This is where he said the win was for his father. Mom, Diane, is left and wife Renata is right. (Photo by Peter Power/The Globe and Mail) (credit:CP)
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Mayor-elect Rob Ford being greeted by his supporters and making his speech at theToronto Congress Centre in Toronto on October 25, 2010, after winning the election. This is where he said the win was for his father. Mom, Diane, is left and wife Renata is right. (Photo by Peter Power/The Globe and Mail) (credit:CP)
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Mayor Rob Ford gets a kiss from his wife Renata at city hall council chambers as he was officially sworn in as new mayor of Toronto Dec. 7, 2010.(Photo by Kevin Van Paassen/The Globe and Mail) (credit:CP)

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