Ed Holder is London's new mayor after historic vote - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:56 AM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
London#LondonVotes

Ed Holder is London's new mayor after historic vote

Ed Holder is the new mayor of the City of London after a lengthy vote counting process in the first ranked ballot vote in modern Canadian history.

The former Conservative MP won the mayoralty in the first ranked ballot vote in modern Canadian history

Ed Holder has been declared the new mayor of London with more than 57,000 votes in the city's first ranked ballot election. (Mark Spowart/Special to CBC News)

Ed Holder is the 64th mayor of the City of London after the first ranked ballot vote in modern Canadian municipal history.

The former Conservative MP replaces Matt Brown, a former one-term city councillor andteacher with the Thames Valley District School Board. Brownwas elected mayor in 2014 on a platform of integrity and teamwork, but served only one term after a scandal erupted halfway through his tenure.

The new mayor was declared the winner on Tuesday, the day after the polls closed. The counting process took longer than normal because, in order to win, a candidate must receive more than 50 per cent of the vote.

Because Holder did not receive an absolute majority on the first ballot, the last-place candidate was eliminated with their supporters' second-choice votes redistributed among the remaining candidates.

In the end, it took 14rounds of counting until Holder receivedmore than 50 per cent of the vote. He beat second place finisher, Paul Paolattoby 13,312 votes.

Work ahead

With the mayoralty secure, Holdermust now square hisshoulders and get to work, including the simmering controversy over London's 10-year, $500 million bus rapid transit project.

Holderran on a platform that was opposed to the colossalcity transit project, which could be in doubt, if a majority of councillorsvote to shelve the project.

Holderwill lead a city council made up of some familiar faces in civic politics, with many incumbents, such as Phil Squire, Josh Morgan, Jesse Helmer, Mo Salih, Michael VanHolst, Stephen Turner, Maureen Cassidy, Anna Hopkins and former city council veteran Paul Van Meerbergen.

Incumbents who lost their seats in Monday's vote were Bill Armstrong, Viriginia Ridleyand Jared Zaifman.

The new faces on council include Shawn Lewis, who won in Ward 2, Steve Lehman in Ward 8, Elizabeth Peloza in Ward 12, Arielle Kayabagain Ward 13, Steven Hillier in Ward 14.