Toronto municipal election, 1978

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The Toronto municipal election of 1978 was the first seriously contested mayoralty race in Toronto, Canada, since David Crombie took office in 1972. Crombie left municipal politics earlier in 1978 to seek and win a seat in the Canadian House of Commons as the Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for Rosedale electoral district.

The contest to succeed Crombie (or more correctly, interim Mayor Fred Beavis) was a wide-open affair that saw three aldermen, David Smith, Tony O'Donohue and John Sewell contest the position.

Though O'Donohue and Smith were both aligned with the Liberals with links to developers, O'Donohue was seen as more right-wing and won the endorsement of the conservative Toronto Sun newspaper while Smith was seen as more of a centrist.

Sewell had first been elected to Toronto city council in 1969 and had a reputation as a community activist and even a radical. His backers consisted of New Democratic Party supporters (although Sewell himself has never been a member of the party), left-wing Liberals and Red Tories, many of whom had supported Crombie who, despite his Tory allegiance, had a reputation as a reform mayor on the left-wing of the municipal political spectrum.

The split on the right between O'Donohue and Smith allowed Sewell to win with less than 50% of the vote.


Preceded by
Toronto municipal election, 1976
List of Toronto municipal elections Succeeded by
Toronto municipal election, 1980


[edit] Results

1978 Toronto municipal election, North York Councillor, Ward Fouredit
Candidate Total votes % of total votes
Howard Moscoe 2,757 45.74
(x)Murray Markin 1,934 32.09
Eleanor Rosen 630 10.45
Jean Lance 447 7.42
Alan Mostyn 259 4.30
Total valid votes 6,027 100.00

62 out of 78 polls reporting.

  • Jean Lance was for many years an activist in Toronto's Lawrence Heights community. She led the Lawrence Heights Residents Association and the Lawrence Heights Neighborhoods Aids Association, and lobbied for various community services in the area. During the late 1960s, she brought day care to the area for single parents.[1] She was also president of the Federation of Ontario Tenants Association.[2] She campaigned in the 1976 and 1978 municipal elections.
  • Alan Mostyn was born in Midland, Ontario in 1947. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Toronto (1970) and a Bachelor of Laws degree from Queen's University (1973), and was called to the Ontario bar in 1975. He is a lawyer with the firm Mostyn & Mostyn, and is active in Toronto's Jewish community.[3] His son Michael Mostyn has campaigned federally for the Conservative Party of Canada, and his wife Sheila Mostyn has sought municipal office in Toronto.

Results taken from the Toronto Star, 14 November 1978.
The final results confirmed Moscoe's victory.

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Stasia Evasuk, "Housing authority pays tribute to its long-time residents", Toronto Star, 10 October 1991, A3.
  2. ^ Marina Strauss, "Procedures for OHC evictions won't be changed, Bennett says", Globe and Mail, 14 December 1978, T3.
  3. ^ Mostyn & Mostyn: Attorneys, Home page, accessed 22 October 2006.