in the
Metropolitan United Church. On July 27, 2018, Keesmaat announced her intention to run for Mayor of Toronto in the 2018 municipal elections, In reaction to Premier
Doug Ford's plan to cut
Toronto City Council by half, Keesmaat tweeted that Toronto should secede from Ontario and become Canada's eleventh province. Veteran Canadian political strategist,
Brian Topp, served as Keesmaat's campaign manager. A number of prominent local and international figures and organizations endorsed Keesmaat for mayor, including
Olivia Chow, a former city councillor and Member of Parliament, Toronto city councillors
Kristyn Wong-Tam,
Joe Cressy,
Mike Layton, and
Josh Matlow, noted urbanists including former Vancouver Chief Planner
Brent Toderian and renowned urban planner
Gil Peñalosa, and the
Elementary Teachers of Toronto (ETT), which represents 11,000 teachers in Toronto’s public elementary schools. On October 22, 2018, Keesmaat lost the mayoral election to incumbent mayor John Tory. Building on her experience guiding much of Toronto's transit expansion planning as Chief Planner, she also introduced an ambitious, city-wide network transit plan that included new subway, LRT, and bus rapid transit infrastructure. Keesmaat told the media that her plan "goes beyond 'election cycles' and provides a blueprint for decades of development...This is about real transit and a real plan for the City of Toronto over the long term."
Road safety In an effort to end preventable pedestrian deaths Keesmaat committed to reduce the speed limit on all residential roads in Toronto to 30 km/h (currently the speed limit is 50 km/h, or 40 km/h for school zones), and to make every school zone safe by design.
Gardiner Expressway Keesmaat promised to tear down the eastern section of the aging and decaying Gardiner Expressway and replace it with a ground level
boulevard, pointing out that cities all over North America are choosing to tear down urban expressways rather than spending hundreds of millions of dollars on maintaining outdated infrastructure. Keesmaat said the move would save the city roughly $500 million as opposed to re-building the decaying urban expressway, and that the decision would unlock "New communities with new jobs in retail and employment and affordable housing — places for people to live — by unlocking this land...This is really about creating a livable city. It's about creating a sustainable city. It's about creating a green city, and it is about moving Toronto into the 21st century", said Keesmaat.
Affordable housing and public safety Keesmaat proposed a property tax increase on the sale of luxury homes to help pay for building 100,000 units of affordable housing. She also supports a municipal handgun ban. Keesmaat had pledged funding to double the number of emergency response mental health workers and to enhance community policing efforts by ensuring community police officers are assigned to every one of Toronto's 140 neighbourhoods.
Other Keesmaat also unveiled detailed plans to enhance gender fairness in the Toronto municipal bureaucracy, support and promote the arts, improve transparency at municipal agencies, and build clean, green, and sustainable infrastructure.
Election results == Personal life ==