North York municipal politics Lastman entered politics in 1969, when he ran for and was elected to the North York
Board of Control. It was there he met another rising young political figure,
Paul Godfrey, who would later serve as
Metro Chairman.
Mayoralty On December 4, 1972, Lastman was elected mayor of North York by defeating fellow North York controller Paul Hunt for the open mayoral seat. Lastman took office on January 1, 1973, and was also automatically a member of Metro Council. In 1975, Lastman ran for the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario as a
Progressive Conservative candidate in the
Armourdale electoral district. He lost to former Toronto Mayor
Phil Givens who was running for the
Ontario Liberal Party. That
provincial election was his only election loss throughout his career. Lastman joined the
Ontario Liberal Party in 1987, although he subsequently claimed that it was the result of a misunderstanding. He agreed to support
Norman Gardner's bid for the Liberal nomination in
Willowdale, and did not realize that he was also purchasing a party membership card in the process. He did not regret his accidental membership, but said he had no long-term loyalty to the party (Globe and Mail, April 28, 1987). Lastman was a critic of Metropolitan Toronto's
Metro Hall, attacking Metro Council's decision to locate the $220 million building downtown. He argued that it would be more equitable and would have been much cheaper to build the headquarters in the suburbs. Metro Hall was later passed over in favour of
City Hall for the future amalgamated city of Toronto. An attempt to put it up for sale only received a maximum bid of $125 million which was far below the construction cost. Throughout Lastman's political career, he was generally supported by the Progressive Conservatives and Liberals, such as
Norman Gardner,
Mike Colle,
Mike Feldman,
Joe Volpe, and
David Shiner. Though usually opposed by the
New Democratic Party, he did cross party lines to work with left-leaning councillors
Jack Layton and
Olivia Chow.
Post-amalgamation Toronto mayor In 1997, Lastman's position was abolished when the provincial government under
Mike Harris amalgamated
North York with
Scarborough,
York,
East York,
Etobicoke, and
Old Toronto, creating a
single-tier "megacity" forming the new City of Toronto. Lastman ran for the mayoralty of the "megacity" defeating incumbent Toronto Mayor
Barbara Hall. Lastman's
electoral victory was credited to his very strong base of support in the suburban cities, namely North York as well as in Etobicoke and Scarborough. Hall had won the majority of the vote in old Toronto, York and East York. Lastman gained national attention after multiple snowstorms, including the January
Blizzard of 1999, dumped 118 cm (46.5 in) of snow and effectively immobilized the city. He called in the
Canadian Army to aid snow removal by use of their equipment to augment police and emergency services. The move was ridiculed by some in other parts of the country, fuelled in part by what was perceived as a frivolous use of resources, although Lastman's defenders noted that at the time the army was called in, Toronto was already at a standstill, and that the
Environment Canada weather forecast called for another severe storm to hit the city later that week. Lastman paid back the soldiers by giving them each a free pass to a
Toronto Maple Leafs hockey game in honour of their hard work. These tickets were obtained free of charge due to an agreement with the Toronto Maple Leafs' management claiming that if these soldiers had not come out to shovel the snow, then the Leafs game that day wouldn't have had as many people attending. Ten years later, in 2009, Lastman gave an interview to the
Toronto Star newspaper, stating he was proud of his decision to bring in the army during the Blizzard of 1999. Some expected that Lastman would face Independent
federal MP John Nunziata in the 2000 municipal election, but Nunziata dispelled the rumours when he found that he could not hold onto his seat in Parliament while campaigning for Mayor. Re-elected in November 2000, with an 80% majority, his closest opponent, civic activist
Tooker Gomberg, drew just a little more than 8% of the vote. Lastman shared Gomberg's three main campaign planks; namely, committing Toronto to 100%
recycling diversion by 2010 to replace the controversial
Adams Mine plan, agreeing with Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien to end
homelessness in Toronto, and appointing
Jane Jacobs, the ethicist and
urbanist, to head the Toronto Charter Committee to explore the potential for
more autonomy for Toronto. Jacobs had publicly endorsed Gomberg. Among his accomplishments as mayor of Toronto, Lastman brought
World Youth Day to Toronto in 2002. He also succeeded in pushing the construction of the TTC
Sheppard line, the first new subway line in decades. He played a key role in developing the Yonge and Sheppard area, notably in the negotiations that had the
Empress Walk condominium complex developed and two leading schools refurbished, all without using public funds. On January 14, 2003, Lastman announced that he would not run for re-election, citing deteriorating health. On November 10, 2003,
David Miller was elected out of a field of five leading candidates to succeed Lastman as city mayor. Lastman sometimes commented publicly on Toronto affairs, such as in 2007 when the city faced a $575 million shortfall and struggled to make service cuts to immediately save $100 million. Lastman also sympathized that provincial downloading had burdened Toronto, but also criticized Miller's service cuts as hurting the quality of life while not going far enough to solve the shortfall. Lastman pointed out that spending had increased by $1.5 billion since he left office, and suggested that councillors had to consider measures such as contracting out services and cutting staff. ==Controversies==