Toronto's City Council voted overwhelmingly Friday to strip Mayor Rob Ford of some of his powers in the latest attempt to box in the embattled mayor, who has rebuffed pressure to resign over his drinking and drug habits and erratic behavior.
The motion, approved in a 39-3 vote, suspends Ford's authority to appoint and dismiss the deputy mayor and his executive committee, which runs the budget process. John Filion, the councilor who introduced the motion, has said the goal is to prevent Ford from firing executive committee members who speak out against him.
An unusually subdued Ford vowed to fight the motion.
"I can't support this, and obviously I have no other options but to challenge this in court," he said.
The vote came a day after yet another series of antics from Ford that outraged city councilors, anti-drunk-driving advocates and even Toronto's football team. Most city councilors are frustrated by Ford's refusal to step aside after he admitted last week to smoking crack, but they lack the authority to force him out of office unless he is convicted of a crime.
In the span of a few hours Thursday, Ford used obscene language to deny that he pressured a female employee for oral sex, admitted that he had driven while drinking and then apologized for his vulgarity and said he was seeking professional help, though he refused to give details.
"We need to take away his power for the good of the city," said Councilor Denzil Minnan-Wong, a former ally. "The tide has turned, and there are very few people that are prepared to defend him, given his vulgar comments and his admission that not only does he take drugs but that he seems to be comfortable drinking and getting behind the wheel."
Ford's troubles began in May, when news reports surfaced of a video showing him smoking crack. After month of evasion, the mayor admitted to having smoked crack only after Toronto police announced they obtained the video during the course of a massive drug investigation that has ensnared a close friend of Ford's.
Reports of other startling behavior have rapidly surfaced since, from former aides alleging that the mayor has frequently been drunk on the job to a video showing the mayor threatening to kill someone in an incoherent rant.
It has been a stunning decline for the 44-year-old mayor, who was elected three years ago with fervent support from Toronto's conservative-leaning outer suburbs, where many voters felt angry about they considered wasteful spending and elitist politics at city hall.
The Associated Press
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