Rob Ford responds to street festival video controversy - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:52 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Rob Ford responds to street festival video controversy

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford admits he had a "couple of beers" at a weekend street festival, but believes the story has been blown out of proportion.

'I did not drive home,' mayor says

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, seen above in a file photo, admits having a couple of beers on the night he visited the Taste of the Danforth street festival. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford admits he had a "couple of beers" at a weekend street festival, but believes the story has been blown out of proportion.

On his weekly radio show, Ford addressed reports that stemmed from videos that showed the mayor when he was strolling to the Taste of the Danforth street festival on Friday night.

Some of the people present at the street festival had suggested that Ford appeared drunk,as he mingled with members of the public and posed for some photographs.

But the mayor said Sunday that while he had been drinking beer, it did not go further than merely having a good time.

"Did I have a couple of beers? Absolutely, I had a couple of beers. But you know what, I had a good time, I think things are getting blown out of proportion," Ford told listeners on Newstalk 1010.

"I met a lot of people, took hundreds of pictures and if I offended anyone, you know what, I apologize."

Later on the radio program, Ford said he did not drive himself home from the festival.

"I went down there, I drove myself down there. I was not drinking," Ford said.

"I went out, had a few beers and I did not drive home. My people met me after that and I got driven home."

Dozens of people were tweeting Sunday about the stories of the mayor's behaviour at the festival. Some were upset about what they saw on the video, while others suggested it was a non-story.

Following the mayors appearance at the street festival, Coun. Jaye Robinson reiterated her call for Ford to take a leave of absence to "address his personal problems and then come back to continue to act as the mayor of Toronto."

In the past year, Ford has on several occasions been accused of behaving strangely while at public events. But the mayor has consistently denied the allegations made about him.

In March, Sarah Thomson, a former mayoral candidate, accused Ford of groping her at an event and suggested that he could have been under the influence of drugs or have an undisclosed medical issue.

The mayor called her claims "absolutely, completely false."

That same month, the Toronto Star reported that Ford had been asked to leave a military fundraiser earlier in the year, as organizers were concerned he was impaired.The mayor called the report "an outright lie."

In May, reports emerged that someone had been shopping around a video of Ford that appeared to show the mayor smoking crack cocaine.

Ford denied using crack cocaine and also denied the video's existence.

The U.S. gossip website Gawker raised $201,204 in a bid to purchase the alleged video, but lost contact with the person who had offered to sell it and did not obtain it.

Ford was elected as Torontos mayor in the fall of 2010. Before that, he had served as a city councillor in Etobicoke, the Toronto suburb where he lives with his family.