so how did sutcliffe do it in four months flat?
mark sutcliffe (along with his wife ginny and three children, erica, jack, and kate) celebrates becoming ottawa’s new mayor with a packed house of about 250 supporters at lago restaurant at dow’s lake monday evening.
julie oliver
/
postmedia
a longtime broadcaster and successful entrepreneur, sutcliffe was a somewhat reluctant entry into the mayoral contest. he did not announce his candidacy until june 29 when he told supporters at brookshire park in kanata that he was running for mayor to improve the city’s safety, transit and affordability.
his decision to make that announcement in kanata, rather than near his home in wellington village, spoke to a critical element of his campaign strategy: win the suburbs.
“i want to make sure every part of this city is represented,” sutcliffe said at his launch event. “i care a lot about the people of kanata and the people in the suburbs and the rural areas of this city, as well as the urban area.”
his chief rival, mckenney, represented the downtown ward of somerset west. an experienced, active city councillor, mckenney’s public profile was heightened by their forceful defence of beleaguered residents during the truckers’ occupation. of all the progressive voices on city council, mckenney now had a powerful political base on which to build a mayoral campaign.
when the traditional ndp vote is combined with those voters who simply want change, it can deliver a progressive candidate between 20 and 30 per cent of the vote, according to a former member of mayor jim watson’s past campaign teams. it meant, the strategist said, mckenney needed only to broaden their appeal to middle-of-the road voters to all but assure themselves of victory.