Toronto Mayor Rob Ford: 4 reasons the drama keeps getting stranger

Why does Rob Ford continue to grab headlines, now delivering shock and awe not only to Torontonians and Canadians, but to bemused observers around the world?

2. He can't be recalled by voters.

Chris Young/The Canadian Press/AP
Toronto Mayor Rob Ford attends a council meeting as councillors look to pass motions to limit his powers in Toronto on Monday, Nov. 18, 2013.

Despite the clamor for Ford's removal from a good proportion of Toronto’s elite, the city has no provision for holding a recall election. Nor does the City Council have any way to impeach Ford or otherwise compel him to step aside. 

Members of the 44-member council have passed resolutions requesting that he take time off. They've also stripped him of some of his executive powers such as appointing deputies, and cutting his budget. Any effort at removing Ford against his will requires the involvement of Ontario provincial officials and is possible only if he is convicted and sentenced to jail. And, as the Canadian Press reports, the province’s premier has said she will not consider any intervention unless the council makes it clear it cannot not function.

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