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Rob Ford Weight: Toronto Mayor Loses Two Pounds In Fifth Week Of Cut The Waist Challenge

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Pushes Through Weight-Loss Plateau
CP

Rob Ford is back on track.

After holding steady at last week's weigh-in, Toronto's mayor recorded a loss of two pounds on Tuesday, according to CP24.

Ford now weighs 308 pounds, down from 330 pounds at the beginning of the Cut The Waist Challenge.

TWITTER REACTS TO ROB FORD'S WEIGHT LOSS

The mayor's brother, Councillor Doug Ford, also shed some weight this week. Doug weighed in at 252 pounds on Tuesday, down three pounds from last week and 23 pounds since starting the challenge at 275 pounds.

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Toronto's two political heavyweights have a good reason for going on a diet. "Rob has two young kids and I have four girls. We want to be around to watch them get married and be grandparents. If you're carrying this extra weight...it's not healthy. And we know that," said Doug.

Ford has faced plenty of ridicule in the press for his waistline. In March of last year, NOW Magazine caused an uproar when it printed a photoshopped photo on its cover prominently featuring the mayor's naked belly.

Even the Globe ran a piece with the headline "Rob Ford’s not popular despite being fat. He’s popular because of it," although the piece was subsequently pulled from the web after widespread criticism.

HuffPost Canada blogger Ben Johnson has argued Ford's weight is a valid political issue, both because the mayor may face serious health problems while in office and because it indicates an irresponsible and short-sighted attitude.

Former mayor David Miller made headlines by dropping approximately 50 pounds while in office. If Ford can match that accomplishment he'll be well on his way to putting the gravy train jokes behind him once and for all.

He'll have his brother to lend him encouragement along the way. Doug told the Globe he's also aiming to also lose 50 to 60 pounds and recapture the fitness of his younger days, when he worked out regularly and could bench press 350 pounds.

The mayor says eventually he would like to make it down to 225 pounds.

With files from The Canadian Press

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