I'm not the person you responded to, but the exact same thing played out where I live (Vancouver) recently. We also have a massive crisis of homelessness here, which has led to more crime, theft, etc. The party's solution? Make the city safer (for the homeowners, interpretation mine) by hiring more police.
The winning party (ABC, which had all of their candidates claim seats) did not have majority support, they were just one of the only parties that wasn't campaigning heavily on building more affordable housing (8 other parties committed to affordable housing likely split the vote)
So the homeowners largely supported them, and that class of people are also more likely to have time to research the confusing election.
ABC's mayoral candidate had the highest voter support of any of their candidates, and it was still only 86,000 of 172,000 voters.
I think the percentage of adults renting vs. owning their home in Vancouver is about 50/50, but I can't imagine how people who didn't already enter wealth through real estate appreciation could afford to buy a home here now. If prices don't fall, I would never be able to buy a home here.
The winning party (ABC, which had all of their candidates claim seats) did not have majority support, they were just one of the only parties that wasn't campaigning heavily on building more affordable housing (8 other parties committed to affordable housing likely split the vote)
So the homeowners largely supported them, and that class of people are also more likely to have time to research the confusing election.
ABC's mayoral candidate had the highest voter support of any of their candidates, and it was still only 86,000 of 172,000 voters.
I think the percentage of adults renting vs. owning their home in Vancouver is about 50/50, but I can't imagine how people who didn't already enter wealth through real estate appreciation could afford to buy a home here now. If prices don't fall, I would never be able to buy a home here.