John Tory has a 35-point lead over his closest challenger with just three days to go until election day, a new poll has found.

The Dart Insight poll of 669 randomly selected residents was commissioned by the Toronto Sun.

It found that Tory had the support of 62 per cent of likely voters compared to 27 per cent for former city planner Jennifer Keesmaat. About 12 per cent of respondents said that they would vote for one of the other 33 candidates in the race.

Tory’s support was the strongest in North York (71 per cent), Scarborough (66 per cent) and Etobicoke (66 per cent), though he still enjoyed support from the majority of respondents in the downtown core (53 per cent) and East York (50 per cent).

Interestingly, the poll found that despite Tory’s big lead many elements of Keesmaat’s platform do have the support of voters.

Her plan to impose a new surtax on multi-million dollar homes to fund the creation of a rent-to-own program had the support of 79 per cent of respondents while her pledge to turn three city-owned golf courses into year-round public spaces was supported by 72 per cent of respondents and her commitment to build 100,000 new affordable housing units over the next 10 years was supported by 86 per cent of respondents.

Her plan to tear down the eastern portion of the Gardiner Expressway and replace it with a “grand boulevard,” though more contentious, was also supported by the majority of respondents (57 per cent).

Tory has previously criticized Keesmaat for that plan, which he has said would be an example of “going backwards.” Keesmaat, however, has said that it would unlock valuable waterfront real estate and save taxpayers up to $500 million when compared to the council-approved plan to rebuild the eastern Gardiner.

“Cities all over the world are tearing down their elevated expressways,” she told CP24 on Friday morning.

Affordable housing and transit are top issues

When it came to the top issues in the minds of voters, the poll found that affordable housing, public transit and crime topped the list. About 45 per cent of voters included affordable housing as one of their top three ballot issues while 43 per cent included public transit and 37 per cent included crime.

Issues like municipal spending (12 per cent), the economy (19 per cent) and the opioid crisis (6 per cent) were not generally identified as considerations.

The online panel was conducted between Oct. 12-15 and is considered accurate to within 4.3 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.