Edmonton Journal

Caroline Mulroney jumps into politics

FORMER PRIME MINISTER’S DAUGHTER CAROLINE SEEKS ONTARIO PC NOMINATION

- Brian Platt and Miriam king

With the son of one former prime minister already holding the highest political office in the country, the daughter of another is making her entrance into politics. Caroline Mulroney, who spent a decade of her childhood at 24 Sussex Drive, announced Wednesday she’s seeking the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ve nomination in the Toronto-area riding of York-Simcoe.

The 43-year-old daughter of Brian Mulroney, Canada’s prime minister from 1984 to 1993, would be a star candidate for the Ontario PCs as the party aims to end a decade and a half of Liberal rule. Not only raised by a political family, she boasts a lengthy resume as a lawyer, investment adviser and philanthro­pist.

The PCs have been leading provincial polls since Patrick Brown was elected leader in 2015, though Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals have narrowed the gap recently. “As a working mother of four, I know we need change,” the 43-year-old Mulroney said in a video announcing her candidacy.

“Government needs to get out of the way, focus more on affordabil­ity, manage taxes properly so we get the services we expect.”

Mulroney has been making herself more visible in party politics recently, including a stint cohosting the federal Conservati­ve leadership convention in May. Last fall, she introduced Brown at a fundraisin­g dinner.

“I have great confidence in Patrick Brown,” Mulroney told Postmedia’s Bradford Times in an interview on Wednesday. “He understand­s what people here want and care about.”

Mulroney, who is married to Andrew Lapham, has a home in Georgina, which is in the riding. She said in the interview she’s getting a sense of what local voters are looking for in the election scheduled for June 2018.

“From all the people I’ve spoken with, the people of York-Simcoe want change. People tell me that what matters to them is the rising cost of living — the cost of housing, hydro rates, taxes ... the affordabil­ity.”

The Ontario PCs have already gotten some advice from her father, who dropped by the Ontario legislatur­e in April 2016 at Brown’s request to give some advice to the caucus on winning the next election.

Brown has previously said that he first decided he was a Conservati­ve when, during grade school, he wrote a letter to then-prime minister Mulroney about acid rain and got a response back. “I told my parents, ‘I think I agree with the Conservati­ve party,’ ” he said in a 2015 Toronto Life interview.

With Justin Trudeau, son of Pierre Trudeau, sitting as prime minister, Caroline’s jump into politics starts another potential dynasty. Her brother Mark, head of equity capital markets at the National Bank of Canada, had also been talked about as a potential leadership candidate to replace Stephen Harper, but he stayed out of the race. Her other brother Ben co-hosts a national morning program on CTV.

Caroline studied at Harvard College, has a law degree from New York University, and experience at investment firms and philanthro­pic organizati­ons. She is currently a vice president at Bloomberg Sen, a Toronto investment counsellin­g firm, a member of the board for the SickKids Foundation, a Governor of the National Theatre School of Canada, and the co-founder and chair of the Shoebox Project for Shelters charity, which collects gifts for women and girls in shelters or facing homelessne­ss.

If she wins the nomination, she’ll be running in a riding vacated by longtime PC MPP Julia Munro, who is retiring. York-Simcoe, located just north of Toronto, has been easily won by Munro in each election since the riding was created in 2007, and Munro has held a seat in the legislatur­e since 1995.

Mulroney has received endorsemen­ts from Munro and from Conservati­ve MP Peter Van Loan, who holds the federal seat for the riding.

The party has been plagued by controvers­ies over nomination­s recently, with numerous candidates alleging the party’s brass has been interferin­g to get its preferred choice and doesn’t take appeals seriously. The volunteer leadership in three riding associatio­ns have resigned in various protests, and other candidates are appealing the nomination process in court.

The nomination meeting for York-Simcoe isn’t scheduled until Sept. 10. Peter Seemann, the riding associatio­n nomination chair, said Mulroney is the only candidate to have formally declared so far, but others have expressed interest.

The Ontario Liberals and NDP have not yet nominated a candidate for the riding.

 ??  ??
 ?? DARREN CALABRESE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Former prime minister Brian Mulroney, left, applauds as wife Mila, centre, acknowledg­es daughter Caroline Mulroney at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, N.S., last year. Caroline Mulroney announced that she will run for the Ontario PC...
DARREN CALABRESE/THE CANADIAN PRESS Former prime minister Brian Mulroney, left, applauds as wife Mila, centre, acknowledg­es daughter Caroline Mulroney at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, N.S., last year. Caroline Mulroney announced that she will run for the Ontario PC...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada