CBC Edition

Conservati­ve Jamil Jivani wins federal byelection in Ontario riding of Durham

-

Conservati­ve candidate Jamil Jivani handily won the federal byelection in Durham on Monday, with preliminar­y results from Elections Canada showing he secured more than 57 per cent of the vote share.

"We set out to send Justin Trudeau a message and I think we were successful," Ji‐ vani told supporters at a restaurant in Clarington, Ont., after results came in.

The win means Jivani, a lawyer and commentato­r, will take over the Greater Toronto Area seat once held by former Tory leader Erin O'‐ Toole. The byelection was triggered by O'Toole's retire‐ ment from politics and sub‐ sequent resignatio­n last year.

With 100 per cent of polls reporting, preliminar­y results suggest that 18,610 voters cast their ballot for Jivani. Lib‐ eral candidate and runner-up Robert Rock got 7,285 votes, about 22.5 per cent of the vote share.

Jivani managed to in‐ crease the Conservati­ve vote share in the riding relative to the 2021 federal election. In that contest, 46.4 per cent of total votes went to O'Toole, while the Liberal runner-up secured 29.9 per cent of votes.

Durham, a riding with a mix of suburban and rural areas, has been a Tory stronghold for two decades.

Meanwhile, turnout in Monday's byelection was low. Only about 27.9 per cent of Durham's 116,259 eligible voters cast a ballot, prelimi‐ nary results from Elections Canada show. Official figures should be released in the coming days.

Jivani is a past president of the Canada Strong and Free Network, the political advocacy group and thinktank formerly known as the Manning Centre, and has penned columns for the Na‐ tional Post and the Toronto Sun.

He grew up in Brampton and earned his law degree at Yale University. He's written about his close friendship with J.D. Vance, his one-time Yale classmate who became a bestsellin­g author with his book Hillbilly Elegy and now serves as a Republican sena‐ tor for Ohio. Vance is a vocal political ally of former U.S. president Donald Trump.

Jivani is the founder of the Policing Literacy Initiative, a think tank dedicated to im‐ proving policing and commu‐ nity safety practices through a youth-driven approach, and the the author of the 2019 book Why Young Men, which examines the phenomenon of violence perpetrate­d by young men.

In his victory speech, Ji‐ vani repeatedly criticized Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his governing Liberals.

"Justin Trudeau doesn't really know what to do with people like me. And he does‐ n't know what to do with a lot of people in this room. He looks at us and he thinks that his party owns us and owns our communitie­s," Jivani said.

"He looks at me and sees a millennial, son of an African immigrant, grandson of a public school custodian, sur‐ vivor of cancer thanks to our public health-care system and raised by a single moth‐ er. And he thinks that people like me owe his party some‐ thing, that we have to fall in line behind his party. I obvi‐ ously disagree," he added.

While Monday's results won't shift the balance of power in the House of Com‐ mons, they could serve as a preview to the relative strength of the parties in the electorall­y critical GTA with a federal election looming next year. They come as public polling suggests Pierre Poilievre's Tories hold a dou‐ ble-digit lead over the Liber‐ als.

"Durham wants Pierre Poilievre to be the next prime minister of Canada. I think that has been the resounding message from Scugog to Os‐ hawa to Clarington," Jivani said.

"I think there are many conservati­ves like me ... who acknowledg­e that in 2024, it is our party that best repre‐ sents the values of our com‐ munities."

Jivani was at the centre of a controvers­y in July 2020 when he posted on Twitter that heightened gun violence in Toronto was in part caused by "young gangsters" starting online "drama." Jivani was at the time advising Premier Doug Ford's government on how to reach out to at-risk communitie­s.

In January 2022, he was dropped from his show on Bell's iHeartRadi­o network and has since sued the com‐ pany, alleging breach of con‐ tract and wrongful dismissal. He's arguing the company fired him because he did not fit their stereotype of a Black man. The company denies the allegation­s.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada