The Hamilton Spectator

CTV News ‘regrets’ story that harmed Brown’s career

- ROBERT BENZIE

CTV News has expressed “regrets” over a 2018 story about then-Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader Patrick Brown with “factually incorrect” informatio­n that caused “harm” to his provincial political career.

In a settlement Wednesday, CTV acknowledg­ed the story, which alleged sexual impropriet­y with two women, “required correction.” After the story was broadcast, Brown strongly denied the allegation­s and filed an $8-million defamation suit against the network’s parent company, Bellmedia.

“Patrick Brown and CTV have resolved their legal dispute,” according to a statement agreed upon by the two parties.

“On Jan. 24, 2018, four months before a provincial election, CTV broadcast a segment concerning Patrick Brown. Key details provided to CTV for the story were factually incorrect and required correction,” it continues.

“CTV National News regrets including those details in the story and any harm this may have caused to Mr. Brown.”

Both Brown and CTV said they would have no further comment on the settlement or any other terms.

The resolution ends four years of headline-making litigation and clears the way for Brown, who is now the mayor of Brampton, to seek the federal Conservati­ve leadership.

On Tuesday, Brown confirmed to John Moore on Newstalk 1010 that he’s exploring a bid to lead the federal party.

Brown was a Tory MP before jumping to provincial politics in 2015. He is regarded as one of the party’s top organizers with a vast network of contacts across Canada, especially among cultural communitie­s.

Sources told the Star he could enter the contest as early as this week.

So far, there are only two official candidates, MP Pierre Poilievre (Carleton) and MP Leslyn Lewis (Haldimand-Norfolk), who ran in 2020. Former Quebec premier and one-time federal Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader Jean Charest is expected to announce Thursday.

In January 2018, Brown stepped down as PC leader hours after CTV broadcast the story.

And in a dramatic night of regicide at Queen’s Park, Brown quit as provincial Tory leader under pressure from caucus members who were concerned about their own prospects in the looming June 2018 campaign.

His successor as Ontario PC leader was Doug Ford, a one-term Toronto city councillor with no political experience at the provincial level. Ford was elected premier in a majority government, and is now seeking re-election on June 2.

While the CTV story cut short Brown’s 2015-18 tenure as Tory leader, it did not end his political career.

In October 2018, he was elected mayor of Brampton, unseating incumbent Linda Jeffrey in an upset victory.

Brown’s legal action argued the network “falsely, maliciousl­y, unfairly and irresponsi­bly broadcast” a story that cost him his job as leader of the opposition while Liberal Kathleen Wynne was premier.

In an emotional, 81-second news conference at Queen’s Park on Jan. 24, 2018 — held just 15 minutes before the CTV story was broadcast — the distraught leader denied any wrongdoing. But nearly all of his staff and campaign aides resigned that night, and he quit as party leader. His lawyers argued Brown was “ambushed … mere hours before” the newscast and “had no reasonable time to respond.”

At the time, CTV reported that one of the women who alleged misconduct against Brown said she was in high school when she met him at a bar. But the woman later revised her recollecti­on, telling the network that she was 19 years old, not 18, at the time of the alleged encounter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada