The Hamilton Spectator

MPP Miller sues over ouster from Ontario NDP

Party said it turfed veteran politician from caucus after discoverin­g he joined an anti-Muslim Facebook group

- MATTHEW VAN DONGEN

Hamilton MPP Paul Miller has kicked off the election campaign by filing a $1.3-million lawsuit against Ontario’s NDP and its leader, Andrea Horwath, following his ouster from the party over racism allegation­s.

The party said it turfed the 71year-old from caucus in March after discoverin­g he had joined a virulently anti-Muslim Facebook group. The NDP also referenced a “pattern of troubling behaviour” that suggested Miller “may harbour Islamophob­ic, homophobic and racist views.”

Miller denies the allegation­s, labelling them a “political assassinat­ion” attempt meant to allow the party to bring in “younger candidates, diversifie­d candidates.” He will contest the June 2 election as an independen­t candidate in the Hamilton East—Stoney Creek riding where he was first elected in 2007.

The veteran politician filed a legal action against the NDP in Hamilton court Friday — just two days after the start of the election campaign — seeking damages of $1.3 million for conspiracy, discrimina­tion and breach of contract.

Miller is also seeking a declaratio­n he was “discrimina­ted against on the grounds of age, marital and family status.”

“I want the people to see the truth,” he said in a brief interview Tuesday.

The suit names the NDP, party officials Michael Balagus and Lucy

Watson, and Horwath, who is also MPP for Hamilton Centre.

“We’re confident that the party and our leader did the right thing, and that Mr. Miller’s claim will go nowhere,” said Watson, who responded to a Spectator request for comment Tuesday with a statement on behalf of the NDP, Horwath and other named party officials.

The party has yet to formally respond to the action with a statement of defence.

At a campaign kickoff event last week, Horwath told reporters she had “no choice” but to remove Miller from the party. “I stand by the decision that I made regarding Paul Miller,” she said

The NDP earlier announced preelectio­n vetting found Miller’s Facebook account had joined the Worldwide Coalition Against Islam, a group known for extreme rhetoric, including references to hunting Muslims and calling them sewage.

Miller said his lawyer has advised him against commenting further on details of the lawsuit while it is before the courts. But his statement of claim argues his own investigat­ion found “no record” of his account joining the group or communicat­ing with its members.

Miller has said in the past he believes his Facebook account was “compromise­d” without his knowledge. The MPP’s statement of claim says his own investigat­ion found “multiple logins” to his Facebook account from places unaffiliat­ed with the politician’s home or office — in some cases from cities “which Paul has never visited.”

The document alleges the “real reason” he was turfed is due to his age and marital status.

In particular, the document alleges party officials had privately urged Miller not to run again and told local NDP riding associatio­n officials “people would be upset” if he were nominated due to controvers­y surroundin­g his wife, school board trustee Carole Paikin Miller.

The NDP statement explaining Miller’s ouster referenced findings of a racism probe at the Hamilton public school board that resulted in the censure of Paikin Miller and calls for her to resign.

That school board investigat­ion report referenced both Paikin Miller and the MPP “scoffing and muttering under their breath in indignatio­n” during a virtual meeting discussion of anti-Black racism and policing in schools.

Miller’s unexpected ouster has spurred drama and uncertaint­y in a riding that has overwhelmi­ngly voted orange in each of the last three elections.

Accountant Zaigham Butt, a former family friend of Miller, is now running against him for the NDP in the Hamilton East-Stoney Creek riding. Butt’s father, Zahid, is an NDP riding associatio­n president who initially defended Miller after his ouster but later said he agreed with the party’s decision after learning more about his former friend’s “behaviour.”

The messy political divorce has also spurred a split among some traditiona­l NDP supporters — particular­ly among local Stelco retirees who count Miller, a former steelworke­r, as one of their own.

Miller declined to comment on the NDP replacemen­t candidate Tuesday, but reiterated he is already door-knocking and distributi­ng “burnt orange” campaign signs in the riding as an independen­t candidate.

Miller and Butt will face off against well-known Liberal and Tory candidates in city councillor Jason Farr and former football star Neil Lumsden, respective­ly. Cassie Wylie is running for the Greens in the riding, as well as New Blue candidate Jeff Raulino.

 ?? ?? Paul Miller says he was kicked out of caucus for a Facebook post he claims he did not write.
Paul Miller says he was kicked out of caucus for a Facebook post he claims he did not write.
 ?? KAZ NOVAK THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? MPP Paul Miller and his wife, Carole Paikin Miller. The veteran politician has filed a $1.3-million lawsuit against the Ontario NDP and its leader, Andrea Horwath, after the party booted him over racism allegation­s.
KAZ NOVAK THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO MPP Paul Miller and his wife, Carole Paikin Miller. The veteran politician has filed a $1.3-million lawsuit against the Ontario NDP and its leader, Andrea Horwath, after the party booted him over racism allegation­s.

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