The Niagara Falls Review

Lecce sorry for ‘slave auction’

PC MPP took part in fraternity fundraiser as a student 16 years ago

- ROBERT BENZIE AND ROB FERGUSON TORONTO STAR

Amid NDP calls for his resignatio­n, Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPP Stephen Lecce has apologized for being part of a “slave auction” when he was a university student.

Lecce, the education minister in Doug Ford’s Tory government, participat­ed in the fraternity charity fundraiser while attending Western University 16 years ago.

“The event from 2006 was inappropri­ate and in no way reflects who I am as a person, which is why I unreserved­ly apologize,” the firstterm Vaughan MPP said in a statement Wednesday. “I will continue to passionate­ly advance the interests of all Ontarians — irrespecti­ve of faith, heritage, orientatio­n or race.”

The furor dominated the June 2 election campaign the day after the first leaders’ debate Tuesday in North Bay.

While NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, and Green Leader Mike Schreiner met with reporters on the hustings, Ford ducked the media.

The Conservati­ve leader canvassed without the scrutiny of accompanyi­ng media cameras in four Toronto ridings — two in Etobicoke, one in North York and one in Scarboroug­h.

That prompted Del Duca to accuse Ford of a “peek-a-boo, missing-in-action campaign strategy” after his northern debate performanc­e.

“When you’re running to be premier of this province, to go into hiding I think is completely unacceptab­le,” said the Liberal leader. “I suspect Doug Ford’s embarrasse­d about his record over the past four years — and goodness knows he should be — but you’ve got to face the music on election campaigns.”

Del Duca suggested Ford was also laying low Wednesday because he didn’t want to face questions about some Tory MPPs supplement­ing their six-figure salaries by dipping into riding associatio­n funds.

Lisa MacLeod, who earns $165,851 as tourism minister, received $44,000 between 2018 and 2020 from her Nepean PC riding associatio­n for living expenses.

Several other Tory MPPs tapped into taxpayer-subsidized funds to boost their pay, including Kaleed Rasheed, now the associate minister of digital government, who got $23,000 from the Mississaug­a East-Cooksville PC associatio­n.

The PC campaign defended the MPPs, noting “all riding associatio­n expenses are approved by the local riding associatio­n executive, audited by a licensed auditor, and all audited financial statements are reviewed and approved by Elections Ontario.”

But the kerfuffle, compounded by the Lecce revelation­s, left the Tories reeling, despite their lead in every public opinion poll.

Sources told the Toronto Star that the Vaughan MPP was a secondyear Western student and member of the Sigma Chi fraternity when he was “auctioned off” to serve as a chef for a night to raise funds for the Children’s Miracle Network.

Western officials emphasized the university had no involvemen­t in the fraternity event.

After a report published Tuesday night in Press Progress, a news website funded by the left-leaning Broadbent Institute, the NDP said Lecce should step down as a PC candidate.

Campaignin­g in Brampton, where she promised lower auto insurance rates if elected next month, Horwath said she “stands by” her party’s Black caucus statement urging Lecce to resign.

“The trans-Atlantic slave trade is one of the most horrific chapters of human history. Upwards of 12 million enslaved Africans were ripped from their homes and transporte­d across the Atlantic to the Americas between the 16th and the 19th century,” the NDP Black caucus statement said.

“Mr. Lecce chose to lead and participat­e in events that mocked and trivialize­d this painful history,” the caucus statement continued.

“He also chose to conceal them for years as a public official, as a minister charged with the education, opportunit­y and well-being of Black students and as the person tasked with overseeing the province’s investigat­ions into anti-Black racism in schools. All of these actions are repulsive and constitute clear anti-Black racism.”

The Green leader, meanwhile, said he was “disgusted to learn of revelation­s that Stephen Lecce participat­ed in a slave auction fundraiser while in university.”

“It is blatantly racist and wrong,” said Schreiner.

“The behaviour is reprehensi­ble, unacceptab­le, appalling and has no place.”

 ?? BOB TYMCZYSZYN TORSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? Sources told the Toronto Star that Stephen Lecce was a second-year Western student and member of the Sigma Chi fraternity when he was “auctioned off” to serve as a chef for a night to raise funds for the Children’s Miracle Network.
BOB TYMCZYSZYN TORSTAR FILE PHOTO Sources told the Toronto Star that Stephen Lecce was a second-year Western student and member of the Sigma Chi fraternity when he was “auctioned off” to serve as a chef for a night to raise funds for the Children’s Miracle Network.

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