The Peterborough Examiner

Mayor impressed MPP Simard is ‘sticking to her conviction­s’

- NICOLE THOMPSON

Amanda Simard is putting the interests of French-speaking Ontarians above her own political clout, her former colleague and one-time rival said Thursday, hours after the rookie legislator severed ties with the province’s governing Tories.

Simard, 29, left the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves on Thursday after publicly denouncing Ontario’s decision to eliminate the independen­t office of the Frenchlang­uage services commission­er and a planned French-language university.

Though she has only represente­d her largely francophon­e riding at Queen’s Park for a few months, she isn’t entirely new to politics, having sat as a municipal councillor in her hometown of Russell, Ont., for four years before she ran provincial­ly.

Pierre Leroux, the mayor of Russell and one of Simard’s former colleagues, said she appears to have now zeroed in on a matter of importance to her constituen­ts — one she also feels strongly about.

“She’s shown a level of maturity now that I didn’t see at the municipal level,” Leroux said. “She was fairly quiet.”

Simard didn’t have the opportunit­y to speak out at such a magnitude while sitting on council, Leroux said in a phone interview after the provincial politician sent a letter to the Speaker of the legislatur­e announcing that she’d sit as an independen­t.

There wasn’t an issue that captured her heart like the government’s recent francophon­e measures clearly have, he said.

Leroux, who ran against Simard as a Liberal in the spring provincial election, said she was a person who “played things close to the chest.” He said her departure from the Tory caucus was a bold move he wouldn’t have expected from her.

“I have to give it to her, she’s sticking to her conviction­s,” he said. “I’m impressed. I really am. If you’d have asked me six months ago, that probably would not have been the word I used to relate to her, but no, I am impressed.”

Simard attended law school at the University of Ottawa, graduating with a doctor of laws in

2013. She served as an editor on the Ottawa Law Review and worked as a political staffer on Parliament Hill.

The municipali­ty of Russell is divided into two villages — Embrun and Russell. Embrun, the village from which Simard hails, is historical­ly francophon­e, whereas the village of Russell is historical­ly English-speaking.

Simard made headlines with a Facebook post last week criticizin­g the government’s decision on the French commission­er and university, saying she was “definitely upset.”

“Franco-Ontarians are not asking for additional rights or services, we’re asking that the existing protection­s and entities remain in place,” she said.

Leroux said Simard’s actions have likely raised the profile of francophon­e issues in the province.

“Even though her voice will maybe not carry as much weight at Queen’s Park, she has lit a match in the Franco-Ontario community,” he said. “Their voice is just going to be louder because of this.”

 ??  ?? Amanda Simard
Amanda Simard

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada