Toronto Star

Muslim trustee sets her sights on city council

Ausma Malik hopes to bring diversity to city hall after winning a Toronto District School Board seat

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

When Ausma Malik considered running for Toronto city council, she thought about what it would be like to again knock on doors, wondering every time if when they open the person on the other side would pledge support or spew hateful barbs.

After being the target of a co-ordinated campaign of hate and Islamophob­ia during the 2014 election where she ran and decisively won a seat at the Toronto District School Board, Malik would be among the first hijab-wearing Muslim women to be elected to public office in Canada. Now, she’s set her sights on council. When nomination­s open for the 2018 municipal election in May, Malik will sign her name to run in a downtown ward with the support of local progressiv­e incumbents who say she is both competentl­y qualified for the work and uniquely positioned for the job.

In a city where the majority of its 2.6 million residents — or just over 51 per cent — identify as a visible minority, according to the latest federal census data, the current 45-member council that represents them is only 11 per cent visible minorities.

“If you’re first of one kind of representa­tion, you never want to be the last and I want there to be more — more young people, more women, more people of colour, Black, Indigenous people in leadership positions who are working for everybody,” Malik said in an interview. “I think that’s really exciting to me in putting myself forward for city council and hopefully to invite a new face of council in 2018.”

The 33-year-old condo dweller, wearing a plum purple hijab inside a Queen St. W. coffee shop, flat white and croissant in front of her, notes other disparitie­s — only a third of council members are women and just two are under age 35.

“When we don’t have those voices being represente­d at council, there is a huge gap.” AUSMA MALIK RUNNING FOR CITY COUNCIL

“When we don’t have those voices being represente­d at council, there is a huge gap and a distance between the reality that people are facing, the solutions that are possible at council and how those are actually realized and executed,” she said.

With a just-released decision on new ward boundaries creating four new wards, Malik says she plans to run in one half of a divided Ward 20 (Trinity-Spadina), now represente­d by newcomer Councillor Joe Cressy — a fellow NDP voice who ran a joint campaign with Malik and friend Councillor Mike Layton (Ward 19, Trinity-Spadina) in 2014.

Beyond wanting progressiv­e city-builders on council, Cressy said what Malik brings in terms of diversity is important: “We represent a city that, when you look at us as city councillor­s, we don’t reflect that city. So, how open are we? And how able are we to respond to issues that affect all religious and ethnic groups in our city if we don’t have a lived experience that can speak to them?”

Downtown Councillor Kristyn WongTam (Ward 27, Toronto Centre-Rosedale), the only racialized woman on council and also the only openly LGBTQ member, said she too would welcome Malik in the chamber.

“She’s not just hard-working, she’s also a person with incredible integrity,” WongTam said.

Malik’s political sensibilit­ies are rooted in student activism from her days at the University of Toronto and have been stoked through community outreach, working on education policy for the Ontario NDP, labour organizing at the Associatio­n of Management, Administra­tive and Profession­al Crown Employees of Ontario and on staff at the Stephen Lewis Foundation.

The daughter of Pakistani immigrants, Malik is the third of four children. Raised in Mississaug­a, she has lived downtown for more than a decade. She identifies as a proud feminist, Muslim and woman of colour and has become comfortabl­e behind a microphone speaking out against misogyny, Islamophob­ia and racism as a private citizen and as a trustee.

She talks about the challenge of living in increasing­ly vertical communitie­s and the pressure on both youth and seniors for whom the city is increasing­ly unaffordab­le. She just as easily pivots to her favourite Netflix shows.

During the 2014 election, Malik was one of several candidates who was targeted by Islamophob­ic attacks that left her repeatedly explaining she does not support terrorist organizati­ons or want sharia law. Flyers anonymousl­y circulated in the ward accused her of backing both the Toronto 18 cell and Hezbollah.

“Is SHE the person you want to choose YOUR children’s curriculum?” one flyer read.

At the doors and during debates there were genuinely scary experience­s that took a psychologi­cal toll, Malik said. She stopped canvassing alone and, at one public event, was ushered out a different door while an angry group that had been heckling her waited for her outside.

There was also the man she met one day while knocking on doors who approached and asked if she was Ausma Malik. Yes, she said, bracing herself for what would come next.

“(Ausma Malik is) not just hard-working, she’s also a person with incredible integrity.” COUNCILLOR KRISTYN WONG-TAM ONLY RACIALIZED WOMAN ON TORONTO CITY COUNCIL

He’d been tearing down the hateful flyers around the community, he told her, pulling door hangers from his neighbours’ front doors. His family, he said, were Holocaust survivors and it reminded him of the stories they told him of anti-Semitism and what hate does.

“That act of generosity and that human connection and also knowing that people saw the campaign for what it was . . . it was an amazing experience and affirming,” she said now.

In an open, nine-way race, more than 16,000 people picked Malik to be their trustee for Ward 10 (Trinity-Spadina). She won with 40 per cent of the vote.

The Star reached out to several national Muslim associatio­ns and searched media clippings but was also unable to confirm if any other hijab-wearing women have been elected to public office. Several women who wear a hijab have run as candidates for political office and there are Muslim women who do not wear a hijab who have held provincial and federal seats across the country.

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 ?? LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR ?? In an open, nine-way race, more than 16,000 people picked Ausma Malik to be their trustee for Ward 10 (Trinity-Spadina). She won with 40 per cent of the vote.
LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR In an open, nine-way race, more than 16,000 people picked Ausma Malik to be their trustee for Ward 10 (Trinity-Spadina). She won with 40 per cent of the vote.

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