Toronto Star

Brown gets the green light to run for PC leadership

‘I won’t let you down,’ he tweets after comeback bid is approved

- ROB FERGUSON, ROBERT BENZIE AND KRISTIN RUSHOWY QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Exiled former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader Patrick Brown has been given the go-ahead to run for his old job.

The controvers­ial former Tory chief — forced to resign last month after a sexual impropriet­y scandal involving two 19year-old women — was told Wednesday by the PC provincial nomination­s committee that he can proceed with a comeback attempt.

That means he can seek the party crown against former MPP Christine Elliott, ex-Toronto councillor Doug Ford, rookie PC candidate Caroline Mulroney, and anti-sex-education crusader Tanya Granic Allen, who have also received the stamp of approval.

Brown’s candidacy dominated the marathon four-and-a-half-hour Albany Club meeting.

Sources said the nomination­s committee agreed by a margin of 3-2 to let him enter the race.

“Thank you to the thousands of party members and Ontarians who have reached out, spoken out, and stood by me. You have brought me to this point and I won’t let you down,” Brown tweeted later.

In a separate statement that pointedly did not mention Brown, Elliott noted she remains “only candidate in this race with the ability to unite our members, and the experience to win the next election.”

Earlier in the day, Brown told Zoomer Radio AM740 that he was a victim of a “coup” last month.

“Why are they doing all this? Why are they so petrified of my leadership? They know the grassroots of our party are rallying behind me,” said the Simcoe North MPP.

Tory members vote online using a ranked ballot between March 2 and 8, with the winner announced March 10.

The victor will try to topple Premier Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals in the June 7 provincial election.

Brown’s stunning decision last Friday to throw his hat into the ring for his former post has plunged the party into chaos.

His announceme­nt was the same day interim leader Vic Fedeli banished him from caucus. As an Independen­t MPP, his assigned seat is in the back row of a remote corner of the legislatur­e, though he has been too busy stumping for his old post to show up at Queen’s Park.

“For the next few weeks I’ve got the leadership campaign. I’m going to be around the province of Ontario to make sure I can finish the job I started,” he said in his radio interview.

Compoundin­g the tumult, Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPP Randy Hillier filed a complaint Tuesday with Ontario’s integrity commission­er over Brown’s personal finances, which are detailed in the annual public filing all members of provincial parliament must make.

His concern includes how the 39-year-old bachelor could afford a $1.72-million mortgage on a $2.3-million Lake Simcoe waterfront home and who paid for internatio­nal travel with his 23-year-old girlfriend, a former Tory intern.

Hillier is accusing Brown of violating the Members’ Integrity Act by not fully reporting all sources of in- come and gifts.

The former PC leader has dismissed the complaint as “ridiculous” and “garbage.” Brown has also denied any wrongdoing with the two women who alleged sexual misconduct against him in a CTV story broadcast Jan. 24.

His senior aides quit en masse the night of the CTV broadcast and he himself resigned after a caucus conference call early the next morning.

Tories at Queen’s Park were abuzz after the Star disclosed that Brown’s on-again-off-again girlfriend, Genevieve Gualtieri, had worked in his office as a 21-year-old intern in 2015. Tory MPP Lisa MacLeod, who was part of Brown’s entourage during a 2016 mission to India, confirmed Gualtieri was on the trip.

MacLeod said she was not aware of any personal relationsh­ip between the two.

“I didn’t know. She’s a lovely girl, and I don’t really have any other comment because I didn’t know anything until I read (the Star).”

The veteran MPP said she had assumed Gualtieri “was a young staffer.”

When asked about the power imbalance in such relationsh­ips, MacLeod said it sends a bad signal.

“As a mom who’s been here a while, that certainly makes me worry, if my daughter were to get involved in politics and be an intern,” she said.

“But just to reiterate on the young lady, I thought she had a bright career ahead of her, and probably still does. She’s a very smart girl.”

Gualtieri, who was not available for comment Wednesday, has rallied to Brown, calling him “one of the most respectful, decent and caring individual­s I have ever met.”

“It is wrong how the media has treated him,” she said last week.

Asked about the optics of Brown having a relationsh­ip with a much younger intern on his payroll and taking her on internatio­nal trips, Liberal MPP Deb Matthews said: “I think they speak for themselves.”

Brown stressed to Zoomer that unnamed enemies have committed a “hatchet job” against him.

“It was absolutely a takedown,” he said.

Earlier Wednesday, Brown skipped a scheduled 30-minute feature interview in studio at10 a.m. with Newstalk10­10’s Jerry Agar, cancelling at the last minute.

When Agar said it was “unprofessi­onal” for the ex-leader not to keep his appointmen­t, Brown’s spokespers­on, Alise Mills, insisted her client “did not not show up.”

Mills suggested it was a mix-up, but the snub kept the city’s toprated talk radio station abuzz for the rest of Wednesday.

 ??  ?? Patrick Brown, the former Ontario PC leader, says he has been the victim of a “coup.”
Patrick Brown, the former Ontario PC leader, says he has been the victim of a “coup.”
 ?? @BROWNBARRI­E/TWITTER ?? Genevieve Gualtieri with Patrick Brown at OrilliaRib­Fest in 2015. Brown has been dating Gualtieri, a former intern, off and on for several years and she accompanie­d his entourage on a trip to India in 2016.
@BROWNBARRI­E/TWITTER Genevieve Gualtieri with Patrick Brown at OrilliaRib­Fest in 2015. Brown has been dating Gualtieri, a former intern, off and on for several years and she accompanie­d his entourage on a trip to India in 2016.

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