Toronto Star

Patrick Brown running for Peel chair

PC leader ousted over sexual assault allegation­s front-runner for position

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN'S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Patrick Brown is running to be the first elected chair of Peel Region.

The former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader, who might well have been Onta- rio’s premier, registered for the race on Tuesday.

“I’m excited to go back to my roots in municipal politics. I believe in being collaborat­ive and non-partisan; as I always say, there’s no monopoly on a good idea,” Brown said in an interview.

His potential candidacy was first revealed by the Star on May 17.

It is the beginning of a political comeback for the 40-year-old lawyer, who lives in Mississaug­a’s Lorne Park neighbourh­ood with his fiancée, less than six months after his stunning resignatio­n as Tory leader.

Brown stepped down early on Jan. 25, hours after CTV News broadcast a report alleging sexual impropriet­y with two women.

He has denied any wrongdoing and is now suing CTV, which stands by its story, for $8 million.

His resignatio­n from provincial politics triggered a PC leadership race, which Doug Ford won on March 10, beating now-MPPs Christine Elliott and Caroline Mulroney and conservati­ve activist Tanya Granic Allen.

Ford was elected premier after defeating Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals in the June 7 election.

Prior to that, Brown had led Wynne and NDP Leader Andrea Horwath in most publicopin­ion polls for two years and appeared poised to become premier.

A Conservati­ve source said after Brown’s departure, he visited with his mentor, former Tory premier Bill Davis, at his home in Brampton.

“The premier told Patrick when you get knocked down, you dust yourself off and get back up,” said the PC source, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Last year, Queen’s Park made legislativ­e changes to allow for the direct election of chairs in Peel and York Region as was already the case in Halton, Durham and Waterloo. Previous Peel and York chairs were appointed.

With oversight of regional responsibi­lities such as policing and other emergency services as well as waste disposal, the chairs are influentia­l.

“Gridlock, congestion, attracting high-paying jobs to the region and overcrowdi­ng at Peel hospitals are key issues for resi- dents here,” said Brown, who is widely seen as the front-runner of the seven candidates vying for the post.

Also registered to run are Mississaug­a Councillor Ron Starr, former Mississaug­a mayoral candidate Masood Khan, real estate broker Amir S. Ali, medical technologi­st Ken Looy, manufactur­ing and operations manager Vidya Sagar Gautam and Marcin Huniewicz, a senior manager of contact centre operations at a fire and security firm.

Brown has a dozen honorary chairs on his campaign, including Bill McBain, an adviser to former NDP premier Bob Rae; Senator Victor Oh; Tiger Ali Singh, philanthro­pist and former profession­al wrestler; former Caledon fire chief Dave Forfar; businesswo­man Asha Luthra, who was the first female president of the Indo-Canadian Chamber of Commerce; Ramesh Chotai, the former chair of the Canada India Foundation; and Ruffy Romano, founder of Kalayaan Filipino Cultural Organizati­on.

“I’m eager to be non-partisan,” said the former PC chief, who led the party from May 2015 until last January.

During his tenure, he made a point of reaching out to Ontario’s many cultural communitie­s and recruited dozens of candidates for the party.

Several of Brown’s star recruits now sit in Ford’s cabinet, including Attorney General Caroline Mulroney, Environmen­t Minister Rod Phillips and Treasury Board President Peter Bethlenfal­vy.

While he represente­d Barrie municipall­y and federally and Orillia provincial­ly, Brown has lengthy family ties to Peel, which includes the cities of Mississaug­a, Brampton and Caledon.

His father has practised law there for four decades and his fiancée, Genevieve Gualtieri, hails from Lorne Park.

Since stepping down from provincial politics, Brown has been writing a memoir, titled Take Down, The Political Assassinat­ion of Patrick Brown, which will be published by OPI in November.

In part because of that looming tell-all tome, not all Conservati­ves are happy to hear of Brown’s comeback.

At Queen’s Park, some Ford loyalists are quietly trying to find a high-profile candidate to take Brown on in the Oct. 22 election.

They have even put out feelers to former Liberal finance minister Charles Sousa, who was the Mississaug­a South MPP, but sources say he has not shown much interest.

Brown is not the only former provincial politician plunging into municipal politics. Steve Del Duca, the former economic developmen­t minister and Vaughan Liberal MPP, is the front-runner to be York Region’s first elected chair. Del Duca announced his broad-based bid last month. His campaign manager is veteran Liberal Tom Allison, who helped Wynne become premier and John Tory become Toronto mayor, and his deputy campaign manager is Dimitri Soudas, a top adviser to former Conservati­ve prime minister Stephen Harper.

He is running against the current appointed York Chair, Wayne Emmerson, and former Liberal MPP Mario Racco.

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