Peter North (politician)

Peter John North (born August 23, 1960) is former politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a New Democratic member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1990 to 1999 who represented the southeastern Ontario riding of Elgin. He was a cabinet minister in the government of Bob Rae. In 1993 he left the New Democratic Party in an unsuccessful attempt to join the Progressive Conservative Party. For the next seven years he sat as an independent member.

Peter North
Ontario MPP
In office
1990–1999
Preceded byMarietta Roberts
Succeeded byRiding abolished
ConstituencyElgin
Personal details
Born
Peter John North

(1960-08-23) August 23, 1960
St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
Political partyNew Democratic Party (1990-1993)
Independent (1993-1999)
Spouse(s)Deneen North
ChildrenJade Rogers, Cassidy North, Abi North
ResidenceSouthwold Township, Ontario
OccupationBuilding contractor

He was the first MPP of First Nations descent ever elected to Ontario's provincial legislature.[1]

Background

North graduated from high school in 1979 and worked as a building contractor.

Politics

New Democrat

He was elected to the legislature in the 1990 Ontario election as the New Democratic Party Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for Elgin, defeating incumbent Liberal Marietta Roberts by over 4,000 votes. As one of the few NDP MPPs to represent a rural constituency in southern Ontario, North was appointed to Bob Rae's cabinet as Minister of Tourism and Recreation on October 1, 1990. He resigned as tourism minister in November 1992 after allegations he had offered a government job to a woman with whom he was having an unconsummated affair.[2] An investigation by the Ontario Provincial Police found no evidence of wrongdoing,[3] but North was not returned to cabinet by Rae.

Cabinet positions

Ontario Provincial Government of Bob Rae
Cabinet post (1)
Predecessor Office Successor
Ken Black Minister of Tourism and Recreation
1990-1992
Ed Philip

Independent

North resigned from the NDP in August 1993 and declared his intention to join the Progressive Conservative party.[2] He did not discuss this with the PC party in advance, however, and was told that he would have to get the support of the riding association in Elgin before he would be accepted by the party.[4] North then sat as an independent.

North was re-elected in the 1995 provincial election, defeating Progressive Conservative candidate Jim Williams by nearly 2,000 votes, becoming the first MPP in the province to be elected as an independent candidate since 1934.[5] He had no formal legislative responsibilities from 1995 to 1997, and made only minor contributions to legislative debate.

North did not seek re-election in 1999, clearing the way for PC incumbent Bruce Smith to run (unsuccessfully) in the redistributed riding of ElginMiddlesexLondon. In July 1999, North was appointed co-ordinator of Community Sport and Recreation Development by the Tory government.[6]

Failed Comeback

North resumed his old career as a contractor based in Port Stanley, Ontario[7] with one failed comeback attempt in 2011 as a PC nomination candidate for ElginMiddlesexLondon,[8] but lost to Jeff Yurek who went on to become elected.

gollark: It was actually on caddy for quite a while, but v2 annoyed me, so I went back to nginx.
gollark: I have about 500 lines of horribly entangled configuration files driving this, despite the original design of osmarks.net (formerly osmarks.tk) calling for it to mostly be a static website.
gollark: Now, the diagram says "nginx". Nginx is also an important part of this setup. It is a reverse proxy allowing me to run all this slightly crazy stuff on one IP, and encrypt with "HTTPS" apiotechnology.
gollark: It also got a HTTP endpoint, available at https://radio.osmarks.net/random-stuff/current-song, which dumps the status etc. information in JSON for the frontend to read.
gollark: So this gained a loop polling MPD - remember, it has a client-server model, so other stuff can communicate with it. Use of MPD turned out to be a good design decision!

References

  1. "‘A missed opportunity for our people’: Indigenous leaders urge province to revisit electoral map". Toronto Star, October 7, 2017.
  2. Leyton-Brown, David (1999). Canadian annual review of politics and public affairs. University of Toronto Press. p. 147. ISBN 0-8020-4701-7.
  3. Blizzard, Christina (1995). Right turn: how the Tories took Ontario. Dundurn Press Ltd. p. 170. ISBN 1-55002-254-7.
  4. "Tory caucus stalls ousted NDP minister". Kitchener-Waterloo Record. September 21, 1993. p. A2.
  5. Noel, Sidney (1997). Revolution at Queen's Park: essays on governing Ontario. James Lorimer & Company. p. 111. ISBN 1-55028-546-7.
  6. "Tories appoint ex-NDP minister to sports post". Toronto Star. July 9, 1999. p. 1.
  7. https://lfpress.com/news/london/2011/01/03/16745461.html
  8. https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2011/01/05/former_ontario_ndp_minister_plots_comeback_with_pcs.html
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