Tony Clement
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Minister of Health Minister for the Federal Economic Development Initiative for Northern Ontario |
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Incumbent | |
Riding | Parry Sound—Muskoka |
In office since | 2006 Federal Election |
Preceded by | Ujjal Dosanjh |
Born | February 27, 1961 (age 46) Manchester, England |
Residence | Port Sydney, Ontario |
Political party | |
Profession(s) | Businessman, counsel, lawyer |
Spouse | Lynne Golding |
Anthony Peter "Tony" Clement, PC, BA, LL.B., MP (born January 27, 1961 in Manchester, England) is a Canadian politician, federal Minister of Health, Minister for the Federal Economic Initiative for Northern Ontario (FedNor) and member of the Conservative Party of Canada.
Clement had previously served as an Ontario cabinet minister, most recently as Minister of Health and Long-Term Care under Premiers Mike Harris and Ernie Eves.
Moving to federal politics, he was a candidate for the leadership of the Conservative Party of Canada after its formation from the merger of the Progressive Conservative and Canadian Alliance parties in 2004. Clement won the seat of Parry Sound—Muskoka in the 2006 federal election, defeating incumbent Liberal cabinet minister Andy Mitchell. The Conservatives formed a government in the election and Clement was appointed as the Minister of Health and Minister for FedNor.
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[edit] Early life and career
Born Tony Panayi to a Greek Cypriot father and Canadian mother in Britain, Clement immigrated to Canada in childhood with his mother and later adopted his last name from his stepfather, Ontario politician John Clement.
As a student conservative activist, Clement first attracted the attention of the media in 1985 when he invited Glenn Babb, apartheid South Africa's Ambassador to Canada, to speak at the University of Toronto.
He was also an admirer of Margaret Thatcher's government in the United Kingdom.
A graduate of the University of Toronto, he completed degrees in political science in 1983, and law in 1986, and was called to the Ontario Bar in 1988.
Clement became president of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario in 1990 and was a close ally of then-party leader Mike Harris. He ran, unsuccessfully, for Metro Toronto Council in 1994 losing to David Miller in the riding of Parkdale-High Park. He served as Harris's Assistant Principal Secretary from 1992 to 1995, and played a leading role in drafting policy directives for the Common Sense Revolution.
[edit] In provincial politics
He was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the provincial election of 1995, defeating incumbent Liberal Bob Callahan by over 6,000 votes in the riding of Brampton South. After serving as a parliamentary assistant for two years, he was appointed Minister of Transportation on October 10, 1997. One of the initiatives under his watch was the completion of Highway 403, which had been discontinuous for decades. He also represented the Progressive Conservative government on a variety of televised discussion panels, and won a reputation as a rising star in the party.
Clement was re-elected in the provincial election of 1999, defeating Liberal candidate Vic Dhillon by over 8,000 votes. He was promoted to Minister of the Environment on June 17, 1999, and served in this capacity until May 3, 2000. In this role he established the program known as Ontario's Drive Clean, which mandated periodic emissions tests on vehicles in southern Ontario.
Clement was appointed Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing on October 25, 1999, and held this position until February 8, 2001.
On February 8, 2001, Clement was appointed Minister of Health and Long-Term Care. He initiated primary care reform, oversaw the implementation of Telehealth Ontario (a toll-free health information line staffed by registered nurses), and expanded Ontario's hospitals system. He also introduced elements of private delivery within the single-payer public system by approving a private cancer care clinic in Toronto and entered into a public-private partnership for a hospital redevelopment in Brampton. His supporters launded him as an innovative and effective administrator, while critics disapproved of his advocacy of public-private partnerships and gave him the nickname "two-tier Tony".
When Mike Harris resigned as party leader, Clement ran to succeed him in the party's 2002 leadership election. During this campaign, his relationship with rival candidate Jim Flaherty deteriorated significantly. The atmosphere between them became poisoned through a series of personal attacks (some have suggested that Flaherty's campaign was behind a broadside that described Clement's wife as a lawyer for abortion doctors). While both Clement and Flaherty were perceived as being on the right wing of the party, Clement challenged his opponent's policies on the homeless, a proposal to ban teachers' strikes and other issues.
Clement finished third on the first ballot, and threw his support to victorious candidate Ernie Eves on the second. When Eves became Premier, he kept Clement in the Health portfolio.
Clement was especially prominent when Toronto suffered an outbreak of SARS in the summer of 2003, travelling to Geneva in a successful bid to urge the World Health Organization to lift a travel ban to Canada's largest city.[1]
The Eves government was defeated in the 2003 provincial election, and Clement was unexpectedly defeated by Vic Dhillon by about 2,500 votes in a rematch from 1999. Clement afterwards worked as a counsel for Bennett Jones LLP.
[edit] In federal politics
Clement first became prominent in federal politics in 2000, sitting on the steering committee for the United Alternative. This initiative was meant to provide a framework for the Reform Party and Progressive Conservative Party to unite under a single banner. It did not accomplish this end, but nonetheless led to the formation of the Canadian Alliance later in the year; Clement served as the Alliance's founding President.
Soon after the election, Clement declared himself a candidate for the leadership of the new Conservative Party of Canada. His support base was undercut by the candidacy of Belinda Stronach, however, and he placed third with only 9% of the party's leadership vote, while Stephen Harper emerged as the winner.
He then sought election as the Conservative Party candidate in Brampton West in the 2004 federal election, but lost to Liberal incumbent Colleen Beaumier by about 3,500 votes.
For his second attempt to win a seat in the Canadian House of Commons, in the 2006 campaign, he switched to the Parry Sound—Muskoka riding where he owned a cottage and where his wife's family had their roots. Liberal cabinet minister Andy Mitchell was his main opponent. Clement was also a resident of the riding for almost a year before the election. The vote was close. On election night, he was declared to be the winner, by 21 votes. The official validation the following day increased his margin to 29 votes, but that triggered an automatic judicial recount, since the margin was less than 1 in 1,000 votes. Upon conclusion of the judicial recount, Clement was found to have defeated Mitchell by 28 votes: 18,513-18,485.
[edit] Minister of Health
Some of Clement's initiatives including establishing the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, developing a national strategy on Autism, and working towards establishing Canada's first Patient Wait Times Guarantees.
Clement attended the XVI International AIDS Conference in Toronto in August of 2006, which Prime Minister Stephen Harper did not attend, causing some controversy. Clement was booed by some conference participants, likely because of his role as surrogate for the Prime Minister. He focused most of his time at the conference promising to investigate the failure of the Canada Access to Medicines Regime to effectively fulfill its purpose of sending Canadian-manufactured generic drugs to developing countries, as per the August 30 Agreement at the World Trade Organization. After further criticism on the lack of new announcement on its efforts to combat AIDS, Clement responded saying that the atmosphere at the conference had become too "politicized". On December 1, World AIDS Day, International Cooperation Minister Josee Verner announced a $450 million investment over the next 10 years to fight AIDS.
Preceded by Andy Mitchell, Liberal |
Member of Parliament for Parry Sound—Muskoka 2006- |
Succeeded by incumbent |
28th Ministry - Government of Stephen Harper | ||
Cabinet Post | ||
---|---|---|
Predecessor | Office | Successor |
Ujjal Dosanjh | Minister of Health (2006–) |
Incumbent |
Provincial Government of Ernie Eves | ||
Cabinet Post | ||
---|---|---|
Predecessor | Office | Successor |
Continued from the Harris Ministry | Minister of Health and Long-Term Care (2002–2003) |
George Smitherman |
Provincial Government of Mike Harris | ||
Cabinet Posts (4) | ||
Predecessor | Office | Successor |
Elizabeth Witmer | Minister of Health and Long-Term Care (2001–2002) |
Continued into the Eves Ministry |
Steve Gilchrist | Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing (1999–2001) |
Chris Hodgson |
Norman Sterling | Minister of the Environment (1999–2000) |
Dan Newman |
Al Palladini | Minister of Transportation (1997–1999) |
David Turnbull |
Members of the current Canadian Cabinet | ||
---|---|---|
Ambrose | Baird | Bernier | Blackburn | Cannon | Clement | Day | Emerson | Finley | Flaherty | Fortier | Harper | Hearn | LeBreton | Lunn | MacKay | Nicholson | O'Connor | Oda | Prentice | Skelton | Solberg | Strahl | Thompson | Toews | Van Loan | Verner
Secretaries of State Guergis | Hill | Kenney | Paradis | Ritz |
[edit] References
[edit] External links
Categories: Members of the 28th Ministry in Canada | 1961 births | Brampton, Ontario politics | Canadian lawyers | Conservative Party of Canada MPs | Current Members of the Canadian House of Commons | Canadians of Cypriot descent | Canadians of Greek descent | English immigrants to Canada | Greek Cypriots | Historical Ontario MPPs | Members of the Canadian House of Commons from Ontario | Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada | People of Cypriot descent | Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario MPPs | University of Toronto alumni | Living people | Politicians from Manchester