Carman McClelland

Carman McClelland
MPP
In office
1987–1995
Preceded by riding established
Succeeded by Joe Spina
Constituency Brampton North
Personal details
Born September 22, 1951 (1951-09-22) (age 60)
Angola
Political party Liberal (1987-1995)
Progressive Conservative (2007-)
Residence Toronto
Occupation Lawyer

John Carman McClelland (born September 22, 1951) is a former politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a Liberal member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1987 to 1995.

Contents

Background

McClelland moved to Canada at a young age, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree York University and a law degree from the University of Windsor.[1] Before entering political life, he practised law as an associate at the firm of Fogler, Rubinoff, Toronto. He was also a board member of the Canadian Council of Christian Charities.

In 1995, he resumed his legal practice and is now a member and VP of the Peel Law Association Executive Committee.

Politics

McClelland first ran for the Ontario legislature in the general election of 1977, losing to New Democrat (NDP) Ted Bounsall by over 3,500 votes in Windsor—Sandwich. The next year, McClelland narrowly lost the race for a seat on the Windsor Board of Education representing Ward 1. In 1980, he was appointed as a board member for Ward 1 after the death of trustee Donald Hill, but was again narrowly defeated in the general election that November. He did not seek office again until the 1987 provincial election, when he was easily elected in Brampton North as part of a Liberal landslide victory. McClelland served as a backbench supporter of David Peterson’s government for the next three years.

Prior to the 1990 election, McClelland was challenged for the Liberal nomination in his riding by the representative of a group which claimed the Peterson government had made insufficient outreach efforts to Ontario’s Sikh community. He won the nomination challenge, and went on to defeat NDP challenger John Devries by only 98 votes in the general election.[2] The Liberals were upset by the NDP provincially, and McClelland moved to the opposition benches for the next five years. In 1993, he brought forward a private member’s bill dealing with the possibility of electoral recall.

The Progressive Conservatives won a majority government in the 1995 Ontario election, and McClelland lost to PC candidate Joe Spina[2] by 5,348 votes.

McClelland changed parties and was the PC candidate for the riding of Brampton-Springdale in the 2007 Ontario election, but lost to the Liberal candidate by nearly 7,000 votes.[3][4] He has also been President (2008–2009) of the Brampton Board of Trade.[1]

References

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