John Parker (Canadian politician)

John L. Parker
Toronto City Councillor for (Ward 26) Don Valley West
Incumbent
Assumed office
December 1, 2006
Preceded by Jane Pitfield
Deputy Speaker of Toronto City Council
Incumbent
Assumed office
December 1, 2010
Preceded by Gloria Lindsay Luby
Member of Provincial Parliament for York East
In office
June 8, 1995 – June 2, 1999
Preceded by Gary Malkowski
Succeeded by Riding Abolished
Personal details
Born 1954
Toronto, Ontario
Nationality Canadian
Political party Progressive Conservative
Residence Toronto
Occupation Lawyer
Religion United Church of Canada

John L. Parker (born c1954) is a politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1995 to 1999. He is now Toronto city councillor for Ward 26, Don Valley West.

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Background

Parker graduated from the University of Toronto, then Osgoode Hall Law School in 1980, and worked as a lawyer. After moving to the Leaside area he became active in the community and was a founding member of the board of the Bessborough Child Care Centre. He is a member of the Leaside United Church. He has coached community baseball, soccer and hockey teams. He served on the Board of the Leaside Hockey Rink and chaired the East York Committee of Adjustment.

In 2001, Parker helped found the Ontario Association of Former Parliamentarians. The association's objectives include offering experience in support of parliamentary democracy in a non-partisan way and to foster good relations between current members. Parker serves on the Board of Directors of the Churchill Society for the Advancement of Parliamentary Democracy, a non-partisan, charitable organization that facilitates education, discussion and debate about Canada’s parliamentary democracy.

Provincial politics

He was elected to the Ontario legislature in the 1995 provincial election, defeating incumbent New Democrat Gary Malkowski by 3,263 votes in the riding of York East.[1] He served in Mike Harris's government for the next four years. During that time he was parliamentary assistant to Native Affairs.

In 1996, the Harris government reduced the number of provincial ridings from 130 to 103. This change resulted in some sitting MPPs having to compete against one another in the 1999 provincial election. Parker ran against Liberal Mike Colle in the newly-created riding of Eglinton—Lawrence, and was defeated by 11,307 votes. Colle received 56.85 percent of the popular vote compared to Parker's 29.72 percent.[2]

Municipal politics

In 2006, Parker was elected as the City Councillor for Toronto's Ward 26. In a field of 15 candidates, Parker prevailed by a margin of 215 votes over runner-up Mohamed Dhanani. Parker received a total of 3,369 votes which amounted to just 20% of the popular vote.[3] Parker has received low grades on environmental issues. In 2008, the Toronto Environmental Alliance issued Parker an "F" grade for what they perceived to be an egregious voting record in 2007-2008.[4] While he is widely considered to be a right-wing councillor, Parker has received poor performance grades from the editorial boards of traditionally conservative newspapers in Ontario. The National Post and Toronto Sun gave Parker "C" grades in "report cards" these outlets issued for Toronto City Councillors in 2007 and 2010 respectively.[5][6] November 21, the Toronto Sun scored Councillor Parker an "A+".[7]

In 2010, Parker was re-elected in Ward 26. He tallied the most votes in a three way race between previous contender Dhanani and newcomer Jon Burnside. The Toronto Sun supported Parker giving him the recommendation as "a hard-wired East Yorker, who brings a conservative ethic and is not easily panicked."[8] Parker sits on the Board of Directors for the Toronto Centre for the Performing Arts and the Toronto Film Board. He has previously worked with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra Board of Directors. Parker is actively involved with the Toronto Community Housing Corporation, Toronto and Regional Conservation Authority (TRCA),[9] the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC),[10] the Employee and Labour Relations Committee, City of Toronto Budget Committee. He was selected to be Deputy Speaker in December 2010.[11]

Election results

2010 Toronto election, Ward 26[12]
Candidate Votes  %
John Parker 6,203 31.3
Jon Burnside 5,788 29.2
Mohamed Dhanani 5,627 28.4
Yunus Pandor 1,452 7.3
Tanvir Ahmed 377 1.9
Shaukat Malik 216 1.1
Nawab Salim Khan 169 0.9
Total 19,832 100

Unofficial results as of October 26, 2010 03:55 am

2006 Toronto election, Ward 26[13]
Candidate Votes  %
John Parker 3,369 20.1
Mohamed Dhanani 3,155 18.8
Abdul Ingar 2,940 17.6
Geoff Kettel 1,372 8.2
Natalie Maniates 1,336 8.0
David Thomas 1,095 6.5
John Masterson 887 5.3
Michele Carroll-Smith 743 4.4
Debbie Lechter 577 3.4
Csaba Vegh 371 2.2
Muhammad Alam 261 1.6
Fred Williams 256 1.5
Bahar Aminvaziri 215 1.3
Orhan Aybars 99 0.6
Raza Jabbar 76 0.5

References

External links