Stephen LeDrew
Stephen Ralph LeDrew (born 1953) is a Toronto-based lawyer and broadcaster. He served as President of the Liberal Party of Canada from 1998 to 2003, and was a Mayor of Toronto candidate in the 2006 municipal election. He hosts LeDrew Live on CP24 and also co-hosts CP24 Live at Noon as well as being the news station's political analyst.
Legal career
As a lawyer, LeDrew served as the Executive Assistant to the Solicitor General of Canada, Government Affairs Counsel for Manulife, and Director of Operations in the Prime Minister's Office. After serving in government, he practiced administrative law in the private sector for over 25 years.
Political career
LeDrew was elected president of the Liberal Party of Canada in March 1998, then re-elected in March 2000, serving until November 2003. Occasionally outspoken, he famously derided the Chrétien government's plan to severely limit corporate donations to political parties as being as "dumb as a bag of hammers".[1]
On September 28, 2006, immediately prior to nomination cut-off date, LeDrew announced his candidacy for Mayor of Toronto in that year's municipal election against incumbent David Miller, centre-right challenger Jane Pitfield and a host of fringe candidates. LeDrew's campaign manager was Arthur Potts. Potts is a lobbyist who has worked on behalf of Showline Studios, and opposes the city's deal with a rival company to create a sound studio in the portlands.[2] Although he received considerable media coverage and was invited to participate in election debates with Miller and Pitfield, LeDrew finished a distant third with only 1.3% of the vote.
Broadcasting
From 2007 until 2009, LeDrew co-hosted a talk show with Michael Coren on CFRB 1010 in Toronto titled Two Bald Guys With Strong Opinions. In January 2009, LeDrew began co-hosting a weekday noon news programme with Ann Rohmer on CP24 tiled Live at Noon working there as a political analyst. Due to these television commitments, LeDrew quit his CFRB 1010 show on March 25, 2009.
Personal
In 2005, LeDrew was forced to declare personal bankruptcy by his sole creditor, the federal government. At that time LeDrew claimed this action against him was incited by his stand against Jean Chrétien's efforts to remain as party leader without a leadership review vote, contrary to the constitution of the Liberal Party of Canada. LeDrew owed C$364,140 in back taxes, which he had been in the process of paying down. The court ordered him to pay 74% of this amount, even though LeDrew had earlier offered to pay 100% of his arrears over time; the government had rejected this offer. The judge on the case noted that LeDrew placed priority on personal expenses rather than his tax obligations.[3] LeDrew stated in reply at the time that his children and their needs came first, and he would not have done anything different. LeDrew is a divorced father of four children.
Stephen LeDrew is past president of the National Club in Toronto.
Electoral record
Candidate | Total votes | % of total votes |
---|---|---|
David Miller | 332,969 | 56.97 |
Jane Pitfield | 188,932 | 32.32 |
Stephen LeDrew | 8,078 | 1.38 |
35 other candidates | 54,508 | 9.33 |
Total valid votes | 584,484 | 100.00 |
For full results, see Toronto municipal election, 2006.
References
- Ex-Liberal chief to run for mayor by Jim Byers Toronto Star September 29, 2006.
- Miller critics beat bushes for mayoral challengers by Jennifer Lewington, Globe and Mail September 29, 2006.
- LeDrew eyes mayoral run by Jim Byers Toronto Star September 29, 2006.
External links
Wikinews has related news: Ex-Liberal president declares for Toronto mayoralty |
Party political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Dan Hays |
President of the Liberal Party of Canada 1998–2003 |
Succeeded by Michael Eizenga |