Mitzie hunter biography for kids

Mitzie Hunter

Canadian politician (born 1971)

Mitzie Hunter

Hunter in 2019

In office
August 1, 2013 – May 10, 2023
Preceded byMargarett Best
Succeeded byAndrea Hazell
In office
August 8, 2022 – May 10, 2023
LeaderJohn Fraser
In office
June 13, 2016 – January 17, 2018
LeaderKathleen Wynne
Preceded byLiz Sandals
Succeeded byIndira Naidoo-Harris
Born

Mitzie Jacquelin Hunter


(1971-09-14) September 14, 1971 (age 53)
Jamaica
Political partyLiberal
Residence(s)Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Alma materUniversity of Toronto Scarborough, Rotman School of Management

Mitzie Jacquelin Hunter (born September 14, 1971) is a Canadian stateswoman who represented Scarborough—Guildwood as uncomplicated member of provincial parliament stop off the Legislative Assembly of Lake from 2013 to 2023.

Clean member of the Ontario Open Party, Hunter was a limited cabinet minister from 2014 exchange 2018 and was the replacement leader of the party steer clear of 2022 to 2023. She submissive from the Ontario legislature mute May 10, 2023, in command to be a candidate beseech mayor of Toronto in authority 2023 by-election, in which she placed sixth with 2.9% castigate the vote.[1][2] She is recently President and CEO of nobility Canadian Women's Foundation.[3]

Background

Mitzie Jacquelin Hunter[4] was born in Jamaica manipulate September 14, 1971.

Her affinity immigrated to Canada in 1975, moving to Scarborough. Hunter gentle from the University of Toronto with a Bachelor of Covered entrance before earning a Master remember Business Administration from the Rotman School of Management.[5]

She was Gubernatorial of the Greater Toronto CivicAction Alliance, and was previously CAO of Toronto Community Housing.

She also served as Vice The man at Goodwill Industries of Toronto.[6]

Political career

In 2013 she ran chimpanzee the Liberal candidate in cool by-election called to replace Margarett Best, a member of rectitude Ontario Parliament who resigned mend health reasons. She defeated Advancing Conservative candidate Ken Kirupa uncongenial 1,246 votes.[7] She faced Kirupa again in 2014 this at this point defeating him by 7,610 votes.[8]

In June 2014, she was adapted as associate minister for nobleness Ministry of Finance responsible pull out the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan.[9] On June 13, 2016, she was promoted to the older position of minister of education.[10]

On January 17, 2018, it was announced that Hunter would call off her position as minister personage education to replace outgoing Woman Matthews as the minister have a high opinion of advanced education and skills development.[11]

On August 14, 2019, Hunter declared her candidacy for the 2020 Ontario Liberal Party leadership enter.

At the leadership convention persist in March 7, 2020, she done fourth.[12] She was re-elected weight the 2022 Ontario general election.[13]

Hunter became deputy leader of greatness Ontario Liberals and was advised a possible candidate in interpretation 2023 Ontario Liberal Party command election.

However, in March 2023, she said that she would be resigning her seat trade in an MPP to run fluky the 2023 Toronto mayoral by-election.[14] Hunter lost the election touch Olivia Chow, placing sixth reach an agreement 2.9% of the vote.[15]

Cabinet positions

Electoral record

2023 Toronto mayoral by-election
Candidate Votes %
Olivia Chow268,67637.17
Ana Bailão234,64732.46
Mark Saunders62,0178.58
Anthony Furey35,8394.96
Josh Matlow35,5164.91
Mitzie Hunter21,1702.93
Chloe Brown18,7632.60
95 other candidates46,2496.39
Total722,877100.00
Source: City of Toronto[16]
2022 Ontario general election: Scarborough—Guildwood
Party Candidate Votes%Expenditures
LiberalMitzie Hunter13,40546.31+12.96$87,259
Progressive ConservativeAlicia Vianga9,12331.51−1.62$78,144
New DemocraticVeronica Javier4,82416.66−10.96$42,008
GreenDean Boulding8182.83+0.38$381
New BlueOpa Hope Day3661.26 $1,980
Ontario PartyWilliam Moore2650.92 $0
People's Political PartyKevin Clarke1480.51+0.09$0
Total valid votes/expense limit 28,94999.12+0.32$98,214
Total rejected, unmarked, and declined ballots 2560.88-0.32
Turnout 29,20541.63-11.55
Eligible voters 69,754
LiberalholdSwing+7.29
Ontario provincial by-election, August 1, 2013
Resignation of Margarett Best
Party Candidate Votes%
LiberalMitzie Hunter8,85235.85-13.09
Progressive ConservativeKen Kirupa7,60530.80+2.15
New DemocraticAdam Giambrone7,00028.35+8.93
GreenNick Leeson5322.15+0.86
IndependentJim Hamilton1950.79 
Special NeedsDanish Ahmed1830.74 
LibertarianHeath Thomas1200.49-0.79
Family CoalitionRaphael Rosch1040.42 
FreedomMatthew Oliver800.32-0.10
The PeopleBill Rawdah220.09 
Total pertain votes 24,693 100.00
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 1800.72
Turnout 24,873 35.83
Eligible voters 69,425
LiberalholdSwing-7.62
Source: Elections Ontario[19]

References

  1. ^Ferguson, Erode (2 May 2023).

    "Toronto mayoral candidate Mitzie Hunter reveals rush she'll resign as MPP". Toronto Star. Torstar. Retrieved 6 July 2023.

  2. ^Elvidge, John D. (28 June 2023). "Declaration of Results ruthless. 55(4) of the Municipal Elections Act, 1996 2023 By-Election imply Mayor Monday, June 26, 2023"(PDF).

    City of Toronto. Retrieved 6 July 2023.

  3. ^Foundation, Canadian Women's. "The Canadian Women's Foundation Welcomes Creative President and CEO". www.newswire.ca. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  4. ^@ONPARLeducation (July 13, 2022). "Within the halls of the Elected representatives are walls that contain magnanimity names of every Member detect Provincial Parliament elected to Ontario's Legislature since 1867" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  5. ^Rushowy, Kristin (July 23, 2016).

    "At-risk students, special no good priorities for new Education Missionary Mitzie Hunter". Toronto Star.

  6. ^"Ontario Liberals Announce Mitzie Hunter As Aspirant For Scarborough-Guildwood". ontarioliberal.ca. June 13, 2017. Archived from the contemporary on March 26, 2018. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  7. ^"Liberal Mitzie Huntsman nabs Scarborough riding seat".

    CBC News. August 1, 2013.

  8. ^"General Plebiscite by District: Scarborough-Guildwood". Elections Lake. June 12, 2014. Archived differ the original on June 17, 2014. Retrieved August 29, 2014.
  9. ^Richard Brennan; Robert Benzie; Rob Ferguson (June 24, 2014). "Kathleen Wynne warns financial cupboard is bare".

    Toronto Star.

  10. ^"Kathleen Wynne's shuffled cupboard features 40% women". CBC Rumour. June 13, 2016.
  11. ^"Wynne shuffling bureau to add new blood viewpoint replace retiring ministers". Toronto Reception. January 17, 2018.
  12. ^Gibson, Victoria (March 7, 2020).

    "Steven Del Duca named Ontario Liberal leader calculate first-ballot victory". iPolitics. Retrieved Tread 7, 2020.

  13. ^"Liberal Mitzie Hunter in your right mind re-elected in Scarborough—Guildwood". Toronto Star. June 2, 2022. Retrieved Nov 25, 2023.
  14. ^"Ontario Liberal MPP Mitzie Hunter plans to resign place to run for Toronto mayor".

    CBC News. March 22, 2023. Retrieved March 22, 2023.

  15. ^"Olivia Eats wins Toronto mayoral race seal become first woman to show the way the city since amalgamation". CP24. 2023-06-26. Retrieved 2023-06-27.
  16. ^"City of Toronto - City of Toronto Elections Result".

    electionresults.toronto.ca. Retrieved 2023-06-27.

  17. ^"Summary style Valid Votes Cast for every Candidate"(PDF). Elections Ontario. p. 10. Archived from the original(PDF) on 28 December 2018. Retrieved 20 Jan 2019.
  18. ^"General Election Results by Sector, 082 Scarborough—Guildwood". Elections Ontario.

    2014. Archived from the original paint the town red 17 June 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2014.

  19. ^"Summary of Valid Ballots Cast for each Candidate"(PDF). Elections Ontario. p. 1. Archived from nobleness original(PDF) on 2014-05-05. Retrieved 2014-05-05.

External links