Han Dong (politician)

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Han Dong
MP
File:Han Dong, 2020.jpg
Dong in 2020
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Don Valley North
Assumed office
October 21, 2019
Preceded by Geng Tan
Member of the Ontario Provincial Parliament
for Trinity—Spadina
In office
June 12, 2014 – June 7, 2018
Preceded by Rosario Marchese
Succeeded by Riding dissolved
Personal details
Born 1977 (age 46–47)
Shanghai, China
Political party Independent (since 2023)
Other political
affiliations
Liberal (until 2023)
Ontario Liberal
Spouse(s) Sophie
Children 2
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese 董晗鵬
Simplified Chinese 董晗鹏

Han Peng Dong MP (Chinese: 董晗鵬; born c. 1977) is a Canadian politician who is the member of parliament (MP) for Don Valley North. Sitting as an Independent, Dong was elected to the House of Commons in 2019 under the Liberal Party banner. He previously served as the member of provincial parliament (MPP) for Trinity—Spadina from 2014 to 2018, with the Ontario Liberal Party. In March 2023, Dong stepped down from the Liberal caucus amidst allegations that he advised the Chinese consulate against the release of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig and helped the consulate interfere in the 2019 federal election.

Background

Han Peng Dong[1] was born in Shanghai. He moved to Toronto with his family when he was 13 and they settled in the Parkdale neighbourhood of Toronto.[2] He lives in Toronto with his wife Sophie and their two children.[3]

Dong worked as marketing director of Chianti Foods and then with the non-profit Canada Shanghai Business Association. Since making the switch to politics, he spent nine years at Queen's Park serving as Ontario Liberal cabinet minister Gerry Phillips's MPP liaison, and most recently as a senior adviser of community outreach under then Citizenship and Immigration Minister Michael Coteau.[4]

Political career

Member of Provincial Parliament (2014–2018)

Dong ran in the 2014 provincial election as the Ontario Liberal candidate in the riding of Trinity—Spadina.[5] He defeated New Democrat incumbent Rosario Marchese by 9,175 votes.[5][6][7]

He was Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities; Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Energy; Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Advanced Education and Skills Development; Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister Responsible for the Poverty Reduction Strategy; Vice-chair of the Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs; member of the Select Committee on Sexual Violence and Harassment; member of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts; member of the Standing Committee on Estimates. He also served as the Chair of The Cabinet Committee of Legislations and Regulations.

In February 2016, he introduced a private member's bill to license and regulate the Ontario home inspection industry, which prompted the Ontario Liberal government to draft its own government legislation for that purpose.[8]

In March 2017 Dong introduced another private member's bill, the Reliable Elevators Act, setting time limits on repairs of elevators in residential buildings.[6] The bill was successfully passed.[9] Dong noted the hardship out of service elevators posed to the elderly, and to parents whose children required strollers.[10]

In the 2018 provincial election, Dong was defeated by New Democratic candidate Chris Glover in the redistributed riding of Spadina—Fort York.

Municipal

Dong registered as a candidate in the 2018 Toronto municipal election, to represent Ward 20 on Toronto City Council.[11] After the number of wards in the city was reduced from 47 to 25, Dong did not refile his candidacy by the September 21, 2018, deadline and was thus deemed to have withdrawn.[12]

Member of Parliament (2019–present)

On July 4, 2019, Dong confirmed his candidacy for the federal Liberal nomination in Don Valley North following the retirement of incumbent MP Geng Tan.[13] Dong was elected to Parliament in the October 2019 federal election.

Dong was re-elected as the MP for Don Valley North in the September 2021 election.

Dong currently serves as the co-chair Canada-China Legislative Association. Dong is also a member of the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills, and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities, and a member of the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy, and Ethics.[14]

Alleged Chinese government interference

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On February 24, 2023, Global News reported that its intelligence sources with knowledge of Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) affairs reported that Dong was an alleged "witting affiliate" in China's election interference networks.[15] Sources claim that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and senior Liberal party officials ignored CSIS warnings about Dong, which has been denied by Trudeau.[16]

The same article also claimed that a "Liberal insider" and former Ontario MPP Michael Chan had possibly arranged Tan's ouster in Don Valley North in favour of Dong in advance of the 2019 federal election because the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was unhappy with Tan. Chan, Dong, and the Chinese embassy denied the accusations, with Dong describing the leaks as "seriously inaccurate". Dong and the Liberal Party also said that his 2019 nomination victory had followed all of the party's rules.[15] According to an anonymous intelligence official and intelligence documents viewed by Global News, CSIS had also been investigating Dong due to an alleged meeting between Dong and a senior official from the CCP's United Front Work Department in New York state.[15]

Dong has stated that he would welcome investigations against himself to clear his name but denies the need for a public inquiry.[17] In response to these allegations, Trudeau has also rejected these allegations as "irresponsible" and a result of anti-Asian racism against Dong.[18] He also stressed that Dong is unquestionably loyal to Canada.[19][20]

In March 2023, he said that he was yet to be contacted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Elections Canada, or CSIS concerning the allegations, and that he wanted the truth to come out.[21]

On March 22, 2023, additional reporting from Global News, based on two national security sources, said that in February 2021, Dong had reached out to the Chinese consulate in Toronto to discuss the detention of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig. According to the sources, Dong told Han Tao, the consul-general, that their release should be delayed, that their release could benefit the Conservative Party of Canada, and for China to make concessions to Canada in the ongoing detention dispute. In a statement, Dong said that although he had spoken to the consul-general, he had not initiated it, and he had not suggested delaying the release of the Spavor and Kovrig, instead calling for their release. The Prime Minister's Office said it was not aware of the meeting until asked for comment by Global News, and that Dong was not used as a diplomatic backchannel.[22] On the same day, Dong announced that he would be leaving the Liberal caucus and sitting as an independent.[23]

Electoral record

Federal

Template:Canadian federal election, 2021/Don Valley North

Template:Canadian federal election, 2019/Don Valley North

Provincial

Ontario general election, 2018: Spadina—Fort York
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
New Democratic Chris Glover 24,677 49.62 +22.91
Liberal Han Dong 11,770 23.67 -24.64
Progressive Conservative Iris Yu 10,834 21.79 +3.33
Green Rita Bilerman 1,815 3.65 -2.33
Libertarian Erik Malmholt 278 0.56
None of the Above Adam Nobody 271 0.54
Stop the New Sex-Ed Agenda Queenie Yu 86 0.17
Total valid votes 49,731 99.17
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 415 0.83
Turnout 50,146
Eligible voters
New Democratic pickup new district.
Source: Elections Ontario[24]

References

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  11. "Political veterans and rookies square off in Ward 20" Archived 2018-07-25 at the Wayback Machine. Toronto Star, July 18, 2018.
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External links