Jack MacLaren

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Jack MacLaren
MPP
Member of the Ontario Provincial Parliament
for Carleton—Mississippi Mills
Assumed office
October 6, 2011
Preceded by Norm Sterling
Personal details
Born MacLarens Landing, Ontario
Political party Progressive Conservative
Residence MacLarens Landing, Ontario
Alma mater Queen's University
Occupation Farmer, civil engineer
Religion United Church of Canada

Jack MacLaren is a Canadian politician, who was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 2011 election. He represents the electoral district of Carleton—Mississippi Mills as a member of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party caucus.

Background

MacLaren is a past president of the Ontario Landowners Association[1] and graduated with a BSc in civil engineering from Queen's University in 1972.

Politics

In 2011, MacLaren contested the party's nomination in the riding of Carleton—Mississippi Mills competing against the sitting MPP Norm Sterling, who had represented the riding in Queen's Park for 34 years.[2] MacLaren won the nomination with the help of one of Sterling's fellow MPPs, Randy Hillier. Hillier, who was also a past president of the Ontario Landowners Association, campaigned on behalf of MacLaren.[1][3]

In the 2011 provincial election, MacLaren ran as the Progressive Conservative candidate in Carleton—Mississippi Mills winning against Liberal candidate Megan Cornell by about 9,102 votes.[1][4] In the 40th Parliament of Ontario, MacLaren served as his party's deputy critic for infrastructure and transportation from October 26, 2011 to September 30, 2013, when he was promoted to be his party's critic for Senate and Democratic reform.[5]

He was re-elected in the June 2014 provincial election defeating Liberal candidate Rosalyn Stevens by 10,029 votes.[6] On July 4, 2014, it was announced that MacLaren would continue be the party's critic for Senate and Democratic Reform.[5][7]

In November 2014, MacLaren introduced a private member's bill to repeal the law that grants environmental protections for the Niagara Escarpment for the second time.[8] The bill was named for a late friend of MacLaren's named Bob Mackie who was fighting to prevent the closure of an illegal archery range on his property on the escarpment.[8] MacLaren said that his bill would begin to reverse "the tide of creeping socialism that has been slowly taking away our property rights for decades" and that it would restore the values of "our British Christian cultural heritage of freedom, democracy, common-law and private property rights that date back to the Magna Carta of 1215.”[8] Most PC MPPs either stayed away from the chamber during the vote, which was 40–1 defeat of the bill, but some whose ridings included parts of the escarpment, such as Sylvia Jones, Ted Arnott, and former leader Tim Hudak, stayed to vote against it.[8]

MacLaren was the second MPP to back former federal Conservative Patrick Brown's successful bid for leadership in the 2015 Progressive Conservative leadership election, bringing with him the supporter of the small but dedicated Ontario Landowners Association[9]

In June 2015, MacLaren was accused of betraying social conservative values by Nick Vandergragt, a conservative radio talk show host on Ottawa's CFRA for marching in that year's Toronto Pride parade alongside PC leader Patrick Brown and other conservatives, both federal and provincial.[10]

On September 10, 2015, MacLaren was named his party's Critic for Natural Resources and Forestry as well as the Vice-Chair of the relevant committee.[11] Brown also made MacLaren, a libertarian, the chairman of the PC's Blue Ribbon Panel on Property Rights.[11][12] Also in Fall 2015, Brown chose MacLaren to replace fellow Ottawa PC MPP Lisa MacLeod as the party's critic for Eastern Ontario.[13]

On November 26, 2015, MacLaren officially invited a "group of friends and guests" from the Tamil community to hear him make a speech in Queen's Park about the "genocidal onslaught for the Tamils" in Sri Lanka.[14] A week after the speech, the National Post reported that the delegation selected by the Tamil community had included M. K. Eelaventhan, a Tamil politician that the Canada Border Services Agency is trying to deport from Canada for his previous connections to the Tamil Tigers, which is recognized by Canada as a terrorist organization.[14]

On March 3, 2016, the Toronto Star reported that MacLaren had been making inquiries on behalf of challengers to MacLeod in her Nepean—Carleton riding.[12] MacLaren refused to comment and the Progressive Conservatives dismissed the claims in the story.[15] At the Ottawa party convention which was ongoing when the story broke, Brown publicly endorsed MacLeod's renomination as candidate.[16]

Leave, demotion, and sensitivity training

On April 6, 2016, MacLaren was forced to apologize after dragging his federal Liberal counterpart Karen McCrimmon to the stage at a cancer fundraising dinner the previous month in Carp, and then telling a vulgar joke about her and her husband's sexual relationship.[17] MacLaren emailed an apology to McCrimmon after the story was first reported by the Toronto Star.[17] The incident prompted criticism from across party lines, as fellow Progressive Conservative MPP Lisa MacLeod and federal Conservative MP Michelle Rempel both tweeted in support of McCrimmon.[17] Patrick Brown said that the party had "zero tolerance for misogynistic comments and an apology was made correctly to Karen McCrimmon this morning."[17][18]

On April 12, 2016, the Ottawa Citizen reported that MacLaren's website included a testimonials section praising his work where most of the constituents were fictional and were represented by photos that had been taken without permission from the internet.[19] One of the testimonials was from a "Robert & Karen" from Constance Bay, which coincidentally is where MacLaren's federal counterpart, Liberal MP Karen McCrimmon lives with her husband Robert.[19] MacLaren's website initially added a disclaimer claiming that the names and depictions of constituents had been changed to protect their privacy before removing the page entirely.[20] MacLaren then issued an apology for the improper use of constituent testimonials and had his website taken offline.[20]

On April 13, 2016, Patrick Brown decided to demote MacLaren after the events of the past few weeks by replacing him as the party's Eastern Ontario representative in caucus with Jim McDonell.[2] MacLaren kept his position as the shadow cabinet critic for natural resources, the chair of a PC panel on property rights, and as an ambassador to ethnic communities.[9]

On April 18, 2016, after Premier Kathleen Wynne called on MacLaren to be kicked out of the PC caucus and for Queen's Park to create a code of conduct for MPPs, Brown ordered MacLaren to stay away from the legislature to focus on constituency work and to undergo sensitivity training.[21][22] Brown also stated that MacLaren's caucus responsibilities would be reassigned.[21][22]

Electoral record

Ontario general election, 2014: Carleton—Mississippi Mills
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Progressive Conservative Jack MacLaren 30,590 47.49 −2.80
Liberal Rosalyn Stevens 20,472 31.78 −2.30
New Democratic John Hansen 8,744 13.57 +2.23
Green Andrew West 4,614 7.16 +3.85
Total valid votes 64,420 100.0   +14.54
Progressive Conservative hold Swing −0.25
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Ontario general election, 2011: Carleton—Mississippi Mills
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Progressive Conservative Jack MacLaren 28,246 50.29 +2.46
Liberal Megan Cornell 19,144 34.08 +2.15
New Democratic Liam Duff 6,371 11.34 +3.72
Green Scott Simser 1,857 3.31 −7.19
Family Coalition Cynthia Bredfeldt 549 0.98 +0.18
Total valid votes 56,167 100.00 +6.92
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 204 0.36 −0.09
Turnout 56,371 53.50 −1.80
Eligible voters 105,368   +10.42
Progressive Conservative hold Swing +0.16
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References

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External links