David Peterson

For other people named David Peterson, see David Peterson (disambiguation).
The Honourable
David Peterson
PC OOnt LLB BA

The Hon. David Peterson
20th Premier of Ontario
In office
June 26, 1985  October 1, 1990
Monarch Elizabeth II
Lieutenant Governor John Black Aird
Lincoln Alexander
Preceded by Frank Miller
Succeeded by Bob Rae
Member of Provincial Parliament
In office
September 18, 1975  September 6, 1990
Preceded by New riding
Succeeded by Marion Boyd
Constituency London Centre
25th Ontario Liberal Party Leader
In office
February 21, 1982  September 6, 1990
Preceded by Stuart Smith
Succeeded by Robert Nixon
23rd Leader of the Opposition in the Ontario Legislature
In office
February 21, 1982  June 26, 1985
Preceded by Robert Nixon
Succeeded by Frank Miller
Chancellor of the University of Toronto
In office
July 1, 2006  June 30, 2012
Preceded by Vivienne Poy
Succeeded by Michael Wilson
Personal details
Born David Robert Peterson
(1943-12-28) December 28, 1943
Toronto, Ontario
Political party Liberal
Spouse(s) Shelley Peterson
Children 3
Residence London, Ontario
Alma mater University of Western Ontario
University of Toronto Faculty of Law

David Robert Peterson, PC OOnt (born December 28, 1943) was the 20th Premier of the Province of Ontario, Canada, from June 26, 1985 to October 1, 1990. He was the first Liberal premier of Ontario in 42 years.

Background

Peterson was born to Clarence Marwin Peterson (19132009) and Laura Marie Scott, and has two siblings, former MPP Tim Peterson and former MP Jim Peterson.[1] He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Western Ontario in political science and philosophy and his law degree from the University of Toronto. He was called to the bar in 1969.[2][3]

At the age of twenty-six, he became president of C.M. Peterson Company Limited, a wholesale electronics firm founded by his father.[4][5] He holds four Honorary degrees including a doctor of laws from the University of Western Ontario and is a knight of the Order of the Legion of Honour of France and a member of the Order of La Pléiade.[6] In 2009, he became a member of the Order of Ontario.[7]

Peterson married actress Shelley Matthews in 1974 and they have since raised three children.[8] He is the younger brother of Jim Peterson, formerly a federal Liberal MP and cabinet minister. Both his sister-in-law Deb Matthews and Tim Peterson, a third brother, were elected to the Ontario legislature in the 2003 provincial election while Deb Matthews was re-elected in 2007 and 2011.[1]

Politics

Peterson was elected as the Liberal Member of Provincial Parliament for London Centre in the 1975 provincial election.[9] Less than one year later, he campaigned for the leadership of the party following Robert Nixon's resignation. Despite his inexperience, Peterson nevertheless came within 45 votes of defeating Stuart Smith on the third and final ballot of a delegated convention held on January 25, 1976. Smith presented an image of an articulate intellectual who some delegates said reminded them of Pierre Trudeau while Peterson came across as similar to then Premier Bill Davis. Convention delegates also thought that Peterson, at 31 years old, was too young and his convention address which he later characterized as the "worst speech in modern political history" came across as stilted and over rehearsed.[10][11]

Peterson was re-elected in the provincial elections of 1977 and 1981.[12][13] He ran for the Liberal leadership a second time after Smith resigned in 1982.

The convention was held on February 21, 1982. This time his convention speech was better. Although not very inspiring, it was viewed as 'statesmanlike' and effective. He won on the second ballot defeating the more left-leaning Sheila Copps with 55% of the vote. In his acceptance speech Peterson said that he would move party to the 'vibrant middle, the radical centre', and stressed economic growth as a way to increase support for social services. Observers from the other parties felt he was trying to move the Liberal party more to the right, away from values that Smith promoted.[14]

Liberal leader

Peterson worked to pay off the party's debt from the 1981 election and accomplished that by the end of the year and was working on long-term debt. Peterson performed well as opposition leader and was popular in the press. The party started to use him as a label rather than 'Liberal' referring to 'David Peterson's Ontario'. A by-election loss to the NDP was attributed to dislike of Federal Liberals.[14] In 1984, a Liberal backbencher, J. Earl McEwen crossed the floor to join the Tories.[15] Polling in late 1984 showed Peterson's Liberals consistently trailing behind the Progressive Conservatives. Premier Davis still polled as the most popular leader.

Peterson's fortunes improved when Davis retired as leader of the Progressive Conservative Party in early 1985. His successor, Frank Miller, took the party further to the right, and was unable to convince the electorate of his leadership abilities. Though Miller's Tories began the election in 1985 with a significant lead, Peterson's Liberals gradually increased their support throughout the campaign. To the surprise of many, Peterson won a narrow plurality of the popular vote. However, at the time rural areas were still slightly over represented in the Legislative Assembly. As a result, the Liberals won 48 seats, while the Progressive Conservatives 52 which was enough for a minority government.[16]

Shortly after the election, NDP leader Bob Rae called Peterson and entered into negotiations. Rae also initiated talked with Premier Miller but the talks with the Liberals proved more fruitful. Rae and Peterson signed a "Liberal-NDP Accord" in which the NDP agreed to support a Liberal government in office for two years. The Liberals, in turn, agreed to implement some policies favoured by the NDP. Rae wanted to have a coalition with representation in cabinet but Peterson indicated that he would not accept a coalition.[17][18]

Premier

The Liberals and NDP defeated Miller's government on June 18, 1985 on a motion of no confidence on the speech from the throne, and Peterson was sworn in as Premier of Ontario eight days later. Robert Nixon, Sean Conway, and Ian Scott were Peterson's top cabinet ministers.

After the expiration of the Liberal-NDP Accord in 1987, the Liberals called another provincial election, and won the second-largest majority government in Ontario's history, taking 95 seats out of 130, at the expense of the NDP and the Progressive Conservatives who dropped to third place in the legislature.

Peterson's government introduced several pieces of progressive legislation. It eliminated "extra billing" by doctors, brought in pay equity provisions, and reformed the province's rent review and labour negotiation laws. His government also brought in pension reform, expanded housing construction, and resolved a long-standing provincial controversy by honouring the Davis Tories promise to extend full funding to Catholic secondary schools. Peterson was also a vocal opponent of free trade with the United States in 1988. His administration was less activist in its later years, though it still introduced progressive measures on environmental protection, eliminated health insurance premiums, and brought in no-fault automobile insurance for the province.

The Peterson administration also developed a reputation for fiscal prudence, under the management of Treasurer Robert Nixon. The Liberal government was able to introduce a balanced budget for 1989–90 following several years of deficit spending in Ontario, at a time when deficit spending was commonplace in most of North America.

Peterson remained personally popular during his time in power, and some spoke of him as a future Prime Minister of Canada. Peterson improved his public speaking abilities in the early 1980s, and projected the image of an active, charismatic figure when in office. Some believed his image was perfectly suited to the young, urban professional demographic of the 1980s.

Warning signs

Both Peterson and his government were still popular at the beginning of 1990. The end of his career in politics came suddenly, and was the result of several factors.

The first was Peterson's prominent role in creating and promoting the "Meech Lake" constitutional accord. While initially popular, this attempt at revising Canada's constitution proved extremely divisive in most of English-speaking Canada. Many believed that it gave too many concessions to Quebec, while others believed that it weakened the federal government's authority in relation to the provinces. Peterson's continued support for the accord, in the face of increased opposition, damaged his personal popularity in Ontario. The accord was not endorsed by Manitoba and Newfoundland, and did not pass.

The second reason for Peterson's downfall was the Patti Starr affair. Starr, a prominent Liberal fundraiser, was found to have improperly diverted money from a land development scheme and charitable organizations to the provincial Liberal Party. Several Liberal cabinet members were recipients of her largesse including Health Minister Elinor Caplan, Transportation Minister Ed Fulton and Revenue Minister Bernard Grandmaitre.[19] She was eventually sentenced to six months' jail time.[20] Although no-one in Peterson's administration was accused of criminal activity, the scandal eroded public confidence in the integrity of the government. Polls showed that more than half of respondents felt that Peterson had poorly handled the matter and 61% felt that it revealed widespread corruption in the government.[21]

The third reason was the weakening North American economy. Productivity levels were falling throughout the United States and Canada during this period, and were likely worsened in Ontario and other jurisdictions by the recent passage of a Free Trade Accord involving the two countries. While there was little that Peterson, or any other Ontario Premier, could have done to prevent this downturn, it weakened his government's reputation for fiscal competence. (Indeed, the government's projected surplus budget for 1990–91 ultimately yielded a deficit of at least three billion dollars.)

Defeat

Notwithstanding all of this, Peterson's Liberal Party still retained a comfortable lead over the Progressive Conservatives and NDP in mid-1990 public opinion polls. As a result, Peterson decided to call an snap election, less than three years into his mandate. This proved to be his greatest mistake.

Many voters saw the early election as a mark of arrogance, and a sign that Peterson's Liberals had become detached from the electorate. There was no defining issue behind the campaign, and many believed that Peterson was simply trying to win re-election before the economic downturn reached its worst phase. Some Liberal cabinet ministers, most notably Greg Sorbara and Jim Bradley, were strongly opposed to the early election call. Sean Conway, a member of Peterson's inner circle, would later acknowledge that most backbench MPPs also opposed the timing of the campaign.

At the time the writ was dropped, the Liberals stood at 50% support in the polls.[22] Peterson's personal popularity rating based on his Meech Lake record was 54%.[23] However, his luck turned immediately upon calling the election. One of the seminal moments in the campaign was at a press conference called to announce the forthcoming election. It was soon interrupted by Greenpeace activist Gord Perks, who arrived with a briefcase handcuffed to his arm, with a tape recorder inside playing a pre-recorded list of broken Liberal environmental promises. David Peterson sat in front of the room full of reporters, awkwardly silent and clearly uncomfortable.[24]

Disappointed by high expectations, groups representing various interests (such as teachers, doctors, and environmentalists), came out against Peterson on television, radio, in print, and at Liberal campaign events. Protesters would follow the Premier throughout the campaign, and often received considerable media coverage.[25] The media reported the election call as cynical, and the party appeared desperate when they unexpectedly proposed to cut the provincial sales tax halfway through the campaign. It did not help that the provincial election campaign was being run in the aftermath of the failed Meech Lake constitutional accord of Brian Mulroney's federal government, with which Peterson had significant media exposure in association with the other first ministers.

The campaign also took place at a time when the federal NDP was performing well in the polls. In the federal election two years earlier, the federal NDP won 43 seats, its highest seat count until the 2011 Canadian federal election. This trend carried over to the provincial level; the provincial NDP under Rae ran a strong campaign and saw its fortunes gradually increase as election day approached. Some voters believed that Peterson deserved to be reduced to a minority government, while others believed the NDP should be given a chance to govern. On September 5, 1990, the NDP scored one of the greatest upsets in Canadian political history, taking 74 seats for a strong majority government. While the NDP only outpolled the Liberals by a narrow six-point margin, they managed to unseat many Liberal incumbents in the Greater Toronto Area. Due to the nature of the first-past-the-post system, this decimated the Liberal caucus. The Liberals suffered their worst defeat ever, falling from 95 seats to 36; the 59-seat loss surpassed the 48-seat loss in 1943 that began the Tories' long rule over the province. This was also the second-worst defeat for a governing party in Ontario.

Peterson lost his own seat, having been resoundingly defeated by NDP candidate Marion Boyd in London Centre by over 8,200 votes.[26] The loss ended Peterson's political career. He announced his resignation as Liberal leader on the night of the election.[27]

Legacy

Peterson's 1985 election victory was part of a trend in the improvement of Liberal Party fortunes in Canada. Prior to that Ontario election, the future of the Liberal Party looked bleak. They governed in no province, and, federally, were down to 40 seats. In some provinces, the Liberals had been completely wiped from both federal and provincial representation in the legislatures. Peterson's surprise victory is regarded by many as the start of the party's comeback. Peterson's successor, Bob Rae, took power during one of the worst recessions since the 1930s, which contributed heavily to the NDP's decimation in 1995. Rae has since left the NDP and joined the Liberal party.

Post provincial politics

Peterson has continued to organize and fund-raise for the federal and Ontario provincial Liberals. In May 2005, he played the central role in persuading Belinda Stronach, a federal Conservative MP, to cross the floor to the ruling Liberal Party, days before a crucial confidence motion on the federal budget of Paul Martin's Liberal minority government. The defection proved critical to the survival of Martin's government, with the final outcome of the budget vote 153–152 in favour of the government.[3]

After Martin resigned the party leadership in the wake of the Liberal defeat in the 2006 election, Peterson planned to support former New Brunswick Premier Frank McKenna who chose ultimately not to run. Peterson then backed Michael Ignatieff, criticizing former political opponent Bob Rae's entry into the race due to the latter's record as provincial premier. Peterson insisted he did not hold a personal grudge against Rae.[28]

After politics

Since 2003, Peterson has been contracted by the federal government to be its chief negotiator in talks with the government of the Northwest Territories and aboriginal leaders to transfer federal powers over lands and resources.

Peterson served as Chancellor of the University of Toronto for two terms from July 1, 2006 until June 30, 2012.[29]

In September 2013, Peterson was appointed chair of the Toronto 2015 Pan American Games Organizing Committee.[30] In 2015, he was sued for alleged sexual harassment of a 34-year-old female Pan Am games manager. Peterson denied any wrongdoing and the allegations have yet to be tested in court.[31]

David Peterson was the founding chairman of the Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association, and was a member of Toronto's Olympics Bid Committee. Since leaving politics, he has been a professor at York University in Toronto, a senior partner and chairman of the Toronto law firm Cassels, Brock & Blackwell LLP and has been director or member of several charitable, cultural, and environmental organizations.[30] He is or has been a member on several corporate boards, being particularly associated with Rogers Communications where he has been a director since 1991.[32] In 2006, Peterson was named to the board of Shoppers Drug Mart at the time of the firm's acquisition by Loblaws.[33] In his legal practice he provides international advice to a wide range of clients about public policy issues and government affairs in Canada.

In 1999, Peterson found himself at the centre of controversy due to his membership on the board of YBM Magnex, a firm which was discovered to have links to the Russian mafia. Peterson maintained that he was unaware of illegal activities at the company, and referred to the accusations against him as "guilt by association". A subsequent investigation by the Ontario Securities Commission found that Peterson's actions met "the legal test of due diligence", but expressed disappointment that he had not shown more leadership on the board.[34] A 2004 report from the Globe and Mail newspaper noted that Peterson was chastened by this experience, and had become "a cautious and more conscientious director" since that time.[35]

References

  1. 1 2 Csillag, Ron (December 19, 2009). "Clarence Peterson, 96, Businessman, Liberal: From Prairie farm boy to Ontario Liberal Patriarch". The Globe and Mail. p. S13.
  2. McCabe, Nora (August 14, 1982). "The great red hope". The Globe and Mail. p. F3.
  3. 1 2 Teotonio, Isabel (March 10, 2006). "New post for Peterson; Former Liberal premier appointed U of T chancellor Position 'nexus of a lot of things I'm interested in,' he says". Toronto Star. p. B1.
  4. Stephens, Robert (November 12, 1984). "Detractors bitter over Peterson's firm". The Globe and Mail. p. 8.
  5. Speirs, Rosemary (October 13, 1986). "How Peterson learned to win". Toronto Star. p. A9.
  6. "Press release: University of Toronto". The Globe and Mail. July 20, 2006. p. B6.
  7. "Order of Ontario Appointments Announced". January 15, 2009. Archived from the original on March 4, 2009.
  8. Walkom, Thomas (September 1, 1990). "Peterson reflects home town". Toronto Star. p. A1.
  9. "Table of vote results for all Ontario ridings". The Globe and Mail. September 19, 1975. p. C12.
  10. Peter Oliver (1977). John Saywell, ed. Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs (1976). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 169–170.
  11. Palango, Paul (February 16, 1982). "Peterson runs hard to stay ahead". The Globe and Mail. p. P4.
  12. "Ontario provincial election results riding by riding". The Globe and Mail. June 10, 1977. p. D9.
  13. Canadian Press (March 20, 1981). "Winds of change, sea of security". The Windsor Star. Windsor, Ontario. p. 22.
  14. 1 2 Frederick J. Fletcher; Graham White (1984). R.B. Byers, ed. Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs (1982). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 222–224.
  15. Stephens, Robert (May 23, 1984). "Ontario MPP crosses floor to join Tories Liberals plan no wake over defection". The Globe and Mail. p. 4.
  16. "Ontario's Government". The Globe and Mail. May 17, 1985. p. 6.
  17. Rae. Protest to Power. p. 94.
  18. Steve Paikin (host). 1985: The Year Politics in Ontario Changed Forever (documentary). TV Ontario.
  19. Walkom, Thomas (June 16, 1989). "25 politicians split $65,873 from charity". Toronto Star. p. A1.
  20. Starr, Patricia (1993). Tempting Fate - A Cautionary Tale of Power & Politics. p. 1,233. ISBN 0-7737-5688-4.
  21. Trickey, Mike (September 7, 1990). "Crack about cranky voters was too true". The Vancouver Sun. p. A8.
  22. Mackie, Richard (July 14, 1990). "Buoyant Liberals gather in Toronto for election talks". The Globe and Mail. p. A5.
  23. "Chretien's rating lowest in Quebec". Toronto Star. July 9, 1990. p. A10.
  24. "Distrust, Disdain, Deceit". Ryerson Review of Journalism. Spring 2005. Archived from the original on 2011-07-06.
  25. Ontario Elections: 20 Tumultuous Years. CBC News. September 1, 1990
  26. "Ontario election: Riding-by-riding voting results". The Globe and Mail. September 7, 1990. p. A12.
  27. Ferguson, Derek (September 7, 1990). "'A personal and lonely decision' Peterson resigns after loss". Toronto Star. p. A9.
  28. "David Peterson warns Bob Rae won't be welcome". CTV News. April 5, 2006.
  29. "David Peterson retires as chancellor of the University of Toronto, flash mob interrupts his final convocation ceremony". Toronto Star. June 21, 2012.
  30. 1 2 "David Peterson taking over as 2015 Pan Am Games chair". CBC News. September 9, 2013.
  31. "Former Ontario premier David Peterson sued for sexual harassment". CBC news. August 14, 2015.
  32. "David Robert Peterson: Executive Profile". Bloomberg Business. June 11, 2015.
  33. "David Peterson loses big bucks in drug price war". Toronto Star. May 8, 2010.
  34. "Securities regulators levy $1.2 million in fines, penalties in YBM Magnex case". CBC News. December 4, 2003. Archived from the original on June 19, 2009.
  35. "From backroom to boardroom: We rank ex-pols' business clout". Globe and Mail. April 30, 2004.
Academic offices
Preceded by
Vivienne Poy
Chancellor of the University of Toronto
2006-2012
Succeeded by
Michael Wilson (Canadian politician)


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