The list of individuals interested in candidacy include:
Steve Mahoney, former MP, MPP, Mississauga Regional councillor
Pat Mullin, former Mississauga Regional councillor
Richard Paterak, former Caledon Regional councillor
John Sanderson, former Brampton Regional councillor
Shelley White, CEO, United Way of Peel
Frank Dale, Mississauga City Councillor Ward 4
Hazel McCallion has cautioned current Mississauga councillors from seeking the seat, or voting for a current Regional councillor, as this would trigger a $500,000 by-election or an appointment.
The 2014 Brampton municipal election was held on October 27, 2014 in Brampton, Ontario, Canada, to elect the Mayor of Brampton, Brampton City Council and the Brampton members of the Peel District School Board (Public) and Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board. The election is being held in conjunction with the province wide 2014 municipal elections.
There are currently eleven Mayoral candidates in Brampton.
John Ish Ishmael, withdrew in February
Fazal Khan, now registered as a candidate for Wards 2 & 6 on city council.
Sewak Singh Manak
Forum Research for The Toronto Star, January 18, 2014
Forum Research for The Toronto Star, April 27, 2014
Forum Research for The Toronto Star, August 7 and 8, 2014 (1178 Brampton voters):
Forum Research for The Toronto Star, September 27, 2014 (928 Brampton voters):
Initials refer to candidates Hargy Randhawa, Gurjit Grewal, and Devinder Sangha.
Mainstreet Research, October 2, 2014:
Mainstreet Research, October 2, 2014, of only those certain to vote:
Forum Research for The Toronto Star, October 16, 2014 (1,020 Brampton voters):
Mainstreet Research, October 21, 2014 (1,602 Brampton voters):
Wards 3 & 4: Janice Gordon, Ryan O'neil Knight
Wards 7 & 8: Jacqueline Bell (became a candidate for Mayor), Clement Osei Tutu
Wards 9 & 10: Gugni Gill Panaich (became the NDP candidate for Brampton West)
Incumbent Grant Gibson won with a healthy margin, as did his close ally, Regional Councillor Elaine Moore. Gibson endorsed the candidacy of John Sanderson for mayor. Gibson and Elaine Moore were the only councillors to post their expenses online before the public focus on accountability. Gibson's top challengers were Steve Kerr, a certified youth counselor/education liaison and entrepreneur, and Maureen Harper, a veterinarian, recently retired from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
Wards 1 & 5: Wesley Rampersad, a former Region of Peel case worker, terminated in August 2013. Peel Regional Police Fraud Bureau investigations found a total of $189,000 was paid to what police allege were fake client claims. Detectives arrested Rampersad on charges May 1, 2014, laying multiple charges.
Wards 3 & 4: Adam Holly, Kevin Montgomery (re-registered as a Regional Council candidate)
Wards 7 & 8: Logan Anderson (re-registered as a candidate for Regional Council), Joseph Tanti
January 7: The Star also runs an editorial critical of Fennell, suggesting that it's "becoming near-impossible to ignore Fennell's spending scandals and her attempts to keep the information secret, which have tainted her reputation as mayor and dominated city council," expressing concern that she's a distraction to the City, during its continued growth.
February 10: John Sanderson registers as a candidate for mayor. The Globe notes Sanderson as the first "experienced challenger", highlighting his "extensive six-part platform".
March 23: Brampton-Springdale MPP Linda Jeffrey (Liberal) confirms that she will resign as both a Member of Provincial Parliament and Municipal Affairs Minister on the March 25. She did not confirm that she was running for Mayor of Brampton, stating to The Star that she was the nominated candidate for the riding. Jeffrey is a former Brampton councillor. Both Fennell and Sanderson were quick to issue statements connecting her with Liberal government issues like eHealth, Ornge, and gas plant cancellations.
March 24 and 25: A leaked memo reveals that Mayor Fennell asked the city treasurer to initiate a "stop of salary", at the end of October, before a salary report release. The move effectively dropped her from the position as Canada's highest paid mayor, by refusing acceptance of her November and December pay. Council must approve changes to the mayor's salary, and many councillors suggested the move was illegal. Sanderson questioned the act of cutting salary in the lead up to an election. Group Citizens For a Better Brampton questioned whether she can reverse the decision after the election, and receive the back owed pay.
March 26: Susan Fennell issues a statement that she will be stepping aside from duties as mayor for an undisclosed period, as her husband has been admitted for open heart surgery. Regional Councillor John Sprovieri serves as acting mayor in a session of council. He will hold the position for the remainder of March; Bob Callahan was to by acting mayor in April. Later in the day, Fennell's spokesperson announces she will return by the next meeting of council.
April 2:
Former Councillor and MPP Linda Jeffrey enters the Mayoral race.
Toronto Star runs a front page story on Fennell and her staff's charges to City credit cards. An editorial says either Jeffrey or Sanderson "would be a better mayor than the incumbent."
May 1: Linda Jeffrey launches her campaign.
May 21: Fennell's privately run Mayor's Gala has only dispersed $442,005 to community groups in 2012 and 2013 combined, from $1,710,106 raised, little over a quarter of funds raised, Toronto Star reports.
May 27: Toronto Star reports that a company owned by a "close personal friend" of Fennell has received 453 City contracts since 2001, all under the competitive tendering process minimum, totalling $1.1 million. The company, MeriMac, has also been paid by Fennell's own organization to organize its charitable gala and golf tournaments since 2008. Ching lives in a house owned by Fennell. An editorial the same day suggests that the Mayor's "years of misrule warrant a crushing defeat".
May 28: A result of the Star article, City Council votes to replace Integrity Commissioner Donald Cameron, who had cleared Fennell. Once a new Commissioner is hired, councillors intend to file an immediate complaint on the grounds that the previous investigation was misled.
May 29: Fennell goes on CBC Metro Morning to defend her actions, saying the Star story is "filled with inaccuracies"; the Star reiterates that Fennell and Ching refused to reply to repeated questions before the story was published. She assured host Matt Galloway she doesn't mix personal life and business. Also on CBC, Fennell commented that various councillors have been displaying "outrageous, shameful conduct". She described the tactic as "silly season" to get in the way of Brampton receiving a university campus.
September 5: Social Justice Collaborative holds Brampton's first debate of the campaign, at the Peel Art Gallery, Museum and Archives. Coverage of the debate focused largely around spending practices by Fennell and council.
September 10
Before the final council meeting of the term, Fennell calls a press conference to announce she's pursuing legal action against critical councillors, the Toronto Star, and Deloitte Canada, which was hired by the City to do a forensic audit. "I've had it up to here with the lies the innuendo and the smears."
Deloitte Canada, scheduled to present to council, leaves to seek counsel.
September 12: Susan Fennell threatens to boycott the Brampton Board of Trade's debate, after several candidates suggested the event was anti-democratic and discriminatory. BBOT members were asked to vote on which candidates should attend. Jaipaul Massey-Singh, Board of Trade chair-elect, responded that the selection process was "in order to properly engage candidates in discussion of their platforms. The BBOT is concerned that if all candidates are invited to speak, individuals will then simply state their positions with little or no opportunity for them to challenge one another or for panelists to hold them accountable in their answers. Recent local debates that have invited all candidates to participate have shown this to be the case." If anyone doesn't participate, the BBOT will replace them with the candidate with the next highest amount of votes.
September 16: BBOT drops Susan Fennell from the BBOT debate. Self-employed farmer Jacqueline Bell will take the fourth spot, joining Jeffreys, Sanderson, and McLeod. Hargy Randhawa is also added. Devinder Sangha issues a press release calling their actions "knee jerk", suggesting Randhawa was "invited directly by the BBOT in spite of his entering the Mayoral race at the last minute and being the lowest voted candidate in the previous Mayoral election." Randhawa received over 13% of the vote in 2010, finishing fourth of five candidates.
September 24: Brampton CAO John Corbett confirms that Deloitte has decided to "stop providing advice to the city." A new auditing firm must be hired to determine repayment amounts. Councillors talking to the media suggest that, due to legal action, the issue is impossible to revisit before the election.
September 29: The BBOT debate at Sheridan College happens as scheduled. While Fennell remained uninvited, she talked to media outlets including CP24, and tweeted responses to the debate.
October 2: Attention moved from Fennell to Jeffrey in the Brampton Young Professionals Forum debate, with the incumbent, Sanderson, and Sangha suggesting that the Province didn't help the City. Jeffrey suggested the City missed opportunities: "sat on the bench and did not chase the puck".
October 5: A senior solicitor for Brampton, Colin Grant, is revealed to be no longer with the City.
October 6:
Fennell, Sanderson, and Jeffrey appear on CP24 program LeDrew Live. Fennell dubs the controversy as "manufactured scandals". Sanderson suggests Jeffrey double crossed him, suggesting during the ice storm that she wasn't interested in running for Mayor of Brampton.
An anonymous attack ad, directed at Jeffrey, is released on YouTube. Citing its production values and professional narration, Jeffrey's campaign suggests that it is connected to a "well financed individual or group."
October 16: A poll conducted by Forum finds 68% of voters want Fennell to resign, up from 63% in September.
October 24:
Arbitator Janet Leiper released a report, finding that the amount to be owed by Fennell as $3,522.97, less than the roughly $34,000 indicated in the audit.
After a press conference held by Fennell on the porch of her Terra Cotta Crescent house, supporters throw room-temperature coffee in the face of Toronto Star reporter San Grewal.
November 26: United Way of Peel officials say they're looking into code of ethics complaints, related to CEO Shelley White's endorsement of Jeffreys.
Registration for the 2014 election in Caledon had a slow start compared to other municipalities; the first Council registration was incumbent Gord McClure, on February 14.
There are currently two Mayoral candidates in Caledon.
Incumbent Marolyn Morrison is not seeking a fourth term in office; her husband intends to retire from teaching in 2015. Morrison experienced continued intimidation from developers throughout her term of office, including an attack on her husband that caused temporary vision damage.
Chris Harker, a former Ward 5 Regional Councillor, registered from August 13; he withdrew August 18, due to "a sudden and unforeseen personal matter".
Those elected as a Regional Councillor serve both on Town of Caledon council and Region of Peel council.
Those elected as an Area Councillor serve only on the Town of Caledon council, not the Region of Peel council.
The mayoral race in Mississauga was noted for the retirement of Hazel McCallion, who had served as the city's mayor since 1978 and often faced only token opposition in past campaigns, thus giving rise to the city's first genuinely competitive mayoral race in many years. The leading candidates were Bonnie Crombie and Steve Mahoney, both former Members of Parliament. A third former MP, Carolyn Parrish, was widely believed to be a potential candidate as well, but instead confirmed her intention to run for a council seat rather than for mayor.
Through much of the year, Mahoney and Crombie were effectively tied in public opinion polling; although Mahoney led slightly in most polls, his lead rarely exceeded the poll's margin of error. Both candidates' platforms were nearly identical, with the only substantive point of distinction between them being Mahoney's proposal to implement high-occupancy vehicle lanes on some city streets as an interim measure, while working toward the longer-term implementation of rapid transit improvements that both candidates favoured. In early October, however, McCallion made a speech in which, while stopping short of calling it an official endorsement, she appeared to favour Crombie as her successor; the speech almost immediately vaulted Crombie into a 25-point lead over Mahoney.
There were a total of 10 registered candidates.
Mike Shoss withdrew his nomination for mayor.
Bonnie Crombie
Mississauga: Stella Ambler, Hazel McCallion (implied only), Luz del Rosario, Paul Szabo
Other: Dr. Carolyn Bennett, Dr. Kirsty Duncan, Art Eggleton, Andrew Kania, Dominic LeBlanc, Rob Oliphant, Yasmin Ratansi
Steve Mahoney
Mississauga: Brad Butt, Bob Dechert, Bob Delaney, Albina Guarnieri, Councillor Sue McFadden, Gurbax Singh Malhi, Harinder Takhar
Other: Colleen Beaumier, Sarmite Bulte, Aileen Carroll, George Dadamo, Buzz Hargrove, John Manley, John McKay, Karen Redman, Brian Tobin
Forum Research, March
Forum Research, April
Forum Research, July
Forum Research, August
Forum Research, September 28 (557 respondents)
Forum Research, October 16 (769 respondents)
Awareness polls
In mid-September 2014, Mahoney commissioned a poll of 824 people using interactive voice response. Main Street Technologies added the names of the three Toronto mayoral front-runners to Mississauga front-runners' names, to demonstrate Mahoney's observation that many Mississauga residents were unaware of the municipal election or its candidates. Mahoney's internal polling found that 63 to 66% of Mississauga residents are undecided as to their choice for mayor.
Ward 3: Audrey Polanco
Ward 5: Loveen Kaur Gill, Cheryl Rodricks
Ward 7: Amir Ali, Jozef Lech, Anwar Bilal Mughal
Ward 8: David Sousa, Albert Tan
Note that Sidney Mondoux was registered for Ward 9, then to Ward 5, and will appear on the ballot for Ward 9.
Janet McDougald was acclaimed as the chair of the Peel District School Board in a 1 December 2014 inaugural meeting.
Wards 1, 5
Wards 2, 6
Janet Atherley
Michael Benoit
William Davies
Hardeep Kalirah
Suzanne Nurse, incumbent
Brittany Savaille
Avtaar Soor
Ravichandran Subbaian
Wards 3, 4
Gurdeep Kaur Bhachu
Lloyd Fournier
Daljit Gill
Rekha Joshi
Ryan-O'Neil Knight
Kathy McDonald
Jagmohan Singh
Stan Taylor
Wards 7, 8
Devinder Singh Anand
Carrie Andrews
Shaheen Arshed
Handell Patrick Buchanan
Dezso Farkas
Virginia Finbow
Michael J. Gyovai
Satpaul Singh Johal
Christina MacLean
Sunny Punia
Amardeep Singh
Lynne Lazare
Wards 9, 10
Withdrawn
Wards 2, 6: Daniel Yeboah
Wards 3, 4: Steve Kavanagh
Stan Cameron (X)
Wards 1 and 7
Janet McDougald, incumbent
Greg Vosper
Stephen Warner
Wards 2 and 8
Yve Bernard
Sophia Brown Ramsay
Andrew Hamilton-Smith
Brad Hutchinson
Brad MacDonald, incumbent
Virinderpaul Singh
Muhammad Waris
Wards 3 and 4
Rita Bindra
Evan Engering
Sue Lawton, incumbent
Goran Saveski
Ward 5
Deepak Anand
Jason Benoit
Rita Bindra
Yasmeen Khan
Ranjit Kaur Khatkur
Karen Lin
Virinderpaul Singh
Rick Williams
Ward 6
Josephine Bau
Bernadette Chatwin
Robert Crocker
Marina Pedrosa Hrenar
Linden King
David Li
Sathyanithy Sadagopan
Ravi Sahni
Paramvir Singh Sekhon
Keval Shaw
Birinder Shergill
Farina Siddiqui
Pam Tomasevic
George Winter
Ward 9 and 10
Hussain A Asghar
Cameron Bogren
Sandra Clarke
Nokha Dakroub
Meredith Johnson
Iftikhar Malik
Shannon Pecore
Dani Schulze
Michael Sesek
Malih Siddiqi
Albert Tan
Allison Van Wagner
Kathy Vukobrat
Kathy Zhao
Brampton wards 1, 3, 4
Mike Campeau
Anna Maria da Silva - Incumbent
Jefferson Huang
Devanand Ramsumair
Brampton wards 2, 5, 6
Darryl Brian D'Souza
Denaize Joseph
Thomas Joseph
Frank R. Turner
Carmen Wilson-Durston
Joseph Tanti withdrew his nomination, to run for Brampton City Council in Wards 7 & 8.
Brampton wards 7, 8, 9, 10
Sylvia Aiello
Mark Hoffberg
Abraham Joseph
Janice Gordon
Mark Hoffberg
Tara Elizebeth Nugent
Lesley-Anne Raymer
Shawn Xaviour
Caledon
Krystina De Rose
Frank Di Cosola
Tony Meglio
Mississauga ward 1, 3
Mario Pascucci
Antu-Maprani Chakkunny
Mississauga ward 2, 8
Corey Henderson
Sharon M. Hobin, incumbent
Arnold Rego
Mississauga ward 4
Anna M. Abbruscato, incumbent
Miroslaw Ruta
Mississauga ward 5
Helene Burrowes
Joseph Joseph
Mississauga ward 6, 11
Josephine Bau
Natalia Kusendova
Luz del Rosario
Mississauga ward 7
Patti-Ann Finlay
Bruno Iannicca, incumbent
Mississauga ward 9, 10
Esther O'Toole, imcumbent
The following candidates are running in all of Peel. Locally, the schools represented are École élémentaire Carrefour des jeunes, École élémentaire Horizon Jeunesse, and École secondaire Jeunes sans frontières.
Malika Attou, St. Catharines
Mark David de Pelham, Mississauga
Kris Nair, Mississauga
Yvon Rochefort, Brampton
Brampton and Caledon
Geneviève Grenier
Tammy Knibbs
Blaise Liaki
Mississauga
Estelle Ah-Kiow
Innocent Legrand Watat