WE really need to get rid of this guy

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Former mayor facing sentencing for sex assaults given time to find lawyer
Trevor Birtch was granted an adjournment of his sentencing hearing for convictions stemming from his second sexual assault trial

Author of the article:Jane Sims
Published Aug 15, 2025 • 4 minute read

Trevor Birtch’s complicated personal life has evolved into a tangled web of legal delays, adjournments, mistrials and unexpected twists through the criminal justice system.


The disgraced former mayor of Woodstock was back in a London courtroom Friday afternoon on his own where he was granted an adjournment of his sentencing hearing for convictions stemming from his second sexual assault trial that began almost a year ago.


Birtch, 50, was given more time by Superior Court Justice Spencer Nicholson to continue his search for a new defence lawyer after James Battin, his counsel for his four criminal cases, was ordered disbarred by the Law Society of Ontario in May over legal aid payment issues.

The need for a defence lawyer is urgent in the case, especially after assistant Crown attorney Kristina Mildred indicated to Nicholson that she would be seeking a prison term for the two sexual assault convictions.


“Given that we are seeking a significant penitentiary term in this matter, and I appreciate the events have unfolded in an unexpected way for Mr. Birtch, we have absolutely no issue with the request for an adjournment today,” she said.

But that’s just one of his cases. A flow chart is almost necessary to track and understand Birtch’s long and complex trek through the courts.

Birtch was first charged in February 2022 when he was still mayor of Woodstock and after ending a relationship with a 45-year-old woman that began in April 2020 and ended in December 2021.

His trial into those matters was the first to heard last year and ended with Superior Court Justice Michael Carnegie convicting him of one count of assault and one count of sexual assault.


The woman told the court about Birtch trying to force her into performing a specific sex act when they were on a Valentine’s Day getaway to a London hotel in 2021. The assault conviction was related to a drive in the country and beach day when the woman was pushed out of the car after refusing sexual activity with Birtch.

He was charged again with more sexual assault counts in the spring of 2022 involving a 39-year-old woman who had a history of addiction and health issues – and was also part of Birtch’s bizarre and violent personal life starting in 2017 until 2021.

Those charges were tried last fall and ended with Nicholson’s decision in January where he convicted Birtch of two counts of sexual assault and called Birtch “an obvious liar.”


The victim testified that she had several unwanted sexual encounters with Birtch, often when both of them had consumed large quantities of drugs and alcohol supplied by Birtch. It was during her testimony that she said Birtch would snort cocaine while off-camera during online city council meetings.

Birtch claimed that the coin bags of white powder were crushed-up over-the-counter pain medication for a bum shoulder. Nicholson found the explanation “totally unbelievable” and also flatly rejected Birtch’s suggestion that all the charges were part of a female-led conspiracy to humiliate him.

However, after the second trial, Birtch sought and was granted a mistrial by Carnegie in December on the first set of convictions because potential evidence for that case from a key witness at the second trial emerged during her testimony and was not disclosed by the Crown for the first trial.


After all of those charges were laid, Birtch sought re-election in the fall of 2022 and was pummelled at the polls.

But before the sexual assault cases ever made it to court, there were more charges on October 30, 2023, when Birtch was charged with impaired driving after he was in a two-vehicle crash west of Woodstock. Birtch pleaded guilty in Woodstock in February to having more than twice the legal limit of alcohol in his blood and was dealt a 90-day conditional sentence, a year of probation and a 12-month driving suspension.

An hour before the crash, Birtch was in London, where he was charged with two counts of assault and one count of unlawful entry involving yet another woman. Birtch was arrested after an alleged confrontation at a London home where the woman was staying where a witness testified he saw Birtch slap her in the face, then have a tussle with the witness when he told Birtch to leave.


An Ontario Court of Justice trial in London on those matters began in February, but was adjourned at the request of the defence, once the Crown closed its case after one witness. The woman was expected to be called to testify by the defence at a later date.

Three months later, Battin was disbarred and Justice Jason Miller later declared a mistrial on those matters in June. Birtch was in the Ontario Court on Thursday where the case was put over to Sept. 4 to give him more time to find a defence lawyer.

And that was the same predicament on Friday when Birtch was in front of Nicholson without a lawyer.

There was yet another twist. Before her judicial appointment was announced earlier this week, Superior Court Justice Jennifer Moser, who is slated to be sworn-in at the end of the month, was the prosecutor for the case and was required to turn over the sentencing to Mildred.


Birtch told Nicholson that he has had “a couple of consultations with different lawyers. But the summer scheduling issues, the size of the file and “the size of the retainers required” have pushed him to seek out “a few more.”

Any lawyer he has spoken to so far asked for a two- to three-month adjournment to review the case.

Nicholson said it was “a very unique situation” and agreed that the case go over to Sept. 19 for an update about Birtch’s search for a defence lawyer.

jsims@postmedia.com
 

spaminator

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On whether she will run again, Mayor Chow's answer is 'I don't know'
Will Olivia Chow's ambiguity on her political future make her a lame duck mayor when it comes to dealing with Toronto's major challenges?


Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Aug 22, 2025 • Last updated 5 hours ago • 3 minute read

Mayor Olivia Chow sported a Maple Leafs sweater in an X posting that appeared in her account on May 4, 2024
Mayor Olivia Chow sports a Maple Leafs sweater in an X posting on her account on May 4, 2024.
Just a little more than year out, Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow has revealed she’s not sure if she will seek re-election.


Her uncertainty on whether to seek another term had light shined on it Friday morning while she was appearing on Newstalk 1010


Saying there is a “shadow electoral campaign” that ”has already started” while noting several people have indicated their intentions to put their names on a ballot, morning host John Moore put a point-blank question to 68-year-old Chow.

“Are you running?”

Chow attempted to dodge the question.

“I am running the City of Toronto right now,” she said. “I am not doing anything else.”

Moore came back at her and asked her again.

“Are you going to be a candidate in the upcoming cycle,” he asked.

Replied Chow: ”I don’t know.”



So with those three words, the future leadership of Toronto, at a time when there are so many key issues from refugees to traffic to crime to cost of living in play, is up in the air.

Chow tried to deflect all of this with her next comment.

“We are talking about October next year. We are not even in October this year. So (I’m) not thinking about it at this point.”

Mayor Olivia Chow at an executive committee meeting.
Mayor Olivia Chow joins members of Toronto city council at an executive committee meeting on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. Council passed a bubble-zone bylaw on Thursday, May 22, 2025, that will be welcomed by the Jewish community.
Is the Toronto public expected to believe the mayor is not “thinking about” whether or not she will seek re-election? Is her being unsure whether or not to take her record to the public something that could put the city in a position of weakness, in that the federal and provincial governments know they have a person in that seat who may not even be there next year?

Chow was sworn in as mayor two years ago on July 12, 2023 after a byelection that opened up the position when then-Mayor John Tory resigned, soon after winning his third term, in response to the discovery of him having had a relationship with a female staffer.


Is it only fair to let Chow decide when she announces her intentions? After all, top potential opponents like a comeback-seeking Tory or Councillor Brad Bradford have not yet declared themselves.

One thing that’s different here is usually a year out will indicate whether or not an incumbent will seek another term. Challengers don’t have the same responsibility and are afforded more time. Chow has not responded to questions from the Toronto Sun to clarify just what she meant by her wishy-washy approach to Moore’s appropriate probing.



The mayor did tell Moore “there are a lot of challenges that we have — whether it’s building housing people can afford, helping some renters, because half of the city of Toronto are renters, so we cannot ignore their needs.”

She also was strong in her words toward Prime Minister Mark Carney and the federal Liberal government to “pay up” when it comes to funding for refugees — who Chow rightfully pointed out Toronto is “sheltering” at great expense but not getting full compensation in return.

Combination photo of Olivia Chow, John Tory and Brad Bradford.
Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow, left, and Councillor Brad Bradford, right, are playing coy about the upcoming mayoral campaign, while former mayor John Tory may be mulling a comeback. Photo by Toronto Sun files
On Friday, Chow attended an emotional vigil held in response to the horrendous shooting murder of eight-year-old JahVai Roy, at which she talked about holding on to one’s “anger” about what happened and looking for ways to curb gun smuggling from the United States.


The mayor was certainly on the job this week. But will she be the one to tackle these challenges a year from now? If not, when will she let Torontonians know?

Will other levels of government take her hesitancy to reveal her plans as weakness and a void in power, thus creating a lame duck effect? And who will step up and try to take her spot?

Time will tell.

But one thing that is clear is Toronto’s current mayor is not being clear on whether she wants the job when this term runs out next October.

jwarmington@postmedia.com
 

Dixie Cup

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On whether she will run again, Mayor Chow's answer is 'I don't know'
Will Olivia Chow's ambiguity on her political future make her a lame duck mayor when it comes to dealing with Toronto's major challenges?


Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Aug 22, 2025 • Last updated 5 hours ago • 3 minute read

Mayor Olivia Chow sported a Maple Leafs sweater in an X posting that appeared in her account on May 4, 2024
Mayor Olivia Chow sports a Maple Leafs sweater in an X posting on her account on May 4, 2024.
Just a little more than year out, Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow has revealed she’s not sure if she will seek re-election.


Her uncertainty on whether to seek another term had light shined on it Friday morning while she was appearing on Newstalk 1010


Saying there is a “shadow electoral campaign” that ”has already started” while noting several people have indicated their intentions to put their names on a ballot, morning host John Moore put a point-blank question to 68-year-old Chow.

“Are you running?”

Chow attempted to dodge the question.

“I am running the City of Toronto right now,” she said. “I am not doing anything else.”

Moore came back at her and asked her again.

“Are you going to be a candidate in the upcoming cycle,” he asked.

Replied Chow: ”I don’t know.”



So with those three words, the future leadership of Toronto, at a time when there are so many key issues from refugees to traffic to crime to cost of living in play, is up in the air.

Chow tried to deflect all of this with her next comment.

“We are talking about October next year. We are not even in October this year. So (I’m) not thinking about it at this point.”

Mayor Olivia Chow at an executive committee meeting.
Mayor Olivia Chow joins members of Toronto city council at an executive committee meeting on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. Council passed a bubble-zone bylaw on Thursday, May 22, 2025, that will be welcomed by the Jewish community.
Is the Toronto public expected to believe the mayor is not “thinking about” whether or not she will seek re-election? Is her being unsure whether or not to take her record to the public something that could put the city in a position of weakness, in that the federal and provincial governments know they have a person in that seat who may not even be there next year?

Chow was sworn in as mayor two years ago on July 12, 2023 after a byelection that opened up the position when then-Mayor John Tory resigned, soon after winning his third term, in response to the discovery of him having had a relationship with a female staffer.


Is it only fair to let Chow decide when she announces her intentions? After all, top potential opponents like a comeback-seeking Tory or Councillor Brad Bradford have not yet declared themselves.

One thing that’s different here is usually a year out will indicate whether or not an incumbent will seek another term. Challengers don’t have the same responsibility and are afforded more time. Chow has not responded to questions from the Toronto Sun to clarify just what she meant by her wishy-washy approach to Moore’s appropriate probing.



The mayor did tell Moore “there are a lot of challenges that we have — whether it’s building housing people can afford, helping some renters, because half of the city of Toronto are renters, so we cannot ignore their needs.”

She also was strong in her words toward Prime Minister Mark Carney and the federal Liberal government to “pay up” when it comes to funding for refugees — who Chow rightfully pointed out Toronto is “sheltering” at great expense but not getting full compensation in return.

Combination photo of Olivia Chow, John Tory and Brad Bradford.
Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow, left, and Councillor Brad Bradford, right, are playing coy about the upcoming mayoral campaign, while former mayor John Tory may be mulling a comeback. Photo by Toronto Sun files
On Friday, Chow attended an emotional vigil held in response to the horrendous shooting murder of eight-year-old JahVai Roy, at which she talked about holding on to one’s “anger” about what happened and looking for ways to curb gun smuggling from the United States.


The mayor was certainly on the job this week. But will she be the one to tackle these challenges a year from now? If not, when will she let Torontonians know?

Will other levels of government take her hesitancy to reveal her plans as weakness and a void in power, thus creating a lame duck effect? And who will step up and try to take her spot?

Time will tell.

But one thing that is clear is Toronto’s current mayor is not being clear on whether she wants the job when this term runs out next October.

jwarmington@postmedia.com
She should simply retire.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
39,183
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113
Councillor Moise puts own name all over ward’s sidewalks
Councillor Chris Moise has his name all over downtown thanks to a bike-centred decal campaign – and some of his constituents aren’t pleased.

Author of the article:Justin Holmes
Published Aug 30, 2025 • Last updated 14 hours ago • 3 minute read

Chris Moise installs a decal on the sidewalk
Councillor Chris Moise installs a “walk your bike” decal on a sidewalk in his Toronto Centre ward. Photo by threads.com/chrismoiseto
Councillor Chris Moise has his name all over downtown as part of a decal campaign — and some of his constituents aren’t pleased.


Moise and his team recently installed large white stickers, roughly the size of a pizza, on sidewalks in his Toronto Centre ward. The decals, which urge Torontonians to “please walk your bike or scooter,” also feature logos for Moise and the City of Toronto.


It’s not clear if the use of logos is acceptable under city hall’s rules, and it didn’t go unnoticed by the Torontonians who complained over social media that Moise’s name is on the decals.

Perhaps the most notable critic was Moise’s constituent George Smitherman, who tagged his councillor and Mayor Olivia Chow in a Facebook post that slammed the “slippery stickers” as “shameless personal self-promotion with city resources in city spaces.”

Chris Moise bike decal up close
Smitherman told the Toronto Sun he wasn’t trying to insert himself back into politics, as he finds his latest gig in health-care recruitment very rewarding — he was just using social media like anyone else.


“That was really on my nerves,” Smitherman said. “Some time ago, I would’ve just eaten that up and ignored it, or what have you, and, you know, now I can spend a couple minutes and let anyone that wants to know my POV about it.”

“I know Chris very well,” Smitherman added. “I’ve known him for a long time.” Still, he said, Moise didn’t reach out and they’ve yet to speak since he made the post.

As a former deputy premier under the Liberals and runner-up for Toronto mayor in the election that crowned Rob Ford, Smitherman has a long political memory. He recalled a “giant kerfuffle” years back when a group stencilled a sidewalk with temporary paint that could only wash away with the next rain.

“I was astonished” Moise’s decals “could be adorned with the name of a local politician,” Smitherman said. “I was gobsmacked by it, to use a word people like to throw in there. It really shocked me.”


George Smitherman
George Smitherman poses for a photo in 2018. Photo by Jack Boland/Toronto Sun files
In an email on Wednesday afternoon, Moise’s office said it would respond to the Sun’s questions about the decal campaign in a statement, but by Saturday evening it had yet to send one.

The website torontocentreprojects.ca, which is operated by Moise, says his office planned to install 100 of the 46-cm vinyl sidewalk decals to encourage people “to walk their bikes and scooters in busy pedestrian areas.” Residents were asked to suggest spots for the decals, and the website says a “pilot feedback survey” will run until November.

In a brief statement, city hall told the Sun the decal initiative “is led by Councillor Moise,” and councillors “are required to comply with city policies regarding name and logo usage.”

Municipal policy says the city logo, “as an official mark, may only be used to specifically identify officially endorsed city business.” Meanwhile, one of the restrictions for election signs is that they cannot include the city’s logo.


Moise’s website only says the stickers were “printed by the City of Toronto.”

Smitherman said he had assumed the stickers were part of a city initiative. After being told by the Sun that the idea came from Moise’s office, he said: “Honestly, that’s very interesting.”

He added that he fears city bureaucrats may be “far too deferential to the local politician” on an issue like this, which was one reason why he tagged Chow.



Smitherman insisted he doesn’t disagree with the core message of the campaign — to “prioritize safety and build a more considerate community,” as Moise put it in a Facebook post. (In a reply related to that Facebook post, Moise said he’d ultimately prefer to put down bike lanes rather than decals.)


Smitherman said he’s a cyclist and he’s certainly noticed a “lack of decorum” lately. He suggested the rise of battery-powered bikes and scooters, and the ubiquity of bicycle-delivered fast food, have made Toronto streets a bit more crowded and at times less friendly.

“It’s all form of mayhem, and there’s so much risk when you have people using the same space but travelling at different speeds,” he said.

But his “bigger issue,” Smitherman said, “just is about where is the line drawn when a locally elected politician is leveraging the city logo and resource to build their profile. The incumbents in our model have enough advantages to begin with without actually commandeering the use of city territory.”

jholmes@postmedia.com
moise-decal-web-e1756590053898[1].jpg1756645593316.png
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Tiny B.C. town on edge because of one man who 'terrorized the whole community'
A father and son in Masset, a remote community in Haida Gwaii, say they recently detained an axe-wielding man until police arrived. The suspect was taken into custody but later released on conditions.

Author of the article:J.J. Adams
Published Aug 31, 2025 • 4 minute read

A photo of the truck of Jordan Holt, which was allegedly smashed by an axe-wielding man in Masset, Haida Gwaii, last week.
A photo of the truck of Jordan Holt, which was allegedly smashed by an axe-wielding man in Masset, Haida Gwaii, last week. Photo by Lori Holt /Facebook
Haida Gwaii is an idyllic archipelago with lush rainforests, rugged terrain and wave-caressed beaches. It’s a paradise.


And for some, it’s been a hell.


On Thursday, Masset — a village nestled on the shore of a northern coast inlet — was abuzz with anger, fear and frustration after a man who has reportedly harassed, assaulted and threatened members of the community for years allegedly went after two people with an axe. He was subdued by Darin Swanson and his son, Jordan Holt, after they say he attacked them.

Postmedia is not identifying their attacker because no charges have been laid by the Crown, but the man has a lengthy list of charges dating back to 2009, according to online court records. Previous charges include assault, uttering threats to cause death or bodily harm, causing a disturbance and breaches of probation orders.

RCMP said this past week the alleged attacker is well-known to them, and they’ve recommended multiple charges to Crown counsel.


“He’s just terrorized the whole community,” said Swanson, a member of the Haida Gwaii hereditary chiefs council. “Everybody’s always on edge with this guy around.”

On Thursday, Jordan Holt was driving to the beach to watch the sunset when another vehicle pulled up beside him, the driver yelling at him to pull over. He stopped, thinking the driver needed assistance. Then the driver ran up and swung at him twice with a splitting maul — a top-heavy axe used to split firewood.

Holt said he was nicked on the hip by the first strike, and bent his thumb deflecting the next swing, which smashed into the drivers’ side window on the open door of his Ford Raptor F-150. Holt jumped back in his truck, and the driver yelled at him to get this truck out of his town, and used the maul on the passenger side window before fleeing.


Swanson said his son never had any previous personal interactions with the suspect. Holt called police, then Swanson. They both drove to the suspect’s property with the intention of blocking it off to keep him contained until police arrived.

“I know how long it’s going to take for the cops to come. It’s going to take them 15, 20 minutes. And a lot can happen in that time,” said Swanson, 60.

“I pulled up into the front of his house … and before I could even get my door open, he comes flying out of there with the axe again, and just hit the passenger side door where my son was sitting and just missed him by fractions of an inch. The handle of the splitting maul stopped it from going in further. Jordan didn’t even see it coming because it was kind of in his blind spot.


“It should be attempted murder. If you’d seen how that axe hit that truck … if he connected, that was it.”

They managed to avoid the next swings and tackle him to the ground, where they held him until police took him into custody.

“Even when the cops were putting him in the back of the car, he says, ‘Darin, I’m going to kill you and your family’ — right in front of the cop,” said Swanson. “He says, ‘I’m gonna be out tomorrow.’ He’s smart enough to know the law because he’s been around it long enough.”

From the RCMP release on the incident: “Police determined the man need treatment at the hospital, where he was released on strict conditions and will be required to attend court in October.”

Swanson was disconcerted when he heard that. His family is on “high alert.”


“(Jordan), he’s got a shotgun ready to go,” he said.

“That night, I went to bed with a pipe, a knife and bear spray by my bed. I went through the house, made sure all my windows were locked. I made sure all the doors were locked. … We just took all kinds of measures, and I couldn’t sleep until four in the morning, thinking, ‘Is this guy going to walk out of the hospital and burn my house down?’ ”

Swanson is growing frustrated with the lack of progression on the legal front, as are others in the community.

Victims in a separate alleged assault involving the suspect called police four times in recent weeks, Swanson said.

He said police told him that he and his son may have instigated the incident.

“They gaslight you. They make it your problem,” he said. “The cop even said, ‘Well, why the hell did your son get out of the truck?’ Because he thought somebody might have needed help. So it’s my son’s fault that he got attacked by an axe?


“The whole system sucks. … You’re on your own. Trust me, you are on your own.”

Without some kind of action, someone is going to be hurt or killed, Swanson predicted.

“It’s gone to a whole new level. It’s going to be him, or whoever,” he said. “His own safety is in jeopardy now. … I don’t know if (police are) scared of this guy or they’re just tired of him.

“That will be the conclusion of it. It’s him or it’s us. That’s what it’s going to come down to, and I’m going to protect my family.”

jadams@postmedia.com
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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TCDSB Chair wanted fries with that – at taxpayers' expense
But no more says Ontario's Education Minister, who put a stop to lavish expenses by TCDSB trustees


Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Sep 05, 2025 • Last updated 22 hours ago • 5 minute read

Markus de Domenico
Markus de Domenico (Chair) Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB) Headshot from TCDSB web page/Toronto Sun/Postmedia Network Photo by HANDOUT /tcdsb.org
Holy shakes!


Being the chair of the Toronto Catholic District School Board sure can be sweet if you have the taxpayers flipping the bill. Yes, at a cost of $15.81, TCDSB Chair Markus de Domenico submitted an expense for a cookie dough-flavoured treat from the Holy Shakes Deserts Cafe on Rexdale Blvd. on April 22, 2024.


And that’s just one of the eateries Education Minister Paul Calandra has flagged in expense receipts filed by the TCDSB Chair and Ward 2 trustee.

The Beertown Public House location on Islington Ave. in Etobicoke appears to be such a good place for learning that Ontario taxpayers were billed by de Domenico for not one or two trips there in the spring of 2024, but three.

On May 25, 2024, at 2:13 p.m., there’s a receipt for $76.90 and a $10 tip for a total of $86.90. On June 18, 2024, at 8:16 p.m., $107.73 and a $16.16 tip for a total of $123.89 that was submitted.


TCDSB receipt
A receipt from TCDSB chair Markus de Domenico.
Then on June 24, 2024, it was $89.54 with a tip of $13.43 for a total of $102.97.

It’s unclear what was ordered in those Beertown visits totalling $313.76 in less than a month since the bill is not itemized. While some Beertown locations do offer milkshakes, they are mostly famous for other fine beverages.

At Richview Bakery and Bistro, the taxpayers paid $3 for Brio, $7 for veal and $10 for a large sandwich. While on June 22 at 3 a.m. there is a receipt for a McDonald’s order that consisted of a strawberry Fruitopia drink, French fries and a Quarter Pounder at a charge of $15.59. But the total bill came to $23.22 when you add in the delivery fee, which included $1.99, a service fee of $1.70 and a “courier tip” of $1.55.

While you were sleeping, somebody was snacking – on your tab. But why?


TCDSB receipt
A receipt from TCDSB chair Markus de Domenico.
There are also receipts filed for a $15.70 charge from Audible, an Apple.com bill for $14.68, and a $145.77 charge at the Apple Store in Sherway Gardens for a “Graphite Milanese Loop,” which is a strap for an Apple Watch, as well as Amazon orders for the book Reaching Down the Rabbit Hole: Extraordinary Journeys into the Human Brain, at $24.78, and another one for $21.72 for the book Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment.



The flaw in this judgement that the Education Minister points out is that none of these treats or purchases benefit students in the schools. It’s the same thing Toronto Suncolumnist Brian Lilley exposed last year when he found school boards had spent tens of thousands of dollars to go to places like Hawaii and Italy and even purchase Italian art on the taxpayers’ credit card.


PC MPP Paul Calandra speaks during
Education Minister Paul Calandra speaks during question period at Queen’s Park in Toronto on Tuesday, May 13, 2025. COLE BURSTON/THE CANADIAN PRESS
The only reason any of this became public is because de Domenico was on John Moore’s show on Newstalk 1010 and was critical of Calandra and the Ford government’s decision to strip the TCDSB and other boards of operating powers due to alleged “mismanagement.”



When asked to respond to de Domenico’s on-air criticism of the Ford government’s school board takeovers and what he called “$25 million in underfunding to schools,” Calandra went on the air with Moore and said he will not take fiscal advice from somebody billing the taxpayers for milkshakes or late-night munchies.

“Ontario families deserve better than trustees who treat the classroom like their personal expense account,” Calandra said.

John Moore of Newstalk 1010
John Moore of Newstalk 1010
But the chair pushed back telling a skeptical Moore, “I guess if the world would operate and spin the way Calandra wants it to do, no one would speak up for students, no one would speak up for kids because he has a very right-wing view of the world.”



While the TCDSB Chair has so far not responded to the Sun for comment, de Domenico did not deny submitting these receipts, telling Moore, “I am not going to get into this partisan thing of listing Calandra’s expenses, God help us, compared to mine. My office is a McDonald’s half the time or a Starbucks where I meet my parents and, yeah, I will buy them a milkshake or a burger or whatever.”

TCDSB receipt
A receipt from TCDSB chair Markus de Domenico.
But Calandra was unforgiving, telling the Sun this kind of waste is why the government is looking to reform school board governance across the province – something there will be announcements about in the months ahead.

“This trustee can cry foul all he wants, but let’s be clear: while parents are working hard to support their kids, he was expensing milkshakes, McDonald’s delivery at 3 a.m., and even a $145 Apple Watch strap,” Calandra said. “None of that helps a single child learn to read or do math. He failed in his responsibility to parents and students, and that’s why I stepped in.”


TCDSB receipt
A receipt from TCDSB chair Markus de Domenico.
Hopefully the TCDSB’s Foodie Party at taxpayers’ expense is over for good. Going forward, if de Domenico or any trustee orders a milkshake, a burger, or goes to the brew pub, they should pay for it themselves.

One positive outcome is that taxpayers, who can’t afford to lavishly dine out like some who oversee our schools do, have received an education on how their money earmarked for kids in schools was being spent.

jwarmington@postmedia.com

EDITOR’S NOTE – Toronto Catholic District School Board Chair Markus de Domenico responded to the Toronto Sun’s request for comment after reading this story late Friday night, after our newspaper’s deadline, with the following statement:

“I’ve never had an Apple TV Plus subscription. I meet my parents wherever they want, I don’t have a constituency office so it’s Tims, Starbucks or a restaurant. I’ll pick up the tab as not everyone has the means to do so. I’m here to help families, this is not a job you do for the renumeration, I’m a dad and a Grandparent trying to help.”

“Clearly I touched a nerve with Minister Calandra as I have been calling him out on his true plan, the removal of the parent voice. It’s unfortunate that the Minister has chosen to attack rather than partner with Trustees and parents, which is what I asked him to consider yesterday on 1010. ”

“Parents are very upset at the removal of their democratically elected voice. Who on earth thinks it’s going to be good for parents to have a centralized Ministry bureaucracy? It’s a power grab.”
IMG_1026[1].jpeg1757202082606.png1757202287101.pngIMG_1033[1].jpeg
 

spaminator

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Hollywood stars mock York Regional Police chief advice on how to deal with home intruders

Author of the article:Mark Daniell
Published Sep 08, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 4 minute read

Sorbo
Dean Cain and Kevin Sorbo have sounded off on York Regional Police Chief Jim MacSween's response to a fatal home invasion.
York Regional Police Chief Jim MacSween’s recent comments that homeowners should “comply” with demands from violent intruders has caught the attention of several Hollywood big names.


Following the murder of Abdul Aleem Farooqi in front of his family after he “confronted” a group of intruders inside his Kleinburg, Ont., home, MacSween advised homeowners not to fight back.


“In the unlikely event that you find yourself the victim of a home invasion, we are urging citizens not to take matters into their own hands,” MacSween said last week.

“While we don’t want homeowners to feel powerless, we urge you to call 911 and do everything you can to keep yourself and loved ones safe until police arrive and be the best witness possible. This could mean locking yourself in a room away from the perpetrators, hiding, fleeing the home, but don’t engage unless absolutely necessary. As it stands, we know the best defence for most people is to comply.”


MacSween later apologized, saying he understood “why people feel the need to fight back.”

But the chief added that “when it comes to defending property, material items can be replaced — but lives cannot.”

His comments caught the eye of Hercules star Kevin Sorbo and onetime Superman actor Dean Cain.

Sorbo rattled off Farooqi’s death and the recent assault of a young girl in Welland, Ont., and then sarcastically shared MacSween’s advice with his 2.5 million followers on X.

“A man was just executed in front of his family during a home invasion,” Sorbo wrote. “A 3-year-old girl was just raped by an intruder. Canadian police chief Jim MacSween told citizens that ‘your best defence is to just comply.'”

The actor’s post has been viewed more than 6.5 million times and generated 108,000 likes.

“It is very likely time to hold the police chief accountable,” one of Sorbo’s followers commented, with another adding, “Nothing sums up the present situation in Canada better than this post.”

Several other American followers said they were thankful they lived in the United States where the right to own weapons is part of their constitution.



Sorbo is one of Hollywood’s most outspoken conservative actors. In an interview with Fox News earlier this summer, he said that he’s seen a shift in how people see him.

“I’m the first cancel culture victim before I knew it was a term. Hollywood booted me up a dozen years ago for things I was posting on the internet. And I looked at my age and I said, ‘Oh, you guys are upset that I’m posting the truth? Is that a problem with you guys?’ Because they hate the truth, and they hate anybody who’s a Christian in Hollywood, anybody who is a conservative. So I’m like a double leper to them. I’m, like, kryptonite or something,” Sorbo said.

“(But) Hollywood is shifting a little bit because I’m starting to get calls from the studios saying, ‘Hey, there’s a big thing with this stuff. So maybe send us a couple of scripts,'” he said. “I think we’ve reached a tipping point.”


Meanwhile, Cain, who last month announced he was joining the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency “ASAP” to help rid America of illegals, re-shared a clip of MacSween alongside an address from a Florida sheriff who encouraged residents to open fire on violent looters.

“I would tell them, if you value your life, they probably shouldn’t do that in Polk County. Because the people of Polk County like guns, they have guns, I encourage them to own guns, and they’re going to be in their homes tonight with their guns loaded,” Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said in a 2020 news conference. “And if you try to break into their homes to steal, to set fires, I’m highly recommending they blow you back out of the house with their guns.”


As a crime wave grips much of Canada, Liberal Justice Minister Sean Fraser defended his government’s approach.

“This isn’t the Wild West. It’s Canada,” Fraser said on X in a post that was ridiculed.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has said he will demand a wave of sweeping reforms when Parliament resumes session this fall.

In response to rising crime in Washington, D.C., President Donald Trump declared an emergency in the U.S. capitol in August and has threatened to deploy his newly created Department of War on cities like Chicago.

“Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR,” the president wrote in a Truth Social post over the weekend.

Trump later walked back that message.

“We’re not going to war. We’re going to clean up our cities,” Trump told reporters on Sunday. “We’re going to clean them up so they don’t kill five people every weekend. That’s not war, that’s common sense.”

mdaniell@postmedia.com
 

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Kim Jong Un oversees test of new rocket engine for ICBMs, North Korea says
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Kim Tong-hyung
Published Sep 08, 2025 • 2 minute read

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Tuesday that leader Kim Jong Un supervised a test of a new rocket engine designed for intercontinental ballistic missiles, the latest step in his effort to build an arsenal that poses a viable threat to the continental United States.


North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency said Monday’s event marked the ninth and final ground test of the solid-fuel rocket engine built with carbon fiber and capable of producing 1,971 kilonewtons of thrust, more powerful than past models. The report came a week after Kim visited the research institute that developed the engine, which North Korea then said will be used for future ICBMs, including a system called Hwasong-20.


North Korea in recent years has flight-tested a variety of ICBMs that demonstrated potential range to reach the U.S. mainland, including those with built-in solid propellants that are easier to move and conceal and can be prepared for launch more quickly than the North’s previous liquid-fuel missiles.


Kim has called for further advancements in North Korea’s long-range weapons, including the development of multi-warhead systems that would improve their chances of defeating missile defenses. All of North Korea’s ICBM tests so far have been conducted at steeper-than-normal trajectories to avoid neighboring territories, and experts say the country may not yet have perfected the technology needed to ensure its warheads survive the harsh conditions of atmospheric re-entry.

KCNA said Kim expressed satisfaction after Monday’s test, calling the “eye-opening” development of the new rocket engine a “significant change” in his effort to expand North Korea’s nuclear forces.

Kim has stepped up testing activities since the collapse of nuclear talks with the U.S. in 2019 under President Donald Trump ‘s first term, demonstrating weapons of various ranges designed to strike U.S. allies in Asia and the U.S. mainland. Analysts say Kim’s nuclear push is aimed at eventually pressuring Washington to accept the idea of the North as a nuclear power and to negotiate economic and security concessions from a position of strength.


Kim is also trying to bolster his leverage by strengthening his cooperation with traditional allies Russia and China, in an emerging partnership aimed at undercutting U.S. influence.

Kim has sent thousands of troops and large quantities of military equipment to Russia to help fuel President Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine. He visited Beijing last week, sharing the spotlight with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Putin at a massive military parade marking the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II and China’s fight against Japanese aggression. Experts say Kim’s rare foreign trip was likely intended to boost his leverage ahead of a potential resumption of talks with the United States.

In a separate report, KCNA said Xi sent a letter to Kim on North Korea’s founding anniversary, which fell on Tuesday, and called for strengthened “strategic communication” between the countries.
 

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Bonnie Crombie to face Liberal leadership test as party members gather for AGM
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Allison Jones
Published Sep 12, 2025 • 3 minute read

Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie speaks on stage at her campaign headquarters during the Ontario provincial election in Mississauga, Ont., on Thursday, February 27, 2025. Photo by Nathan Denette /THE CANADIAN PRESS
TORONTO — Ontario Liberals are set to hold a leadership vote this weekend, amid grumbling from some members about whether Leader Bonnie Crombie is the right person to take them back into government.


The party is gathering in Toronto for its annual general meeting, its first since the mixed-bag February election that saw them regain official party status but left their leader without a seat in the legislature.


Members will be voting throughout the weekend, with results to be announced Sunday, on whether to hold another leadership race two years after the last one or to stick with Crombie at the helm.

The New Leaf Liberals, which describes itself as a grassroots group, has formed to urge a new leadership race. Former provincial leadership challenger Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith has also urged “renewal” at the top.

But Crombie said she is feeling confident heading into the voting.

“I have support of the executive council, I have support of my team, the caucus, and we’ll see what the membership says,” Crombie said in an interview.


“You will never get 90 or 100 per cent because there’s always dissenters.”

What that magic number is may be harder to pin down. The Liberal constitution says she needs 50 per cent plus one to stay on, but the New Leaf Liberals are calling for Crombie to resign if she receives any less than 66 per cent support for her to stay on as leader.

Crombie herself is not committing to any particular course of action beyond what the constitution says.

“It’ll be up to me to judge … if I have the support of the majority of the party behind me,” she said.

Noah Parker, one of the New Leaf organizers, said 66 per cent is the minimum threshold by which a leader should consider they have the support of their party members.

“If (Crombie) can get that command of the party, and the vast majority of Ontario Liberals support her then so will we, but if she can’t, then we should move on as a party and find a leader who can,” Parker said in an interview.


“We’re not shy to say that we think a leadership race would be good for our party, good for our Liberal movement, and would better our chances at beating Doug Ford.”

Parker said the group is not — as some have suggested — a front for Erskine-Smith, who made waves in Liberal land over the summer with a call for leadership change, particularly if Crombie doesn’t get at least two-thirds support in the AGM vote.

Erskine-Smith acknowledged in a note to supporters that his criticisms of Crombie’s leadership are not devoid of self-interest.

“I’ve always said I want to make the biggest difference I can in politics,” he wrote.

“It’s why I ran for the provincial leadership in 2023 and why I made the difficult decision to run again for my federal seat back in December, with the threat posed by Trump and with a view to getting housing built. As I’ve already told the media, I’ll make my ultimate decision once the members have made theirs.”


Erskine-Smith came second to Crombie in the 2023 provincial leadership contest, which was also marked by tension between the two politicians.

He raised Crombie’s age — 63 at the time — in the context of suggesting he, in his late 30s, would have more longevity as a party leader if the Liberals’ path back to victory was to take more than one more election cycle. She penned an op-ed calling his remarks ageist.

Crombie said she has not spoken to Erskine-Smith about his missive this summer, nor has she had conversations with the New Leaf Liberals. But some of her supporters did.

A petition they’re circulating calls for several steps toward party renewal aside from what they want to see on the leadership front, and many of those concerns are already being addressed, Crombie said.

She pointed to a recent campaign debrief report as a roadmap for renewal. It recommended more consistent fundraising, volunteer co-ordination and nominations between campaign periods.
 

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Crombie resigns as Ontario Liberal leader after weak show of support from party
Decision announced Sunday evening, hours after party delegates narrowly voted against leadership race

Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Sep 14, 2025 • Last updated 4 hours ago • 2 minute read

Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie vows to stay on as leader after party delegates narrowly voted against having a new leadership race.

OTTAWA — Despite dodging a mandatory leadership vote over the weekend, Ontario’s seat-less Liberal leader is calling it quits.


In a statement emailed to media Sunday just before 5 p.m., Bonnie Crombie announced her intention to resign, just hours after party delegates narrowly voted against a leadership race.


“Even though I received a majority of support from the delegates, I believe it is the best decision for the Ontario Liberal Party to facilitate an orderly transition towards a leadership vote,” Crombie said in her statement.

“I have advised the party president of my decision to resign upon the selection of my successor.”

Fifty-seven per cent of party delegates voted against holding a leadership race — ahead of the 50% threshold that party rules said she needed to stay on as leader.



In remarks delivered after results were announced Sunday, Crombie agreed the vote was narrower than she would have liked, but indicated she intended to stay on as leader.

Despite widespread media reports, sources within the Liberal Party told the Toronto Sun that rumours of an internal caucus revolt are “absolutely not true.”

A statement from party president Kathryn McGarry thanked Crombie for her service and said details about a forthcoming leadership contest will soon be made public.

The Liberals’ annual general meeting comes days after the party released its post-mortem on this year’s provincial election, which saw Crombie lose her seat and lead her struggling party to a third-place finish with only 14 seats.


“I’m the first to say there were some great wins — of course, we were 30% of the vote, five new seats,” Crombie told CityNews in an interview Friday.

“There were some misses.”



Problems with the platform, messaging, nominations and organization ranked high among the issues flagged about the provincial Liberals’ campaign in the report.

The Ontario Liberals went into this year’s election with only nine seats, below the threshold needed to maintain official party status at Queen’s Park.

Factions of Ontario Liberals — including a grassroots coalition that has branded itself the “New Leaf Liberals” — maintained the only path forward is with a new leader. The New Leaf Liberals wanted Crombie to step aside if the leadership vote was less than 66% — but a party insider told the Sun that Crombie’s 57% result was nothing short of a catastrophe.

“If you can’t whip your own caucus members to vote for you, you’re in a bad place,” they said, speaking under the condition of anonymity.


“It’s no secret that the party’s had a bit of trouble whipping delegates and getting excitement back, but 57% is pretty catastrophic.”


They said a new leader is an important part of waging a comeback for the Ontario Liberals.

“We need a leader who’s going to go across the province and properly listen to everybody, riding by riding.”

Crombie served as MP for Mississauga–Streetsville from 2008 to 2011. That same year, she won a seat on Mississauga city council and eventually succeeded longtime mayor Hazel McCallion with nearly 64% of the vote.

Crombie stepped away from municipal politics to launch a successful run for the Ontario Liberal leadership in late 2023.
 

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TCDSB chair told to turn over items valued at $6,700 billed to taxpayers

Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Sep 15, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 6 minute read

Markus de Domenico
Markus de Domenico of the Toronto Catholic District School Board is pictured in a photo from the TCDSB website. tcdsb.org
Ontario’s minister of education is taking the Toronto Catholic District School Board chair to school Monday by asking him to return dozens of items that he has expensed to the taxpayer.


In fact, in a letter to Markus de Domenico, Ward 2 trustee, who is the TCDSB chair, Minister Paul Calandra detailed 61 items that his staff found in submitted expense forms that he would like to be turned back over to the school board, which at this time is under suspension while the Ford government reviews the system as it has been.


From a $145 Apple Watch strap to AirPods, to headphones, to batteries to a desk and many other items, Calandra wants them all back.

“Dear Mr. de Domenico, It has recently come to my attention, through information provided to me by the Minister-appointed Supervisor at the Toronto Catholic District School Board, that during your tenure as Trustee, you purchased various office and personal electronic devices using Board funds,” wrote Calandra.


“As I’m sure we agree, Board resources are most effective when they support students in classrooms. Given your repeated public statements that you have no office and that, since the Supervisor’s appointment, your role as trustee is limited solely to denominational issues, please arrange to return the following items purchased with taxpayers’ dollars, totalling $6,704.04.”

Chair de Domenico has not so far not commented on this new development. He should explain these expenses and be given an opportunity to.

In a previous Toronto Sun column, he had expressed a need to expense various food items like milkshakes as part of his duties in meeting parents as part of his role of overseeing education.

Claiming the PC government has underfunded school boards, de Domenico admonished the criticism of his expenses as pure political games and said he would not stoop to the level of comparing his expenses to Calandra’s.


But Calandra has made it clear he won’t be taking advice from anybody who would bill the taxpayers for expenses from McDonald’s at 3 a.m. or other lavish and unnecessary dining experiences.

But the minister is taking it to a whole new level by demanding that other items that were purchased under the ledger, as being for professional work, be gathered and brought back to the board in good working order immediately.

“Kindly ensure each item is in working order and includes any accessories and chargers, and that all passwords have been removed,” Calandra wrote.

“Given that several additional purchases were submitted without itemized receipts or with the itemized details curiously removed, please also include any additional devices or accessories that, on reflection, are Board property,” the letter read.


Calandra asked de Domenico to “Please deliver the items at your earliest convenience to the Toronto Catholic District School Board Catholic Education Centre located at 80 Sheppard Avenue East, Toronto” and “if any item is no longer in your possession, provide the date, disposition, and the authorization under which that occurred, along with receipts.”

While the board chair would get an F for expensing all of these items and the minister an A+ for pointing this out, a bigger issue is that taxpayers’ money was used to purchase the items all.

The minister is correct to ask for each and every item to be returned to the public, which owns the items from 30 cell phone screen covers to European prepaid SIM cards to an Obusforme backrest.


And it shouldn’t stop at this trustee, but each and every one of them should be scrutinized because while people in Ontario struggle to pay their rent, their grocery bills and car insurance, there is no way that it is appropriate elected officials should be dinging the taxpayers for so many purchases.

It was a brilliant play here to demand these things be returned, but no matter how it’s spun, it needs to be noted it was our money used to make these purchases and as the minister rightly asks, it’s time to give back our stuff.

Here is a list of what Calandra has asked to be turned over:
Headphones and Audio:

2. 3. 4. 6. AKG Y500 Headphones + Charger – $180.78
BERIBES Over Ear Bluetooth Headphones – $37.99

36 Inch TV Sound Bar – $146.89


DOSS SoundBox Touch Portable Wireless Bluetooth Speakers – $42.99

Apple AirPods Pro with Charging Case – $371.77
ION Total PA Ultimate Speaker – $293.79

Hard Drives:

8. 9. Seagate 2 TB External Hard Drive + USB – $118.63
Samsung T7 Portable SSD 1TD – $248.59

Vansuny 64GB USB Type-C Flash Drive – $11.29

BENFEI USB C to USB 3.0 Adapter, 3 Pack – $11.29
Phone Accessories:

2 Prepaid Europe Sim Cards – $66.04
Iphone XS Max LE Case Black-ZML – $77.97
Lightning to SD Card reader for iPhone Camera – $18.06
ESR Classic Hybrid Magnetic Case with HaloLock, for IPhone 14 Pro – $20.33
TORRAS Crystal Clear Case Compatible for iPhone 12 Pro Max – $19.54
2x BENEWY Headphone Adaptor for iPhone – $10.59
2x CaseMate Phone case – $59.98
Common Craft Wireless Charger and Phone mount – $22.50
HonShoop Wireless Car Charger Mount – $29.99
iBolt MagDock 360 Combo Universal Vehicle Mount – $33.89
BelKin Car Vent Mount for iPhone – $33.84

Laptop sleeves and bags:

Macbook Pro 15 Leather Sleeve Black – $281.37
Amazon Laptop Sleeve – $32.76
Bagasin 15.6 Laptop Sleeve – $25.98
Tomtoc 360-degree Protective Laptop Sleeve for 13-inch MacBook Air – $32.53
MOSISO Laptop Sleeve for MacBook – $27.11
Laptop Backpack with Separate Laptop Compartment – $67.79
Chargers:

Anker Powerport Atom USBC/USBQ CHRGR-ZML – $90.34
Anker Powerline II Lightning Cable – $24.85
Apple USB-C Charging Cable (2M) + 96W USB-C Charger, USB Type C Power Adapter – $135.56
Belkin 2-1 MagSafe Stand Black – $146.84
3 Pack Aloneus Lightning Cable iPhone charging Cord – $14.40
USB C Fast Charger for iPhone 12 – $25.70
87W USB C Charger Power Adapter Compatible with MacBook air 13in – $40.99
96W USB-C Charger, USB Type C Power Adapter – $43.99
ANKER iPhone Powerline Lightning Cable – $12.42

Cameras and Accessories:

60FPS Autofocus 1080P Webcam with Dual Microphone & Privacy Cover –$75.64
AKASO 4K 30 FPS Camera with 64GB Micro SDXC Memory Card – $293.79
Gigastome 64GB SD Card 2 Pack + USB C SD Card Reader Camera Micro TF
Memory – $66.63

Pickle Power 2 pack Batteries and LED charger for Samsung digital camera –$22.58
Ring Light with Tripod Stand – $30.39
Table Top 10-inch USB LED Ring Light – $28.39
Projectors and screens and TV wall mounts:

4K Projector – $402.27
20FT 3.5mm Audio Cable for projector – $14.68
150 inch Portable Projector Screen – $70.05
100 Inch 4K Fixed Frame Projector Screen – $316.34
47. Mounting Dream 42-84 Inch TV Wall Mount – $44.06
USX Mount tilting TV wall mount Low Profile for 20-60in TV – $23.72
USB C to HDMI Adapter + 4K Cable – $48.01

Office Equipment:

Rubbermaid Rougheck Storage Totes 6 Pack – $244.95
2 Lepro Desk Lamps – $73.43
4 Pack Heavy Duty 45 Litre Stackable Totes for Truck – $110.45
LORYERGO Monitor Stand – $38.41
ObusForme Lowback Backrest Support – Lower Back Padded Seat Cushion – $79.07
Bostitch Personal Electric Pencil Sharpener – $25.75
Ikea Desk – $398.89
iPad and Apple Accessories:

11-Inch iPad Air 128GB- Starlight – $924.34
ProCase Smart Case for iPad Air 11-inch – $19.02
Apple Pencil Pro – $179.67
Apple Magic Trackpad Multi-Touch Surface White – $168.37
45mm Graphite Milanese Loop for Apple Watch – $145.77
 

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Crombie sought diplomatic post ahead of leadership vote
Leadership team talked a good game but sought an out in case things went bad for Ontario Liberal Leader.


Author of the article:Brian Lilley
Published Sep 15, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Liberal leader Bonnie Crombie resigned as head of Ontario party after poor showing in a leadership review on Sunday.
Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie is pictured after winning 57% of the vote in a leadership review at the Ontario Liberal Party annual general meeting on Sept. 14, 2025. (The Canadian Press)
If Bonnie Crombie hadn’t been convinced that she was the one to beat Doug Ford, she would still be the mayor of Mississauga. Instead, Crombie will soon be the former leader of the Ontario Liberal Party having never won an election or her own seat.


It’s a sad tale considering that Crombie could have stayed in her position as mayor for years to come, much like her predecessor, Hazel McCallion.


Crombie became the leader of the Ontario Liberal Party in December 2023 and resigned on Sunday, after only securing 57% support in a leadership review. While neither she nor her team publicly stated the level of support they expected, privately they would claim Crombie would get over 70%.

Over the weekend, the Liberals held their party convention at a downtown Toronto hotel and by all accounts it was a disaster. The party brass clearly had no clue how poorly Crombie would perform, they did not do the groundwork to ensure a full and proper victory, and they did not prepare their leader for the result that came.


The results were expected around 12:30 p.m. Sunday, but were delayed by more than an hour. At first, Crombie said that she would stay on as party leader even as she said it wasn’t the result she wanted.

“I met with my caucus this morning and I have the support I need to continue,” Crombie said just after the vote and announcing she would stay. It all made it sound like her caucus supported her.

Later, some caucus members would say that Crombie never even asked for their support, though several expressed support before she resigned and then said she did the right thing after she stepped down.


Ahead of the vote results being made public, there was wild speculation from people all claiming to be in the know. Claims that Crombie’s team was disorganized, claims that her scrutineers were smiling after the vote indicating that she would win, a claim that she got 61.5% of the vote — something they perhaps wish had been true.


While technically a leader only needs 51% support to stay on, practically they need a super-majority of support within their own party to be secure. This isn’t a general election, this is your own party so having a bare majority isn’t enough to stay on as leader.

As one long-time Liberal put it, the dissatisfaction with Crombie ran deep, noting that when 43% of your own party want you gone, it is “the result of pretty broad and deep unhappiness.” Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine Smith and former federal Liberal cabinet minister Navdeep Bains were both agitating against Crombie, but insiders said that the dissatisfaction against Crombie ran deeper than campaigns by either of those individuals hoping to try to unseat her.

Despite Liberal after Liberal saying that Crombie’s team hadn’t prepared her for the poor results, there were claims that Crombie, or her team clearly knew something was up.

“She’s been quietly talking to folks about a possible diplomatic appointment,” a source said of Crombie before the results were known.

So, add Crombie’s name to that of Liberal MPs Chrystia Freeland and Bill Blair looking for an exit via a diplomatic appointment.



Would Canada really be served on the world stage by any of them representing our national interests. Hopefully, the Carney government will say no to all three of these requests.

Crombie left a secure job as mayor of Mississauga to lead a party that didn’t have official party status. It was a huge gamble, a risk few would have taken, so kudos to Crombie for putting her name forward.

Still, the gamble didn’t pay off for Crombie. She was able to increase the seat count of the party and regain official party status but not win her own seat.

In the end, not enough people within her own party wanted her to stay on and the cruel reality of politics set in. The Ontario Liberals are now looking for a new leader and Crombie is looking for her next chapter.
 

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Ontario Liberals to plan new leadership race after Crombie resignation announcement
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Allison Jones
Published Sep 15, 2025 • 3 minute read

Ontario Liberals will soon search for their third leader in less than six years, starting by setting ground rules for would-be contenders, and senior Liberals predict there will be a lot of interest.


The upcoming leadership race was triggered over the weekend, when current Leader Bonnie Crombie announced she will step down as soon as a successor is chosen.


Crombie has held the job for less than two years, but decided to bow out after receiving a weak show of support in a leadership vote at the party’s annual general meeting Sunday.

She initially vowed to stay on despite receiving just 57 per cent support, but announced her intention to resign a few hours later. Crombie had to weigh it both on an intellectual level and on an emotional level, while getting input from scores of voices, said the Liberals’ parliamentary leader, John Fraser.

“Did it happen at the perfect time? No,” Fraser said in an interview. “Was it the perfect decision? One hundred per cent. It took a lot of courage.”


The party must now set about organizing a new leadership race. It will have to determine factors such as how long the contest is, when and how the voting will be held and entry fees.

Ontario Liberal Party president Kathryn McGarry said those decisions won’t be made immediately.

“I don’t expect this to happen any time soon,” she said. “I’d say in the coming weeks, more details will emerge as we put the pieces in place.”

People are already “starting to come out of the woodwork” to suss out potential interest, McGarry said, and the field should be a wide one.

“This is our opportunity to do a real robust search, and to really ensure that we have asked people that may have been interested, or people that don’t know that they’re going to be interested yet,” she said.


“We look to our party’s history and find that some people that weren’t thinking about it were asked, asked again, and they became successful in their quest to gain a seat in the legislature.”

The 2020 race in which party members chose Steven Del Duca had six contenders and the 2023 contest that saw Crombie crowned leader had five people initially running, with four staying in the race until voting day.

That was a good amount of interest for a party that was not in great shape at those times, said Fraser. He believes the prospect of becoming leader of the party now is more attractive, so interest will be high.

“The fundamentals are good,” Fraser said.

The Liberals have official party status in the legislature and therefore more resources and debate time, five more seats than before, a good amount of fundraising activity and 30 per cent of the popular vote in the last election, he noted.

“I think we’ll get interest, and names will start popping up soon. I’m sure people want to get out early.”

One name that won’t be on the ballot is Fraser’s own.

“I owe people a bunch of time,” he said. “I’ve got grandkids, and so I have to actually give them time. I think what this job will require is all of somebody’s time. I’m willing to give a lot of time. I can’t give it all.”
 

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Crombie sought diplomatic post ahead of leadership vote
Leadership team talked a good game but sought an out in case things went bad for Ontario Liberal Leader.


Author of the article:Brian Lilley
Published Sep 15, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Liberal leader Bonnie Crombie resigned as head of Ontario party after poor showing in a leadership review on Sunday.
Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie is pictured after winning 57% of the vote in a leadership review at the Ontario Liberal Party annual general meeting on Sept. 14, 2025. (The Canadian Press)
If Bonnie Crombie hadn’t been convinced that she was the one to beat Doug Ford, she would still be the mayor of Mississauga. Instead, Crombie will soon be the former leader of the Ontario Liberal Party having never won an election or her own seat.


It’s a sad tale considering that Crombie could have stayed in her position as mayor for years to come, much like her predecessor, Hazel McCallion.


Crombie became the leader of the Ontario Liberal Party in December 2023 and resigned on Sunday, after only securing 57% support in a leadership review. While neither she nor her team publicly stated the level of support they expected, privately they would claim Crombie would get over 70%.

Over the weekend, the Liberals held their party convention at a downtown Toronto hotel and by all accounts it was a disaster. The party brass clearly had no clue how poorly Crombie would perform, they did not do the groundwork to ensure a full and proper victory, and they did not prepare their leader for the result that came.


The results were expected around 12:30 p.m. Sunday, but were delayed by more than an hour. At first, Crombie said that she would stay on as party leader even as she said it wasn’t the result she wanted.

“I met with my caucus this morning and I have the support I need to continue,” Crombie said just after the vote and announcing she would stay. It all made it sound like her caucus supported her.

Later, some caucus members would say that Crombie never even asked for their support, though several expressed support before she resigned and then said she did the right thing after she stepped down.


Ahead of the vote results being made public, there was wild speculation from people all claiming to be in the know. Claims that Crombie’s team was disorganized, claims that her scrutineers were smiling after the vote indicating that she would win, a claim that she got 61.5% of the vote — something they perhaps wish had been true.


While technically a leader only needs 51% support to stay on, practically they need a super-majority of support within their own party to be secure. This isn’t a general election, this is your own party so having a bare majority isn’t enough to stay on as leader.

As one long-time Liberal put it, the dissatisfaction with Crombie ran deep, noting that when 43% of your own party want you gone, it is “the result of pretty broad and deep unhappiness.” Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine Smith and former federal Liberal cabinet minister Navdeep Bains were both agitating against Crombie, but insiders said that the dissatisfaction against Crombie ran deeper than campaigns by either of those individuals hoping to try to unseat her.

Despite Liberal after Liberal saying that Crombie’s team hadn’t prepared her for the poor results, there were claims that Crombie, or her team clearly knew something was up.

“She’s been quietly talking to folks about a possible diplomatic appointment,” a source said of Crombie before the results were known.

So, add Crombie’s name to that of Liberal MPs Chrystia Freeland and Bill Blair looking for an exit via a diplomatic appointment.



Would Canada really be served on the world stage by any of them representing our national interests. Hopefully, the Carney government will say no to all three of these requests.

Crombie left a secure job as mayor of Mississauga to lead a party that didn’t have official party status. It was a huge gamble, a risk few would have taken, so kudos to Crombie for putting her name forward.

Still, the gamble didn’t pay off for Crombie. She was able to increase the seat count of the party and regain official party status but not win her own seat.

In the end, not enough people within her own party wanted her to stay on and the cruel reality of politics set in. The Ontario Liberals are now looking for a new leader and Crombie is looking for her next chapter.
Wow. Picture of her crumbling right there!