Jump to content

2003 Ontario municipal elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Earl Andrew (talk | contribs) at 17:23, 8 October 2023 (Cambridge). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In the 2003 municipal elections in Ontario, voters in Ontario, Canada, elected mayors, councillors, school board trustees and all other elected officials in all of Ontario's municipalities.

Results of election

According to the Association of Municipalities of Ontario, province-wide turnout for municipal elections in 2003 was 40.18% across 408 municipalities. This was down roughly 1%. 574 positions were acclaimed and 28 municipalities reported that their entire councils were acclaimed. In all, there were 5,103 candidates for 2,268 positions.

Here are results of mayoral races in selected cities in the civic elections held on November 10, 2003.

  • Steve Parish 10,302
  • Kip Van Kempen 4,192
  • Tim Jones 5,597
  • Homer Farsad 3,014
  • Rob Hamilton 14,213
  • Patricia B. Copeland 7,901
  • Jim Perri 5,020
  • Jon Vink 395
  • Mary-Anne Sills 5,945
  • Neil R. Ellis 5,707
  • Doug Parker 3,256
  • Trueman Tuck 57
  • Rob MacIsaac (acclaimed)
  • Marolyn Morrison 4,075
  • Richard Whitehead 3,855
  • Gary Wiles 3,635
  • Anthony Di Somma 1,455
  • Diane Gagner 16,737
  • Austin Wright 6,033
  • Mary K. Lee 4,817
  • Richard Erickson 4,202
  • Larry Brundritt 1,989
  • William "Bill" Arends 1,472
  • John Mutton 16,143
  • Richard Ward 1,824
  • Phil Poirier 7,271
  • Brian Sylvester 6,131
  • Andre Rivette 1,756
  • Robert Grossi 6,631
  • Jeffrey Holec 4,441

In a surprisingly active race (Toronto was the only city in the province with more mayoral candidates on the ballot), city councillor David Courtemanche emerged the victor over businessman Paul Marleau to succeed retiring mayor Jim Gordon.


2003 Greater Sudbury municipal election: Mayor of Greater Sudbury
Candidate Votes %
David Courtemanche 19,152 35.56
Paul Marleau 11,360 21.10
Colin Firth 8,096 15.03
Louise Portelance 5,645 10.48
John Caruso 4,693 8.71
Tom Boyuk 1,930 3.58
Brian R. Gatien 1,280 2.38
Richard Doyon 667 1.24
Mary Fournier Pagnutti 405 0.75
David Chevrier 271 0.50
Yvonne Neison 141 0.26
Robert Maurice 102 0.19
Ed Pokonzie 67 0.12
David Popescu 42 0.08
Total valid votes 53,851 100.00

In 2003, Guelph was the only major city in the province where both of the leading candidates for mayor were women.

  • Rick Bonnette 5,035
  • John Day 4,022
  • Kathy Gastle 2,206
  • Marilyn Serjeantson 1,423
  • Marie Trainer 7,303
  • Lorraine Bergstrand 6,192
  • Wilfred Marlowe 1,363

See 2003 Hamilton municipal election

  • Barbara Kelly 9,748
  • John R. Macklem 7,189
  • Patrick J. O’Reilly 6,882
  • Patrick Dunn 4,585
  • Joe McGuire 4,335
  • Carl Zehr 23,707
  • Jon Huemiller 4,553
  • Ferenc Kulcsar 739
  • Anne Marie DeCicco 48,789
  • Vaughan Minor 37,337
  • Garry Moon 1,871
  • Ivan W. Kasiurak 865
  • Andrew McIlhargey 729
  • Carl Harris 636
  • Frank Burlock 578
  • Linden John Cassina 506
  • Mesbah Eldeeb 388
  • Kenneth Venus 312
  • Peter Schuller 296
  • Gord Krantz 6,238
  • Rick Malboeuf 2,224
  • Al Volpe 701
  • Las Polcz 409
  • Vito Agozzino 369
  • David Lloyd 331

First elected mayor in 1978, Hazel McCallion was easily reelected to her tenth term. As one of the longest serving politicians in the country, Mayor McCallion is well known to Mississaugans.

  • Hazel McCallion 74,719
  • Masood Khan 2,304
  • Charles Coober 1,613
  • Larry J. Mancini 1,478
  • Dyal Chanderpaul 1,419
  • Al Heller 8,645
  • Tom Taylor 4,604
  • David Martin 2,268

See: 2003 Norfolk County municipal election

  • Rita Kalmbach 12,143
  • Brian Decker 5,158
  • Vic Fedeli 13,025
  • Lynne Bennett 3,147
  • Tim Wright 686
  • Jeff Marceau 508

Incumbent Ann Mulvale's narrow defeat of development skeptic Rob Burton had to be confirmed later in a judicial recount.

Incumbent mayor Nancy Diamond was defeated by challenger John Gray in a race that also hinged on economic and urban development; Gray was the pro-development candidate.

  • John Gray 14,921
  • Michael Clarke 7,333
  • Nancy Diamond 5,871
  • Ed Kowalczyk 1,827
  • Darlene Hovland 229

Incumbent Bob Chiarelli was reelected after facing an unexpectedly strong challenge from Terry Kilrea.

  • Bob Chiarelli 104,595
  • Terry Kilrea 66,634
  • Ike Awgu 5,394
  • Ron Burke 2,698
  • John A. Bell 2,027
  • Donna Upson 1,312
  • Paula Nemchin 1,191
  • John Turmel 1,166
  • Sylvia Sutherland 11,194
  • Douglas Peacock 10,522
  • D. Paul Ayotte 5,155
  • Margaree Edwards 1,326
  • Bob Campney 4,611
  • Terry R. F. Cassidy 3,051
  • Bill Armstrong 2,801
  • Claude Rolland du-Lude 118
  • Mike Bradley 13,707
  • Rose-Ann Nathan 5,716
  • Tom Hurst 623
  • Carlos Murray 330
  • Hermann Martens 198
  • John Rowswell 11,713
  • Peter Vaudry 8,579
  • Patricia Jennings 7,000
  • Gary Bedryk 812

See: 2003 St. Catharines municipal election

  • Tim Rigby 9,558
  • Wendy Patriquin 9,504
  • Rondi Craig 9,189
  • Mark Klimchuk 1,166
  • Burt Koiter 415
  • Boris Petrovici 212
  • Jeff Kohler 5,876
  • Joanne Brooks 3,596
  • John R. Heaslip 587
  • Lynn Peterson 26,572
  • Frank Pullia 13,690
  • Orville Santa 3,767
  • Don Slobojan 3,602
  • (Mike) Marvin McMenemy 330

Victor M. Power, Mayor of Timmins for 17 of the 20 years from 1980 to 2000, who did not stand in the 2000 municipal election, came out of retirement and was returned against one-term incumbent and the first female mayor of Timmins Jamie Lim.

David Miller was elected mayor defeating John Tory, Barbara Hall and John Nunziata. See also: 2003 Toronto municipal election Results of 2003 Toronto election

  • Damian Goulbourne 7,554
  • Cindy Forster 5,312
  • Philip Bradley 2,036
  • Dick Reuter 1,892
  • John Watt 473
  • Frank Garofalo 378
  • Marcel Brunelle 11,548
  • Judy Griffiths 3,052
  • Michael Harding 4,789
  • Sandra J. Talbot 3,520

See also