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Chris Friel (politician)

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Chris Friel
File:MayorChrisFriel.jpg
Mayor of Brantford, Ontario
In office
December 1, 2010 – December 2018
Preceded byMike Hancock
Succeeded byKevin Davis
In office
1994–2003
Preceded byBob Taylor
Succeeded byMike Hancock
Personal details
BornBrantford, Ontario

Chris Friel is a politician in the Canadian province of Ontario. He was the mayor of Brantford from 1994 to 2003 and was re-elected to the same position in the 2010 municipal election. He was defeated in the 2018 municipal election by Kevin Davis.

Early life and private career

Friel was born and raised in Brantford. He has an Honours Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from the University of Waterloo (1989).[1] Before running for office, he was the executive director of a non-profit government agency.[2]

Both of his parents were active in politics. His father, James Friel, was involved in the labour movement and ran for a trustee position on the Brant County Board of Education in 1976.[3] His mother, Judy Friel, ran for a seat on the Brantford City Council in 2000.[4]

After his loss in 2003, he worked in business and economic development with the Ontario Native Affairs Secretariat.[5]

Mayor of Brantford

Friel was first elected as mayor of Brantford in the 1994 municipal election, defeating one-term incumbent Bob Taylor. He was only twenty-seven years old at the time.[6] He was re-elected in 1997, defeating right-wing candidate Andy Woodburn by a significant margin. He initially planned to stand down in 2000, but later changed his mind and was re-elected for a third term.[7]

Friel became mayor during a period of economic difficulties for Brantford; shortly after his election, he described the city as having the worst downtown in Canada.[8] He later presided over a period of economic growth for the city.[9]

Friel initially opposed the Brantford Charity Casino, describing it as a "scam" designed to shift money from the city to the province. He was quoted as saying, "What bothers me is that the government used to do these capital projects to build a country. . . . Now the government is doing work that is building gaming. It's like they've given up, there's no creativity." [10] He later accepted the casino's presence and tried to ensure it would provide some benefits to his community, though he still described it as an economic mistake.[11]

He helped establish Laurier Brantford, a local division of Wilfrid Laurier University.[12] He was also mayor when the Brantford Eaton's closed and took part in overseeing the site's transformation into a call centre.[13] During his second term, he spoke in favour of keeping the Brantford Hydro-Electric Commission as a public utility.[14]

Friel encouraged merger discussions between Brantford and neighbouring Brant County in 2000. At one stage, he said that he would ask the province to impose a decision on restructuring if the county declined talks. Brant County Mayor Ron Eddy strongly opposed this position, and Friel later acknowledged that producing a local agreement would be impossible.[15] During the same period, Friel argued that the Six Nations people have a legitimate claim to the land surrounding the Grand River, six miles in each direction.[16] Generally, Friel was known for having good relations with local indigenous groups.[17]

Friel strongly supported Brantford's anti-smoking by-law, citing his own father's death from lung cancer at a relatively young age.[18] He himself took a three-month leave of absence in 2002 due to serious health issues.[19]

Friel was defeated in the 2003 mayoral election, losing to Mike Hancock by only fifteen votes.[20] He chose not to seek a recount.[21] He challenged Hancock again in the 2006 election and lost by 165 votes. When Hancock did not seek re-election in 2010, Friel ran for mayor again and won by a significant margin.

A newspaper article from 2000 described his political style as "flamboyant, sometimes truculent."[22] When running for re-election in 2003, he acknowledged that he had been an unorthodox mayor.[23]

Federal and provincial politics

Friel was a political ally of Brant Member of Parliament (MP) Jane Stewart, who served as a cabinet minister in Jean Chrétien's government.[24] He strongly criticized provincial premier Mike Harris at a 2001 Labour Day rally,[25] although he was more complimentary toward Chris Hodgson, Harris's municipal affairs minister.[26]

Friel sought the Liberal Party nomination for Brant in the buildup to the 2004 federal election, but lost to Lloyd St. Amand.[27]

Electoral record

2010 Brantford municipal election: Mayor of Brantford
Candidate Votes %
(x)Chris Friel 11,334 41.80
John Sless 5,466 20.16
Mark Littell 3,417 12.60
Dianne M. Austin 3,267 12.05
Mike Quattrociocchi 1,875 6.92
James Calnan 1,068 3.94
Richard E. Casey 495 1.83
Winston C. Ferguson 131 0.48
John Turmel 61 0.22
Total valid votes 27,114 100
  • See the 2010 Brantford election page for information on defeated candidates other than Turmel.


2006 Brantford municipal election: Mayor of Brantford
Candidate Votes %
(x)Mike Hancock 13,212 49.22
Chris Friel 13,047 48.60
Winston C. Ferguson 360 1.34
John Turmel 226 0.84
Total valid votes 26,845 100


2003 Brantford municipal election: Mayor of Brantford
Candidate Votes %
(x)Mike Hancock 11,668 48.53
Chris Friel 11,653 48.47
Randy Tooke 721 3.00
Total valid votes 24,042 100
  • See the 2003 Brantford election page for information on Tooke.


2000 Brantford municipal election: Mayor of Brantford
Candidate Votes %
(x)Chris Friel 13,251 45.60
John Starkey 9,586 32.99
Dave Neumann 4,015 13.82
Kevin Raymond 1,777 6.12
Winston C. Ferguson 245 0.84
Joseph Robert Gallant 185 0.64
Total valid votes 29,059 100
  • See the 2000 Brantford election page for information on Raymond and Gallant.


1997 Brantford municipal election: Mayor of Brantford
Candidate Votes %
(x)Chris Friel 18,442 67.83
Andy Woodburn 5,521 20.31
Wayne Barlett 1,600 5.89
Joseph Robert Gallant 1,174 4.32
Patrick Clement 450 1.66
Total valid votes 27,187 100
  • See the 1997 Brantford election page for information on Barlett and Clement.


1994 Brantford municipal election: Mayor of Brantford
Candidate Votes %
Chris Friel 10,695 41.97
(x)Bob Taylor 7,631 29.95
Bob Lancaster 3,981 15.62
John Starkey 1,754 6.88
Dan McCreary 1,094 4.29
Chuck Giles 325 1.28
Total valid votes 25,480 100
  • See the 1994 Brantford election page for information on Lancaster.

References

  1. ^ About Chris Archived July 25, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Chris Friel for Brantford (campaign site), accessed 5 November 2010.
  2. ^ "Young rookie whips incumbent," Hamilton Spectator, 15 November 1994, B3.
  3. ^ "Workers across Ontario observe Labour Day," Cambridge Reporter, 4 September 2001, B8.
  4. ^ Lisa Grace Marr, "Brantford's Mayor Friel wins the job he says he's best at; Rival says he made leadership an issue, but this gave young incumbent an edge," Hamilton Spectator, 14 November 2000, D09.
  5. ^ Susan Gamble, "There's life after politics," Brantford Expositor, 23 December 2004, A3.
  6. ^ Paula Kulig, "Blight on Main Street," Toronto Star, 19 May 1996, D1.
  7. ^ "Ex-mayor in Brantford race," Hamilton Spectator, 7 April 2000, A11. The article title refers to Dave Neumann, not to Friel.
  8. ^ Paula Kulig, "Blight on Main Street Even the mayor says Brantford has the worst downtown in Canada—a victim like so many others of shopping malls," Toronto Star, 19 May 1996, D1.
  9. ^ Richard Beales, "Don't be negative, Friel says: Mayor insists city's growth is no illusion," Brantford Expositor, 4 October 2002, A1; Michael-Allan Marion, Cheryl Bauslaugh and Lori Littleton, "Mayors raring to go: Chris Friel and Ron Eddy confirm intentions to run again," Brantford Expositor, 7 January 2003, A3.
  10. ^ Moira Welsh and Kevin Donovan, untitled article, Toronto Star 15 March 1998, A1.
  11. ^ Ken Kilpatrick, "Casino foes plan last-ditch rally," Toronto Star, 4 May 1998, A8.
  12. ^ Luisa D'Amato, "WLU launches unique campus in Brantford," Kitchener-Waterloo Record, 30 June 1998, A1; Luisa D'Amato, "$500 off at new WLU campus," Kitchener-Waterloo Record, 18 March 1999, A2.
  13. ^ John Goddard, "Brantford fights back," Toronto Star, 8 November 1999, p. 1.
  14. ^ Ross Marowits, "Brantford Hydro won't go on block: Council decides utility should stay public—for now," Brantford Expositor, 7 April 1999, A1.
  15. ^ Carol Parafenko, "Brant mayor slams threat by Brantford over merger," Hamilton Spectator, 6 January 2000, A6; Ross Marowits, "Friel backs off on talks of city-county amalgamation," Brantford Expositor, 18 January 2000, A3; Ross Marowits and Michael-Allan Marion, "Brant frosty to Friel plan: `My forehead is bloody from beating on a brick wall'—Friel," Brantford Expositor, 16 February 2000, A1.
  16. ^ John Zronik, "Friel backs native land claims," Brantford Expositor, 28 August 2000, A1.
  17. ^ Susan Gamble, "Native voters could sway Brant riding," Brantford Expositor, 12 June 2004, A1.
  18. ^ Chris Brennan, "Mayor's personal history drives fight against smoking," Brantford Expositor, 16 October 2002, A10.
  19. ^ Michael-Allan Marion, "Friel gets leave," Brantford Expositor, 7 May 2002, A1.
  20. ^ Natalie Alcoba, "Recounts seen for Oakville, Brantford mayors," Hamilton Spectator, 11 November 2003, A04.
  21. ^ "Brantford's mayor won't seek vote recount," Hamilton Spectator, 21 November 2003, A06.
  22. ^ Lisa Grace Marr, "Brantford mayor has change of heart; Friel decides to run for mayor after all," Hamilton Spectator, 6 October 2000, A03.
  23. ^ Michael-Allan Marion, "Mayoral candidates offer study in contrast," Brantford Expositor, 1 November 2003, A1.
  24. ^ "Stewart's riding gets $30M in grants," Kitchener-Waterloo Record, 11 February 2000, A03.
  25. ^ "Workers across Ontario observe Labour Day," Cambridge Reporter, 4 September 2001, B8; Michael-Allan Marion, "Friel blasts him," Brantford Expositor, 4 September 2001, A1.
  26. ^ Michael-Allan Marion, "Mixed reaction to Eves cabinet," Brantford Expositor, 16 April 2002, A3.
  27. ^ Michael-Allan Marion, "Grits race to replace Stewart," Brantford Expositor, 17 February 2004, A1; Michael-Allan Marion, "St. Amand gets nod: More than 1,400 attend meeting," Brantford Expositor, 1 April 2004, A1.