George Smitherman
George Smitherman (born February 12, 1964) is a Canadian former politician and current broadcaster who represented the Toronto Centre-Rosedale electoral district as a Liberal Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) from 1999 to 2010.[1][2] During his tenure, he held senior cabinet roles under Premier Dalton McGuinty, including Minister of Health and Long-Term Care from 2003 to 2008—one of the longest-serving in that position in recent Ontario history—Deputy Premier from 2007 to 2009, and Minister of Energy and Infrastructure from 2008 to 2009.[2][3] Smitherman was the first openly gay MPP elected in Ontario and the province's first openly gay cabinet minister.[4] As Minister of Health, Smitherman oversaw significant expansions in healthcare infrastructure and policy reforms, though his department faced scrutiny for procurement practices that later contributed to the eHealth Ontario scandal involving no-bid contracts and excessive spending on consultants.[5][6] In his energy portfolio, he introduced the Green Energy Act in 2009, which prioritized renewable energy development through feed-in tariffs and streamlined approvals for green projects, but has been criticized for driving up electricity rates substantially beyond initial projections of about 1% annual increases.[7][8] Known for his combative style—earning the nickname "Furious George"—Smitherman resigned from cabinet in 2009 to unsuccessfully run for Mayor of Toronto in 2010, finishing second to Rob Ford amid campaigns highlighting his ties to provincial spending controversies.[4][9] Post-politics, Smitherman has worked as a political commentator, author of the memoir Unconventional Candour detailing his rise and challenges, and strategic advisor, reflecting on his career's blend of progressive advocacy and fiscal critiques from opponents.[10] His legacy includes advancing LGBTQ+ visibility in Canadian politics while embodying the tensions between ambitious policy reforms and accountability concerns in public administration.[11]Early Life
Upbringing and Education
George Smitherman was born in 1964 in Toronto, Ontario, as one of four children.[12] He grew up in central Etobicoke, a district within the city.[12] Smitherman attended Burnhamthorpe Collegiate Institute for secondary education, where he was elected student council president at age 15.[12] He departed high school prior to completing his diploma and did not enroll in any post-secondary institution, opting instead to enter political organizing work at a young age.[12][13]Entry into Politics
Early Involvement and Provincial Election
Smitherman's entry into politics began during his high school years at Burnhamthorpe Collegiate Institute, where he served as student council president and became involved in Liberal Party organizing under Premier David Peterson's administration from 1985 to 1990.[14] Following graduation, he continued in political roles, including as chief of staff and campaign manager to Toronto Mayor Barbara Hall from 1994 to 1996, during the pre-amalgamation period.[3] [15] He also acted as senior advisor for the Toronto region to federal Liberal ministers David Collenette and Herb Gray.[16] These experiences positioned Smitherman for a provincial candidacy with the Ontario Liberal Party. In the June 3, 1999, general election, he ran in the Toronto Centre—Rosedale riding, securing victory as the Liberals formed the official opposition under Dalton McGuinty amid the Progressive Conservatives' majority government led by Mike Harris.[17] His win marked him as the first openly gay member of the Ontario Legislative Assembly, a distinction noted in contemporary profiles amid the party's urban strongholds.[14] The election occurred against a backdrop of Harris's Common Sense Revolution policies, with Liberals gaining seats in downtown Toronto ridings like Smitherman's.[18]Provincial Political Career
Legislative Roles and Elections
Smitherman was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario as the Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for the Toronto Centre riding in the provincial general election held on June 3, 1999, representing the Ontario Liberal Party in a contest that saw the Progressive Conservative Party secure a majority government under Premier Mike Harris.[2] As one of the first openly gay MPPs in Ontario history, he served in opposition from 1999 to 2003, contributing to legislative scrutiny and party policy development during this period.[4] He was re-elected in the October 2, 2003, general election, coinciding with the Liberal Party's victory that formed a majority government under Premier Dalton McGuinty, thereby transitioning Smitherman to the government side.[2] Smitherman secured another term in the October 10, 2007, election, held amid a referendum on electoral reform, where the Liberals formed a minority government; his riding, encompassing diverse urban communities including St. James Town, remained a Liberal stronghold throughout his tenure.[2] [19] Throughout his legislative service, Smitherman engaged in assembly debates, constituency representation, and committee participation, though detailed non-executive roles such as parliamentary assistant positions prior to cabinet appointments are not prominently documented in official records.[2] He resigned his seat effective January 3, 2010, to pursue the Toronto mayoralty, triggering a byelection won by Liberal Glen Murray.[2] [20]Cabinet Positions
George Smitherman entered the Ontario cabinet following the October 2, 2003, provincial election, in which the Liberal Party under Premier Dalton McGuinty formed a majority government. He was sworn in as Minister of Health and Long-Term Care on October 23, 2003.[21] This role positioned him to oversee one of the province's largest budgetary portfolios, encompassing hospitals, public health, and long-term care facilities.[11] On September 21, 2006, McGuinty appointed Smitherman as Deputy Premier while he continued as Minister of Health and Long-Term Care.[22] In this capacity, he acted as the premier's primary substitute and coordinated government priorities across ministries. Following the Liberals' re-election on October 10, 2007, Smitherman retained both positions until a cabinet shuffle on June 20, 2008.[23] [2] Smitherman then transitioned to Minister of Energy and Infrastructure, maintaining his role as Deputy Premier.[2] This portfolio involved directing infrastructure projects and energy policy, including initiatives for renewable energy development. His combined tenure as Deputy Premier and a senior minister lasted until November 9, 2009, when he resigned from all positions to pursue the mayoralty of Toronto.[24] [25]| Position | Start Date | End Date |
|---|---|---|
| Minister of Health and Long-Term Care | October 23, 2003 | June 20, 2008 |
| Deputy Premier | September 21, 2006 | November 9, 2009 |
| Minister of Energy and Infrastructure | June 20, 2008 | November 9, 2009 |
Policy Implementation and Achievements
As Minister of Health and Long-Term Care from October 2005 to June 2008, Smitherman oversaw the implementation of Ontario's Wait Times Strategy, which aimed to reduce delays for priority procedures including cataract surgery, hip and knee replacements, cancer treatment, heart procedures, and diagnostic imaging.[26] In Phase I of the strategy (2004-2005), $35 million was allocated to hospitals to expand procedures in five key areas, marking an initial effort to address surgical backlogs through targeted funding.[26] By 2007, provincial data indicated double-digit reductions in wait times across regions, with Ontario achieving national leadership: cataract surgery waits dropped 61.4 percent, knee replacements 41.6 percent, and hip replacements 36.2 percent since 2005.[27] [28] Smitherman also advanced health system performance measurement, including the release of standardized wait time reports to enhance transparency and accountability, with commitments to refine reporting methodologies based on evidence.[29] In December 2005, he announced initiatives to improve patient data quality for better care coordination, integrating electronic health records to support decision-making.[30] As Minister of Energy and Infrastructure from June 2008 to November 2009, serving concurrently as Deputy Premier, Smitherman introduced the Green Energy and Green Economy Act, enacted in May 2009 to promote renewable energy development and energy efficiency.[31] The legislation streamlined approvals for green projects, set feed-in tariffs for solar and wind power, and aimed to integrate more renewable sources into Ontario's electricity grid, with public consultations yielding suggestions to bolster local manufacturing and job creation in the sector.[7] During his tenure, the act facilitated early contracts for renewable generation, targeting increased capacity to meet provincial energy demands while reducing reliance on fossil fuels.[32]Controversies and Criticisms
During his tenure as Ontario's Minister of Health and Long-Term Care from October 2003 to June 2008, Smitherman faced significant criticism over the establishment and early operations of eHealth Ontario, a provincial agency created in 2008 to manage electronic health records and related IT projects. An Auditor General's report released on June 16, 2009, highlighted irregularities including $11 million in untendered contracts awarded to consultants with ties to executives, excessive expenses such as $1,000 dinners and $2,000-a-night hotel stays, and a lack of competitive bidding processes that inflated costs for a project originally budgeted at $47 million but ballooning due to poor oversight.[5] Opposition parties, including the Progressive Conservatives and New Democrats, demanded his resignation in October 2009, arguing that as the minister responsible for health policy during the agency's inception, Smitherman bore accountability for the "culture of entitlement" and failure to enforce procurement rules, even after his departure from the health portfolio.[5] Smitherman defended himself by attributing the issues to bureaucratic lapses post his tenure and subsequent leadership changes, but critics, including then-Auditor General Jim McCarter, noted systemic failures originating under his watch that contributed to over $200 million in wasted expenditures by 2010.[33] [6] Smitherman was also associated with controversies at Ornge, the provincially funded air ambulance service, where a 2012 Auditor General report detailed $730 million in government funding over five years marred by opaque for-profit subsidiaries, executive bonuses exceeding $1 million annually, and contracts lacking proper oversight, leading to investigations by the RCMP and provincial authorities.[9] As former health minister, he was criticized for not implementing sufficient accountability measures during Ornge's expansion under his department, though Smitherman countered in April 2012 that ministry bureaucrats failed to monitor the organization adequately and that he had relied on their expertise.[9] The linkage persisted as a political liability, with commentators noting it compounded perceptions of mismanagement in health-related initiatives during the Liberal government's tenure.[34] In his role as Minister of Energy and Infrastructure from June 2008 to September 2009, Smitherman drew scrutiny for aspects of Ontario's green energy policies, including feed-in tariffs that prioritized renewable projects amid rising electricity costs, contributing to what opponents termed a "green energy debacle" with billions in subsidies and ratepayer burdens.[35] Additionally, his interpersonal style—described by staff and colleagues as abrasive, with frequent outbursts and a reputation for being temperamental—led to internal cabinet tensions and high staff turnover, as reported in media accounts of his demanding leadership during policy implementations.[36] [6] These criticisms resurfaced during his 2010 Toronto mayoral campaign, where rival Rob Ford's team amplified the eHealth issues to portray Smitherman as emblematic of Liberal waste, influencing voter perceptions despite Smitherman's denials of direct culpability.[11]Toronto Mayoral Campaign
2010 Election Platform and Strategies
Smitherman's 2010 mayoral platform emphasized fiscal restraint alongside investments in infrastructure and public services, positioning him as a competent manager drawing on his provincial government experience. Key fiscal pledges included an immediate hiring freeze for non-essential services, a line-by-line review of the city's internal services budget, and a $2 million cut to the $22 million budget for the mayor and councillors through service and spending reviews. He committed to reducing the vehicle registration tax and opposed selling city assets to balance the budget, deeming such measures short-sighted. On public services, he promised to hire at least 50 additional police officers, funded by overtime and traffic court savings; add drinking fountains in parks and 20 new beach showers; enable online booking for rinks and recreation facilities; and install public kiosks for resident feedback on service levels.[37][38] A cornerstone of the platform was a $17 billion transportation expansion plan, funded by $10 billion from municipal, provincial, and federal commitments, with the remainder from a transit trust drawing on gas taxes, Toronto Hydro revenues, parking authority funds, and public-private partnerships. Specific initiatives included converting the Scarborough RT to an above-ground subway integrated with the Bloor-Danforth line and extending it 7 km west from Kipling to Sherway Gardens; extending the Sheppard subway west from Yonge Street to Downsview; building the Finch LRT to Humber College; tunneling the Eglinton LRT further west to Weston Road; completing the Spadina extension to York University; extending Sheppard LRT to the University of Toronto Scarborough campus; and adding waterfront streetcar service to the West Don Lands, with some projects targeted for 2015 Pan Am Games completion. Complementary measures involved free midday TTC rides for seniors, expanded separated bike lanes, and cycle superhighways. Environmental and waste policies featured a scientific review of waste management, exploration of thermal disposal technologies, and appointment of a science advisor to innovate garbage solutions while incentivizing recycling.[39][38] Campaign strategies centered on leveraging Smitherman's executive background to project stability and expertise amid voter frustration with city hall, with messaging focused on "change with competence" and restoring public confidence. Early efforts included high-profile launches, such as a February 22, 2010, platform unveiling at a sold-out $125-ticket event for 80 supporters, emphasizing job creation and efficient governance. Facing polling declines, the campaign underwent a mid-April reset under new manager Bruce Davis, former Toronto District School Board chair, to adopt a more aggressive posture and "unleash" Smitherman's profile through direct voter outreach. Late strategies targeted left-leaning voters disillusioned with rival Rob Ford, including efforts to consolidate support from councillor Joe Pantalone's base via promises appealing to progressive priorities like transit expansion and accessibility testing on the TTC.[37][40][41] Endorsements bolstered the establishment-oriented approach, including backing from former mayor Art Eggleton on October 15, 2010; the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 79; and editorial support from The Globe and Mail, which praised his ability to "get things done" despite critiquing platform flaws, and The Toronto Star, which highlighted his progressive values. Union support from CUPE contrasted with rival endorsements, aiding mobilization in public sector-heavy areas, though the campaign contended with Ford's grassroots populism and personal attacks on Smitherman's record and private life.[42][43][44][45]Results and Post-Election Analysis
In the October 25, 2010, Toronto mayoral election, Rob Ford won with 383,501 votes, equivalent to 47.1% of the 813,984 total votes cast, defeating George Smitherman, who received 289,832 votes or 35.6%.[46][47][48] Incumbent left-leaning councillor Joe Pantalone finished third with 95,482 votes (11.7%), splitting the progressive vote and preventing a clearer left-right contest. Voter turnout reached approximately 53%, higher than in previous municipal elections, driven by intense suburban mobilization.[47] Ford's victory reflected a pronounced urban-suburban geographic divide, with him securing over 50% support in suburban regions like Etobicoke (65%), North York (53%), and Scarborough (57%), while Smitherman dominated the denser former City of Toronto core with 51% of votes there.[48] Ecological regression analyses of ward-level data identified automobile commuting as the strongest predictor of Ford support (standardized β coefficients ranging from 0.53 to 0.80 across models, R²=0.74–0.80), alongside lower median household incomes (β=-0.20 to -0.36), indicating appeal to car-dependent, working-class suburbanites frustrated with urban-focused transit expansions like Transit City.[48] Homeownership showed weak negative correlation with Ford votes, challenging assumptions of property-owner conservatism, while the core-suburban dummy variable exerted a strong negative effect on his support (β=-0.40), underscoring post-1998 amalgamation tensions where suburbs felt marginalized by downtown policies.[48] Causal factors centered on retrospective dissatisfaction with outgoing mayor David Miller's administration, marked by property tax hikes averaging 7.5% annually from 2006–2010 and perceived wasteful spending on social programs amid post-2008 recession fiscal strains, which Ford's "stop the gravy train" pledge directly targeted through promises of 7–10% budget cuts without service reductions.[49] Smitherman's campaign, emphasizing fiscal prudence via audits and modest transit investments, positioned him as a centrist alternative but failed to counter Ford's simpler anti-tax populism or overcome associations with Ontario's Liberal government's eHealth procurement scandals and deficit spending during his tenure as deputy premier.[50][48] Pre-election polls showed a tight race, with Ford trailing Smitherman by margins as narrow as 2 points in mid-October, but Ford surged on higher suburban turnout (despite overall lower turnout in his strongholds at 43% vs. 49% in Smitherman's).[51][48] Smitherman conceded the night of the election, congratulating Ford and pledging cooperation on shared priorities like balanced budgets, though he later reflected that Ford's win exploited a "populist wave" fueled by economic discontent and personal attacks, including insinuations about Smitherman's sexuality.[52][53] The outcome highlighted Toronto's evolving electoral dynamics, where suburban fiscal conservatism trumped urban progressive coalitions, setting the stage for Ford's term focused on austerity measures that achieved $1 billion in savings by 2012 but faced council resistance on social spending.[48][49]Post-Political Career
Business and Advisory Roles
Following his unsuccessful 2010 Toronto mayoral campaign, Smitherman founded G&G Global Solutions, a consulting firm, and served as its chairman and principal.[54] In 2011, he was appointed a zone advisor to Ryerson University's Digital Media Zone, an incubator for startups.[3] That same year, he began serving as a special adviser to Ryerson University president Sheldon Levy, a role he held through 2012 and for which he was compensated $158,833.32.[55][56] From 2014 onward, Smitherman shifted focus to the cannabis sector, leading the development of a cannabis production licence application under Canada's Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations.[57] He subsequently held the position of senior vice president of corporate affairs at Biome Grow, a Toronto-based cannabis company.[58] In March 2016, he was appointed chief executive officer of Alta Vista Ventures Ltd., a firm involved in cannabis-related ventures, overseeing operational aspects until his replacement in September 2016.[59] Smitherman has founded three companies and served as a director on the boards of several public companies, primarily leveraging his policy expertise in regulated industries.[60][57] In March 2020, Smitherman became president and CEO of the Cannabis Council of Canada (C3), an industry advocacy organization, where he advocated for regulatory reforms to support licensed producers amid challenges like black market competition and excise taxes.[61] He held this position until January 31, 2024, after which C3 initiated a search for a successor.[62] Immediately following, on February 1, 2024, he joined Delphic Research as senior strategic advisor, providing counsel on public affairs and government relations drawing from his four decades in politics.[63][64]Public Engagement and Recent Developments
In February 2024, Smitherman joined Delphic Research as a senior strategic advisor, where he provides counsel on strategic initiatives drawing from his extensive political background.[63] Earlier that month, he stepped down as president of the Cannabis Council of Canada after four years, during which he advocated for industry growth and regulatory reforms.[61] Smitherman has remained active in public discourse on policy and leadership, participating in panels such as the 2021 webinar on Black experiences in cannabis and mental health, hosted by the Mental Health Commission of Canada.[65] He serves as a speaker at events like the Grow Up Conference and Expo, focusing on cannabis sector expertise combined with his governmental service.[57] In September 2025, he discussed leadership principles in building effective political organizations during an Instagram reel interview.[66] Through social media, Smitherman engages on current affairs, including a October 2025 LinkedIn post critiquing Ontario's policy to offer two years of free college tuition, emphasizing fiscal implications.[67] His commentary often highlights entrepreneurial perspectives and community involvement, positioning him as an outspoken voice on health, energy, and economic issues post-politics.[68]Electoral Record
Smitherman first won election to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario as the Liberal candidate in the Toronto Centre—Rosedale riding during the June 3, 1999, provincial general election, becoming the first openly gay MPP in the province's history. He was re-elected in the same riding on October 2, 2003, and again on October 10, 2007, with 21,522 votes representing 47.85% of the popular vote in the latter contest.[69] Smitherman resigned his seat in late 2009 to pursue the Toronto mayoralty, triggering a by-election in early 2010 that was won by Liberal Glen Murray.[70] In the October 25, 2010, Toronto municipal election, Smitherman ran as an independent for mayor, securing 289,832 votes (24.4% of the total) and finishing second to Rob Ford's 383,501 votes (32.6%).[46]| Year | Election | Party | Votes | % | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Ontario provincial (Toronto Centre—Rosedale) | Liberal | — | — | 1st (elected)[69] |
| 2003 | Ontario provincial (Toronto Centre) | Liberal | — | — | 1st (elected)[69] |
| 2007 | Ontario provincial (Toronto Centre) | Liberal | 21,522 | 47.85 | 1st (elected)[69] |
| 2010 | Toronto mayoral | Independent | 289,832 | 24.4 | 2nd[46] |