- John Nunziata
John Nunziata (born
January 4 ,1955 ) is a Canadian politician. He served in theCanadian House of Commons from 1984 to 2000, initially as a Liberal and later as an independent member.Nunziata was born in Revelstoke,
British Columbia , and was educated atYork University andOsgoode Hall Law School . He worked as a lawyer before entering public life.The early years
Nunziata started his career as a supporter of the New Democratic Party on a suburban
Toronto city council , but left the party in the early 1980s. He campaigned as a Liberal for a 1982 provincialby-election inYork South , but lost to new NDP leaderBob Rae .Nunziata was elected to the
Canadian House of Commons in the 1984 general election as a Liberal despite a national Progressive Conservative landslide. Nunziata thrived as a member of the opposition Rat Pack, a group of Liberal Members of Parliament (MPs) includingDon Boudria ,Brian Tobin , andSheila Copps , who made it their business to bring misery to the government of Prime MinisterBrian Mulroney .Nunziata's ideological position in the Liberal Party was not clearly defined at this stage. He was opposed to
abortion , but his views on other issues were not always socially conservative. During the national debate oncapital punishment in 1986, he was one of the strongest parliamentary opponents of any restoration of the death penalty. He was re-elected without difficulty in the 1988 election.Federal Liberal leadership bid
When John Turner resigned as Liberal leader, Nunziata ran to succeed him in the 1990
Liberal leadership convention . He was unable to develop a strong support base, and placed last in a field of five candidates. Nunziata alleged thatLiberals for Life , apro-life group working within the Liberal Party, had offered to support his candidacy in exchange for money. (A pro-life group in the Liberal Party did endorse the candidacy ofTom Wappel .)Marginalization in the Liberal Party
In the buildup to the 1993 federal election, Nunziata criticized Liberal leader
Jean Chrétien for appointingArt Eggleton over a local candidate inYork Centre . He was forced to apologize for his comments, and was excluded from cabinet when the Liberals won a majority government in the election. He was the only member of the "Rat Pack" who was never included in cabinet.Nunziata became increasingly outspoken in both his socially-conservative views and his criticisms of the Liberal government. On
April 21 ,1996 , he was expelled from the Liberalcaucus after he voted against the government'sbudget in protest over the government breaking a promise to rescind the Goods and Services Tax.Nunziata as an independent
Despite the difficulties of winning a seat as an independent, Nunziata ran and won re-election in the 1997 general election without the support of any party. He defeated Toronto councillor
Judy Sgro by 4,431 votes to retain his riding, and so became the only independent member elected to the new parliament. Nunziata's campaign signs in this election featured the same shade of red as that used by the Liberal Party, and many voters likely considered him an independent Liberal.hift to the right
After the 1997 election, Nunziata's policy views shifted dramatically to the right on a number of subjects. He reversed his previous opposition to capital punishment, campaigned for Progressive Conservative candidate
Annamarie Castrilli in the 1999 provincial election and drew closer to the right-wingCanadian Alliance party on a variety of issues. There were suggestions throughout 2000 that he might join the Canadian Alliance, but this did not happen. [http://www.nowtoronto.com/issues/2000-10-26/newsfront.html]Nunziata was also suspected of planning a challenge to Toronto Mayor
Mel Lastman in the 2000 municipal election, but Nunziata nixed the rumours when it was found that he could not hold onto his seat in Parliament while campaigning for Mayor.Seen as being too conservative for Toronto, he was defeated in the 2000 election by Liberal candidate
Alan Tonks .2003 Toronto Mayoralty Race
Nunziata ran to be
Mayor of Toronto in theToronto 's 2003 municipal election as aright wing "law and order" candidate. He pledged support for the police, and to sweep the homeless off the streets. When he entered the race, he was a distant second, ahead of councillorDavid Miller and former Rogers Cable CEOJohn Tory but well behind frontrunnerBarbara Hall .His campaign was dogged by allegations that he tried several times to introduce a private members bill in the House of Commons that called for the criminalization of abortion. Additionally, he called for jail terms for providers of abortion and also for women who underwent the procedure. During a debate, when he denied taking such a position, Miller produced a copy of the proposed legislation.
Late in the campaign, he claimed that the campaign of rival candidate
John Tory had offered him $150,000 and the Deputy Mayor's position if he were to drop out of the race. Nunziata refused to release specifics, however, and a police investigation found no criminal wrongdoing. Nunziata was accused of at best smearing his opponent with unsubstantiated claim, and at worst mischief. He received only 5% of the vote.Attempt to re-enter federal politics
Nunziata tried to re-enter federal politics by running for the
Conservative Party of Canada inYork South—Weston , but failed to secure that party's nomination for the 2004 election.Family
Nunziata's sister,
Frances Nunziata , was the last mayor of the city ofYork, Ontario before it was merged into the "megacity" of Toronto, and is now a Toronto city councillor for Ward 11 York South-Weston.
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