Donna Cansfield

Donna Cansfield
Donna Cansfield
MPP for Etobicoke Centre
Incumbent
Assumed office
October 2, 2003
Preceded by Chris Stockwell
Minister of Natural Resources
In office
October 30, 2007 – January 18, 2010
Preceded by David Ramsay
Succeeded by Linda Jeffrey
Personal details
Born 1945 (age 65–66)
Alberta
Political party Ontario Liberal Party
Spouse(s) Bill Cansfield
Children 2
Residence Toronto, Ontario

Donna H. Cansfield, (born c.1945)[1] is a politician in Ontario, Canada, who has represented the riding of Etobicoke Centre in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario since 2003. Cansfield is a member of the Ontario Liberal Party.

Before entering provincial politics, she was a school trustee, and served as trustee of the former Etobicoke Board of Education and Chair of the Toronto District School Board. She has also served as the Vice-Chair of the Toronto Foundation for Student Success, and as a Director of Beatrice House, a homeless shelter. Cansfield was first elected to the Etobicoke board in 1988, and became a Chair of the TDSB in 2002. In the 2000 trustee's election, she successfully fought off a challenge from Ihsam El-Sayed, who was part of a group that opposed Cansfield's endorsement of the school board's gay-inclusive policies.

Cansfield's political identity has been the source of some controversy in recent years. Until recently, she was a member of the now-defunct Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. Notwithstanding her commitment to social liberalism, she was generally regarded as being on the conservative wing of the Etobicoke Board of Education. She was also regarded by some as supportive of Paul Christie, who was appointed by the provincial government of Ernie Eves to oversee and reduce expenditures in the Toronto District School Board. Shelley Carroll, who led the faction of left-leaning trustees opposed to Christie, waged a successful campaign to oust Canfield as chair of the TDSB. Carroll then replaced Cansfield as TDSB chair.

Notwithstanding this, her involvement in the education community led her to oppose the policies of the Mike Harris and Ernie Eves governments, and to run for the Ontario Liberal Party in the provincial election of 2003. She was initially seen as a long-shot candidate against high-profile Progressive Conservative cabinet minister Chris Stockwell. Following Stockwell's retirement amid scandal in mid-2003, however, she emerged as the frontrunner and eventually defeated replacement PC candidate Rose Andrachuk by about 4500 votes. She was appointed Parliamentary Secretary to Energy Minister Dwight Duncan on October 23, 2003.

Cansfield was appointed as Minister of Energy on October 11, 2005, when the former minister Dwight Duncan was named as Minister of Finance. She was reassigned as Minister of Transportation on May 23, 2006, when Duncan returned to Energy. After the 2007 election, Cansfield became Ontario's Minister of Natural Resources, where she served until January 18, 2010. Premier McGuinty appointed Cansfield as Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing (Housing) after the January 2010 cabinet shuffle.

Electoral record

Ontario general election, 2007
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
     Liberal Donna Cansfield 22,886 50.2 +0.79
     Progressive Conservative Andrew Pringle 15,565 34.1 -5.33
     New Democrat Anita Agrawal 3,828 8.4 0.79
     Green Greg King 3,330 7.3 3.75
Ontario general election, 2003
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
     Liberal Donna Cansfield 22,070 49.41 +9.04
     Progressive Conservative Rose Andrachuk 17,610 39.43 -14.69
     New Democrat Margaret Anne Mchugh 3,400 7.61 +4.83
     Green Ralph M. Chapman 1,584 3.55 +2.75

References

External links


Provincial Government of Dalton McGuinty
Cabinet Posts (3)
Predecessor Office Successor
David Ramsay Minister of Natural Resources
2007-2010
Linda Jeffrey
Harinder Takhar Minister of Transportation
2006-2007
Jim Bradley
Dwight Duncan Minister of Energy
2005-2006
Dwight Duncan
Legislative Assembly of Ontario
Preceded by
Chris Stockwell
Member of Provincial Parliament for Etobicoke Centre
2003-Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent

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