Honorific-Prefix: | The Honourable |
Andrew Mitchell | |
Honorific-Suffix: | PC |
Birth Date: | 21 April 1953 |
Birth Place: | Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Profession: | banker, administrator |
Party: | Liberal |
Office1: | Member of the House of Commons of Canada for Parry Sound-Muskoka |
Term Start1: | October 25, 1993 |
Term End1: | January 23, 2006 |
Predecessor1: | Stan Darling |
Successor1: | Tony Clement |
Office2: | Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food |
Predecessor2: | Bob Speller |
Successor2: | Chuck Strahl |
Term Start2: | July 20, 2004 |
Term End2: | February 5, 2006 |
Office3: | Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development |
Predecessor3: | Bob Nault |
Successor3: | Andy Scott |
Term Start3: | December 12, 2003 |
Term End3: | July 20, 2004 |
Office4: | Secretary of State for the Federal Economic Development Initiative for Northern Ontario Styled as Minister of State for the Federal Economic Development Initiative for Northern Ontario in 2005–06. |
Predecessor4: | Joe Comuzzi |
Successor4: | Tony Clement |
Term Start4: | June 28, 2005 |
Term End4: | February 5, 2006 |
Predecessor5: | position created |
Successor5: | Joe Comuzzi |
Term Start5: | August 3, 1999 |
Term End5: | December 11, 2003 |
Office6: | Secretary of State for Rural Development |
Term Start6: | August 3, 1999 |
Term End6: | December 11, 2003 |
Office7: | Secretary of State for Parks |
Term Start7: | June 11, 1997 |
Term End7: | August 2, 1999 |
Office8: | Deputy Reeve of Selwyn and member of the Peterborough County Council |
Term Start8: | 2010 |
Term End8: | 2014 |
Predecessor8: | Mary Smith |
Successor8: | Sherry Sennis |
Office9: | Mayor of Selwyn and member of the Peterborough County Council |
Term Start9: | 2018 |
Term End9: | 2022 |
Predecessor9: | Mary Smith |
Successor9: | Incumbent |
Andrew Mitchell, (born April 21, 1953) is a Canadian politician. He served in the House of Commons of Canada from 1993 to 2006, representing Parry Sound-Muskoka as a member of the Liberal Party. He was a minister in the government of Jean Chrétien and a cabinet minister in the government of Paul Martin.
Mitchell was born in Montreal, Quebec, and has a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from Carleton University (1972). Before running for public office, he worked for the Bank of Nova Scotia in Ottawa, Toronto, Cornwall, Elliot Lake, and Gravenhurst.[1] He was also active with several local Chamber of Commerce organizations. Mitchell joined the Liberal Party in 1991.[2]
Mitchell was first elected in the 1993 federal election, winning a seat that had been held by the Progressive Conservatives since 1957. At the time, he did not have a strong public profile outside of his riding.[3] The Liberals won a majority government, and Mitchell entered parliament as a backbench supporter of Jean Chrétien's government.
He chaired a parliamentary task force that examined banking and small business policy in 1994.[4] Its recommendations included a code of conduct for banks regarding small business loans, an ombudsman to oversee this code of conduct, and a provision allowing entrepreneurs to borrow up to twenty per cent from their registered retirement savings plans (RRSPs). The proposed code of conduct was intended to facilitate more bank loans to small businesses.[5]
In 1996, Mitchell was appointed to another task force that examined the role of the federal government in relation to Canada's disability community.[6] It recommended that the government cancel its plans to wind down assistance programs for disabled people and instead introduce new programs and tax credits. Mitchell argued this investment was necessary to ensure disabled Canadians could enjoy the full rights of citizenship.[7]
In the same period, he chaired a standing committee on natural resources with a focus on economic development in rural Canada.[8] He supported construction of Fenbrook Institution, a medium security prison in Gravenhurst, as a benefit to the local economy.[9]
Shortly after his appointment, Mitchell announced that Canada's national parks would not be privatized or commercialized apart from a small number of projects that had already been approved in the previous parliament.[11] He following year, he introduced legislation to create a permanent agency for Parks Canada. The oversight of national parks had previously shifted among various ministries, and Mitchell argued that the new agency would allow for more and better-managed parks.[12]
In April 1998, Mitchell said the Canadian government would block a salvage company's plans to dynamite the wreckage of the Empress of Ireland ocean liner to recover an estimated one million dollars' worth of nickel ingots. Over one thousand people were killed when ship sank in the Saint Lawrence River in 1914, and Mitchell argued the detonation would violate Canada's laws against interference with human remains. Many of the deceased were members of the Salvation Army, which strongly opposed the detonation plans.[13]
Mitchell joined with environmental groups in late 1998 to oppose a bid by the government of the Northwest Territories, the Inuvialuit, and the Toronto-based company Falconbridge Ltd. to change a proposed boundary of the Tuktut Nogait National Park and permit nickel mining in the disputed area. Mitchell argued that the change would endanger the local caribou population and noted that eighty per cent of the nickel find was already located outside of the park's boundaries. A committee of the Senate of Canada decided against moving the boundary in December 1998.[14] The following year, Mitchell introduced legislation to restrict future development in all national parks and announced the creation of an aboriginal affairs secretariat to assist Parks Canada in matters relating to First Nations communities.[15]
Mitchell supported a private member's bill introduced by Liberal backbencher Albina Guarnieri in 1998 to reduce parole opportunities for criminals convicted of multiple murders.[16]
Re-elected in the 2000 federal election, Mitchell helped formulate a federal loan to prevent bankruptcy at Algoma Steel in 2001.[19] He later announced the creation of a sixteen-member advisory committee on rural issues at the second national rural conference in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.[20]
In May 2002, Mitchell led a trade delegation to Atlanta, Georgia, to promote trade with Northern Ontario.[21] Later in the same year, he promoted increased high-speed internet service for rural Canada and announced a fifteen million dollar plan to support co-operatives.[22] In August 2003, he joined with Chrétien and Industry Minister Allan Rock to unveil Canada's Municipal Rural Infrastructure Fund, valued at one billion dollars.[23]
Mitchell attended the Martin government's one-day summit with leaders of the Assembly of First Nations (AFN), the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the Métis National Council, the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples, and the Native Women's Association of Canada in April 2004.[27] He indicated that he was willing to fund a housing secretariat that would be operated by the AFN.[28]
In early 2004, Mitchell recognized embattled grand chief James Gabriel and the elected band council as the legitimate authority in Kanesatake, Quebec.[29] The Kanesatake community was divided into rival factions, and Gabriel was forced to leave the community for his safety after his house was burned down.
When Mitchell became agriculture minister, the American border was closed to Canadian cattle due to a case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) found in a single Canadian cow in 2003. Mitchell's initial efforts to lift the ban were unsuccessful, and he announced $488 million to aid the ailing sector in September 2004.[31] When other instances of BSE were discovered in early 2005, Mitchell said that a "low level and a declining level" of the disease in older cattle was not surprising, that changes introduced in 1997 would ensure the safety of Canadian beef, and that an organized cull of older animals would be too extreme a reaction.[32]
Mitchell announced one billion dollars in aid farm aid in March 2005, primarily in response to the border closure but also to grain harvests affected by frost, drought in the Prairies, and trade difficulties associated with the higher Canadian dollar relative to the American dollar.[33] The border eventually reopened in July 2005.[34] Mitchell subsequently established a beef and cattle advisory group to assist the government on export policy.[35]
Mitchell withdrew the government's support for a conference promoting agricultural exports to Iran in April 2005, following revelations that Canadian journalist Zahra Kazemi had died from torture in an Iranian prison two years earlier.[36]
In early 2005, the National Farmers Union (NFU) charged that proposed federal legislation would make it difficult for independent farmers to retain seeds from one year to the next and that the government was abandoning its commitment to public plant breeding by closing four experimental research farms. The NFU further argued that these changes would benefit large companies like Monsanto over Canadian farmers. A representative for Mitchell responded that the government would protect the right of farmers to save their seeds.[37] In response to further criticism, Mitchell announced a moratorium on the farm closures in June 2005.[38]
Mitchell spent part of the 2006 federal election participating in previously scheduled World Trade Organization talks in Hong Kong on agricultural subsidies. After extended negotiations, Mitchell and International Trade Minister Jim Peterson announced their support for a tentative deal that would end farm export subsidies while allowing the Canadian Wheat Board's operations to continue.[39]
Mitchell lost to high-profile Conservative candidate Tony Clement by only twenty-eight votes in the 2006 election, as the Conservatives won a minority government nationally.
Mitchell served as chief of staff for official opposition leader Bill Graham in 2006.[40] He later became executive director and chair of the Greater Peterborough Economic Development Corporation (GPAEDC), led a non-profit organization called the Greater Peterborough Innovation Cluster, and became an adjunct professor at Trent University.[41]
Mitchell was elected as deputy reeve of Selwyn in the 2010 municipal elections.[42] By virtue of holding this position, he also served on the Peterborough County Council.[43] Mitchell also served as a Senior Policy Advisor to the Hon. Jeff Leal, MPP and Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs.[44] He served until 2014.
Mitchell also served as campaign manager to the Maryam Monsef campaign in 2015 federal election in which Monsef won. He also worked as a professor at Trent University in the Political Studies department following his leaving federal politics.
On October 22, 2018 he won election to become mayor of Selwyn, Ontario
Source: Official results, Township of Smith-Ennismore-Lakefield.