Catherine McKenney | |
Birth Date: | 3 June 1961[1] [2] |
Birth Place: | Fort-Coulonge, Quebec, Canada |
Office: | Ottawa City Councillor |
Term Start: | December 1, 2014 |
Term End: | November 15, 2022 |
Predecessor: | Diane Holmes |
Successor: | Ariel Troster |
Alma Mater: | University of Ottawa (BSocSc, 1993) |
Constituency: | Somerset Ward |
Party: | Ontario New Democratic Party |
Spouse: | Catharine Vandelinde[3] (m. circa 2005) |
Children: | 3 |
Residence: | Centretown West |
Catherine McKenney (born June 3, 1961) is a Canadian politician who served on Ottawa City Council from 2014 to 2022, representing Somerset Ward. McKenney did not seek re-election as councillor in the 2022 Ottawa election, instead running for Mayor of Ottawa and finishing second. In the 2025 Ontario general election, McKenney was announced as the Ontario New Democratic Party (Ontario NDP) candidate for Ottawa Centre.[4] Before running for office, they worked as an advisor and political staffer.
McKenney was born in Fort-Coulonge, Quebec, the child of a forester and stay-at-home parent. The family would then move to Sturgeon Falls, Ontario, where McKenney went to elementary school. In grade 9, McKenney moved to Pembroke, Ontario when their dad got a job at Algonquin College. McKenney had two children in their early 20s, working in fast food and as a photographer's assistant to support them. McKenney moved to Ottawa at the age of 26, where they completed a Bachelor of Social Science at the University of Ottawa in 1993.[5] [6]
After graduating, McKenney lived in Kanata and had a job reading news articles on television for people who are blind.[7]
Prior to holding elected office, McKenney worked as a staffer in the offices of city councillors Diane Holmes and Alex Munter, and federal members of Parliament Ed Broadbent and Paul Dewar.[8] They supported Jim Watson in the 2014 mayoral election.[9]
McKenney was first elected in the 2014 municipal election to represent Somerset Ward, which consists of Centretown, Centretown West, and the downtown core. During the 2022 Canada convoy protests, McKenney criticized inaction by Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson and the Ottawa Police Service.[10] McKenney virtually joined an Ottawa City Council meeting from the streets of the occupation.[11]
In December 2021, McKenney announced that they would be running for mayor in the 2022 Ottawa municipal election.[12] McKenney lost to Mark Sutcliffe with 119,241 votes to 161,679 votes.
In January 2023, McKenney co-founded CitySHAPES non-profit organization with Ottawa economist Neil Saravanamuttooto address "climate change, active transportation, transit, affordable housing and ending chronic homelessness."[13]
In October 2024, McKenney launched a campaign for the Ontario NDP nomination in Ottawa Centre. McKenney was announced as the NDP candidate in November 2024, replacing former Ontario NDP MPP Joel Harden who was announced as the NDP candidate in the 2025 Canadian federal election[14]
McKenney is queer and is the first non-male openly-LGBT person to serve on Ottawa's city council.[15] McKenney is non-binary and uses they/them pronouns.[16] McKenney has three children.
See main article: 2022 Ottawa municipal election.
See main article: 2018 Ottawa municipal election.
Somerset Ward (Ward 14)[17] | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Catherine McKenney | 7,754 | 76.66% |
Jerry Kovacs | 1,461 | 14.44% |
Arthur David | 701 | 6.93% |
Merdod Zopyrus | 199 | 1.97% |
See main article: 2014 Ottawa municipal election.
Somerset Ward (Ward 14)[18] | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Catherine McKenney | 3,997 | 40.13% |
Jeff Morrison | 1,681 | 16.88% |
Martin Canning | 1,631 | 16.38% |
Conor Meade | 807 | 8.10% |
Edward Conway | 576 | 5.78% |
Thomas McVeigh | 434 | 4.36% |
Lili V. Weemen | 292 | 3.94% |
Denis Schryburt | 223 | 2.24% |
Sandro Provenzano | 99 | 0.99% |
Curtis Tom | 77 | 0.77% |
Silviu Riley | 43 | 0.43% |