Jason MacDonald | |
Office: | Director of Communications to the Prime Minister of Canada |
Term: | 2013–2015 |
Primeminister: | Stephen Harper |
Predecessor: | Andrew MacDougall |
Successor: | Rob Nicol |
Birth Date: | 1971 |
Birth Place: | Montreal, Quebec |
Party: | Conservative Party of Canada |
Spouse: | Lara Mills |
Children: | Molly and Ella |
Residence: | Ottawa South |
Profession: | Public relations |
Jason MacDonald is a Canadian communications professional and was the candidate for the Ontario PC Party in the 2011 Ontario election in the riding of Ottawa South. In 2013, MacDonald was appointed as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's eighth Director of Communications.
MacDonald holds an M.A. from Wilfrid Laurier University and a B.A. from Bishop's University.[1]
MacDonald has twin daughters, Molly and Ella, with his wife Lara.[2]
MacDonald was the Chief of Staff at CBC Television in Toronto, followed later by his role as the Director of Public Relations and Operations at CBC Corporate Communications in Ottawa.[3]
MacDonald then moved into his role as Vice President of Corporate and Public Affairs with Veritas Corporation, a full-service communications agency in Toronto.[3]
In 2009, MacDonald moved back to Ottawa and was hired as Carleton University's Director of Communications. He would take a leave of absence from this role so he could run in the 2011 election, and returned for a short period of time.
MacDonald served as the Department of Aboriginal Affairs Minister's Director of Communications for almost two years, serving under John Duncan then Bernard Valcourt.
Rumours began on September 10, 2013 when Ottawa journalist Don Martin wrote that "sources" said MacDonald was about to be named Harper's Communications Director.[4] MacDonald's initial response seemed like he was denying the rumour, succinctly replying "I’m happy working for Minister Valcourt. Thanks. Jason." Two days later MacDonald was named as the Prime Minister's Office's Director of Communications.
In 2015, Jason Macdonald joined Hill+Knowlton, a global public affairs and government relations firm in Ottawa. He currently serves as Vice-President of Corporate Communications.
See main article: Ottawa South (provincial electoral district). MacDonald was elected as the Ontario PC candidate for the riding of Ottawa South, and was faced with the tough challenge of facing off against then-sitting Premier Dalton McGuinty.
Since PC Party leader Tim Hudak was unilingual English, MacDonald was given the responsibility of speaking for the Ontario PC Party during the French leaders' debate.[5]
McGuinty would win by 7,000 votes, but the Ontario Liberals would also lose their majority government.
Rumours began on September 10, 2013 when Ottawa journalist Don Martin tweeted that "sources" said MacDonald was about to be named Harper's Communications Director.[4] MacDonald's initial response seemed like he was denying the rumour, succinctly replying "I’m happy working for Minister Valcourt. Thanks. Jason." Two days later MacDonald was named as the Prime Minister's Office's Director of Communications, replacing Andrew MacDougall, who left for a job in England.
Former Paul Martin speechwriter Scott Reid described MacDonald as "a great guy," "genuinely decent," and "well-motivated."[5]
In January 2014, Jason MacDonald accused the National Council of Canadian Muslims of having "documented ties to a terrorist organization such as Hamas". The council, a Canadian Muslim civil liberties organization, filed a libel notice the same month in response, demanding a retraction and apology. Subsequently, on May 26, 2014, the council filed a defamation lawsuit in Ontario Superior Court against Jason MacDonald and Prime Minister Stephen Harper as it had not received a retraction.[6] In February 2015, Jason MacDonald was questioned under oath in the defamation case and Stephen Harper claimed parliamentary privilege to avoid testifying.[7] That same month, MacDonald resigned as the Prime Minister's communications director.[8] In March 2017, as part of a settlement between council and Jason MacDonald, he admitted that his statements were inaccurate.[9] [10] The Government of Canada also issued a statement "disavowing MacDonald's suggestion that the council had terrorist ties."[9]