Matthew Kellway Explained

Matthew Kellway
Riding:Beaches—East York
Parliament:Canadian
Term Start:May 2, 2011
Term End:August 4, 2015
Predecessor:Maria Minna
Successor:Nathaniel Erskine-Smith
Party:New Democrat
Birth Date:10 December 1964
Birth Place:Hull, Quebec, Canada
Profession:Economist, policy analyst
Alma Mater:Queen's University
University of Toronto
York University
Residence:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Spouse:Donna
Children:3

Matthew Kellway (born December 10, 1964) is a Canadian economist and former politician. He was a New Democratic Member of Parliament for the Toronto riding of Beaches—East York from 2011 to 2015. In the 2018 municipal election he came in second in Ward 19 for the Toronto City Council.

Background

Kellway spent much of his childhood in Kingston. He has a degree in political science from Queen's University, and a Master of Industrial Relations degree from the University of Toronto. He also pursued graduate studies at York University.

He worked as an economist and as a policy analyst with the Society of Energy Professionals.[1] He was co-chair of the Toronto Energy Coalition, and chair of the St. John Catholic School Parent Council. He served as president of the Beaches-East York NDP Riding Association for four terms.

Kellway is married to Donna, who is a crown attorney.[2] They have three children and live in the Beaches neighbourhood.[3]

Since February 2016, he has worked for the Society of Energy Professionals, a Toronto-based local of the International Federation of Professional & Technical Engineers labour union, where he is special assistant to the president and manager, central functions.[4]

Politics

Federal

In the 2011 federal election he ran as the New Democratic candidate in the riding of Beaches—East York. He defeated longtime Liberal incumbent Maria Minna by 5,298 votes.[5] [6] [7] He served as the opposition critic for urban affairs and infrastructure, as well as deputy critic for transport. In 2015 he was defeated by Liberal candidate Nathaniel Erskine-Smith during an election where the Liberals took every seat in Toronto. He was defeated by over 10,000 votes.[8]

Municipal

Initially Kellway registered to run in the 2018 municipal election in ward 37.[9] However, after the provincial government reduced the number of wards from 47 to 25 he reregistered to run in ward 19 which conforms to the boundaries of his former federal riding of Beaches-East York.[10] Kellway was endorsed by outgoing councillor Janet Davis, but lost the election to Brad Bradford.[11]

Electoral record

2018 Toronto Municipal Election

Ward 19: Beaches-East York

Vote%
 14,286 38.56
   Matthew Kellway 13,998 37.78
   Joshua Makuch 2,315 6.25
   Diane Dyson 1,613 4.35
   Veronica Stephen 1,257 3.39
   Valérie Maltais 929 2.51
   Adam Smith 708 1.91
   Brenda MacDonald 601 1.62
   Paul Bura 288 0.78
   David Del Grande 283 0.76
 248 0.67
   Frank Marra 142 0.38
   Donald Lamoreux 141 0.38
   Norval Bryant 89 0.24
   Dragan Cimesa77 0.21
   Paul Murton 74 0.20

Notes and References

  1. News: Beaches-East York: Q & A of the riding's top contenders . Inside Toronto (East York Mirror) . 2011-04-27.
  2. News: Phil . Lameira . Kellway looks forward to helping out in Ottawa . Beach Metro Community News . 2011-05-18.
  3. News: Joanna . Lavoie . BEACHES-EAST YORK: Liberals lose 18-year stronghold . Toronto.com (East York Mirror) . May 4, 2011 . May 26, 2023.
  4. Web site: Society reps presented to international conference. Society of Energy Professionals. September 25, 2017.
  5. News: Patty . Winsa . NDP wins Beaches East York from Liberal Maria Minna . Toronto Star . 2011-05-02.
  6. News: Riding results from across Canada . Edmonton Journal . May 3, 2011 . A6.
  7. Web site: Beaches-East York Canada Votes 2011 . CBC News . 2011-05-02.
  8. News: Canada Votes . . October 20, 2015 . GT13–GT15.
  9. News: Former NDP MP Matthew Kellway to run for council . May 22, 2018 . David . Nickle . Toronto.com .
  10. News: Candidate list confirmed for Beaches–East York Town Hall . Beach Metro Community News . September 22, 2018.
  11. News: Beaches—East York sees shifting allegiances after cut to wards . David . Rider . Toronto Star . September 27, 2018.