Neil Ellis (politician) explained

Honorific-Prefix:His Worship
Neil Ellis
Riding:Bay of Quinte
Parliament:Canadian
Term Start:October 19, 2015
Term End:September 20, 2021
Predecessor:Daryl Kramp
Successor:Ryan Williams
Office2:Mayor of Belleville
Term Start3:December 1, 2006
Term End3:December 1, 2014
Predecessor3:Mary-Anne Sills
Successor3:Taso Christopher
Term Start2:November 15, 2022
Predecessor2:Mitch Panciuk
Office4:Chairman of the Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs
Term Start4:February 16, 2016
Term End4:December 12, 2019
Minister4:Seamus O'Regan
Kent Hehr
Predecessor4:Royal Galipeau
Successor4:Bryan May
Birth Date:[1]
Education:Carleton University
Profession:businessman, politician
Party:Liberal
Residence:Belleville, Ontario, Canada[2]

Neil R. Ellis (born 1962) is a Canadian politician, currently serving as the mayor of Belleville, Ontario. He is a former Liberal Member of Parliament, who was elected to represent the riding of Bay of Quinte in the House of Commons of Canada in the 2015 federal election. In the 2019 federal election, Ellis was reelected as the Member of Parliament for the Bay of Quinte. He was defeated in the 2021 federal election.

Background

Ellis holds a bachelor's degree in law and psychology from Carleton University in Ottawa.[3] In 1984, he became the proprietor of Doug's Bicycle, a bicycle store in Belleville which his brother had operated for five years.[4] Ellis relinquished control of the store in 2012 after twenty-eight years of ownership.

Political career

Mayor of Belleville

During the 2003 municipal elections in Ontario Ellis ran against Belleville's incumbent mayor Mary-Ann Sills, losing by only 202 votes.[5] Nevertheless, Ellis would run again in 2006, defeating Mary-Ann Sills to become mayor of Belleville. He would serve two terms as mayor, being reelected in 2006, and leaving office in 2014.[6] As mayor, Ellis guided city council through the Build Belleville initiative, which involved pursuing twenty-two infrastructure projects worth $91 million.[7] He was elected again in 2022, defeating incumbent mayor Mitch Panciuk.

Member of Parliament

In 2015, Ellis became the Liberal nominee in the newly created Bay of Quinte riding, and won the subsequent election.[8] He would go on to win reelection in 2019. From 2015 to 2019, Ellis served as the chairman of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs, until being appointed as the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food in December 2019.[9]

Electoral record

Municipal

2010 Belleville Mayoral Election

2010 Belleville mayoral election
Mayoral Candidate https://web.archive.org/web/20100924053555/http://www.city.belleville.on.ca/CityHall/Election%202010/Pages/ListofCandidates.aspxVote%
Neil Ellis 10,081 75.09
Mitch Panciuk 2,825 21.17
Lonnie D. Herrington 350 2.62
Graham K. Longhurst 149 1.12

2006 Belleville Mayoral Election

2006 Belleville mayoral election
CandidateVote%
Neil Ellis 10,427 61.8
Mary-Anne Sills 3,957 23.5
Doug Rollins 2,483 14.7

2003 Belleville Mayoral Election

2003 Belleville mayoral election
CandidateVote%
Mary-Anne Sills 5,945 39.7
Neil Ellis 5,707 38.1
Doug Parker 3,256 21.7
Trueman Tuck 57 0.5

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Belleville Intelligencer. nurun.com. The Belleville Intelligencer.
  2. Web site: Official Voting Results. Elections Canada. January 23, 2021.
  3. Web site: Meet Neil Ellis. Liberal.ca. en. 31 May 2020.
  4. Web site: Changing Gears at Doug's Bicycle. Miller. Jason. 24 Feb 2013. The Intelligencer. en. 31 May 2020.
  5. Web site: Outgoing Mayor Neil Ellis reflects and looks ahead. Miller. Jason. 24 Oct 2014. The Intelligencer. en. 31 May 2020.
  6. http://neilellis.liberal.ca/biography/ Meet Neil Ellis
  7. Web site: Outgoing Mayor Neil Ellis reflects and looks ahead. Miller. Jason. 24 Oct 2014. The Intelligencer. en. 31 May 2020.
  8. http://www.intelligencer.ca/2015/10/19/ellis-takes-bay-of-quinte Ellis takes Bay of Quinte
  9. https://www.quintenews.com/2019/12/12/ellis-named-parliamentary-assistant/ Ellis Named Parliamentary Assistant