Paul Fromm | |
|---|---|
![]() Fromm in 2009 | |
| Metropolitan Separate School Board Trustee for Area 11 (Etobicoke) | |
| In office 1976–1978 | |
| Preceded by | Ed Webster |
| Succeeded by | Francis Hogan |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Frederick Paul Fromm (1949-01-03)January 3, 1949 (age 76) Bogotá, Colombia |
| Nationality | Canadian |
| Political party | Social Credit (1971–72) Western Guard (1972–73) Progressive Conservative (1981–83) Reform (1983–88)[citation needed] Confederation of Regions (1988) Western Block (2011–14) Independent (1973–1981, 1988–2011, 2014–2018) Canadians' Choice (2018–present) |
| Alma mater | University of Toronto (MA) |
| Occupation | High school teacher (1974–1997) |
Frederick Paul Fromm (born January 3, 1949) is a Canadian former high school teacher,white supremacist,neo-Nazi, andperennial political candidate.
Fromm is the international director of the white supremacist organizationCouncil of Conservative Citizens[1] and is the director of severalfar-right groups in Canada, most notably theCanadian Association for Free Expression,Citizens for Foreign Aid Reform and the Canada First Immigration Reform Committee.
He has hosted a radio show on theStormfront web site and has ties to formerKu Klux Klan membersDavid Duke,Don Black, and Mark Martin, a white supremacist rally organizer inCovington, Ohio. TheNational Post newspaper described him as "one of Canada's most notorious white supremacists".[2]
Since 2018, he has been based inHamilton, Ontario,[3] but he previously lived inMississauga,Ontario, outside ofToronto, since the 1970s.[4]
Fromm was born inBogotá, Colombia to Canadian parents,[5] and grew up inEtobicoke in a devoutCatholic family. His mother, Marguerite Michaud, was ofFrench Canadian descent, while his father, Frederick William Fromm, was ofGerman andIrish descent.[6] His father enlisted in theRoyal Canadian Navy duringWorld War II. After the war, he qualified as achartered accountant and worked in Colombia for an oil company. After Fromm was born, the family returned to Ontario where his father found work as an accountant with the provincialDepartment of Highways.[7]
Fromm began teaching atApplewood Heights Secondary School in 1973. During a public meeting on race relations in 1991, he said "scalp them", while activistRodney Bobiwash of the Native Canadian Centre was speaking. TheCanadian Jewish Congress and community and race relations committee chairArt Eggleton called for review of his employment; the Native Canadian Centre of Toronto called for his dismissal. Fromm said his remark was misinterpreted, and claimed to leave his politics out of the classroom.[8][9]
Fromm's 1990 speech to the Western Guard was shown to thePeel District School Board in 1992, prompting the board to ask the province to review Fromm's contract, warn Fromm to end his involvement with racist organizations, and urge theOntario Teachers' Federation to establish guidelines of teachers. The OTF replied that such guidelines existed in the Teaching Profession Act, and contesting that it was up to the board to pursue.[10] The board asked the Ontario Ministry of Education to review his teaching certificate.[11]
In June 1993, it was announced that Fromm would be reassigned to teaching adult education, "the best option legally available to the board." The school board chair suggested adults would be more likely to act on inappropriate behaviour, than high school students.[12]
Fromm was an admirer ofFidel Castro in the early 1960s, but changed his views after coming across the writings ofBarry Goldwater.[5]
In 1967, as a student at theUniversity of Toronto'sSt. Michael's College, Fromm co-founded theEdmund Burke Society (EBS), withDon Andrews and Leigh Smith, as well as its student wing "Campus Alternative".[13] The Edmund Burke Society was aright-winganti-communist group that agitated against prominent left-wing movements. The group would often disrupt left-wing rallies and events, sometimes violently. The group's main focus was opposition to theNew Left and other left-wing tendencies that the Society associated withcommunism. In 1970, the group disrupted a speech by left-wing radical lawyer,William Kunstler, with Fromm climbing on stage and pouring a glass of water on Kunstler's lecture notes, resulting in theChicago Seven's lawyer drenching Fromm with a pitcher of water. A melee between EBS members and Kunstler's supporters ensued, and Fromm was knocked to the floor unconscious.[14]
With the support of members of the Edmund Burke Society, Fromm was elected president of theOntario Social Credit Party in 1971, and was able to have other EBS members elected to the party's executive. Three Social Credit candidates in the1971 Ontario election were avowed "Burkers".[5]
As the New Left movement waned, Edmund Burke Society members turned their attention to issues of race and immigration and became increasingly attracted towhite supremacist ideas. In February 1972, the group renamed itself theWestern Guard.[14] In 1972, after having lost the Social Credit Party presidency to James McGillvray, Fromm led a successful attempt by the Western Guard to take over the Ontario wing of theSocial Credit Party of Canada. The national executive of the national Social Credit Party declared membership in the Western Guard "incompatible" with membership in the party, which led national Social Credit leaderRéal Caouette to place the Ontario organization under trusteeship in order to counter Fromm's activities.[15][16][17]
In May 1972, Fromm was the opening speaker at a Western Guard banquet honouringRobert E. Miles, a formerKu Klux Klan leader who became a leading ideologue in theChristian Identity movement.[13] Fromm, Overfield and several others resigned from the Western Guard in May 1972, immediately after theToronto Sun published an article on the group, which included information about the banquet. Fromm's departure left the leadership of the Western Guard in the hands of Don Andrews.[13] Fromm claimed in a 1973 letter to theToronto Star that he left the Western Guard "because of a growing radicalization of its politics and the irresponsibility of some of its activities".[18] Later, he denied ever having been a member of the Guard, saying he "never had any connection" with the organization. When confronted with his 1973 letter, he dismissed it as "a matter of semantics".[19]
On August 4, 2008,Fox News interviewed Fromm in relation to the prosecution of right-wing Canadian authorMark Steyn. TheSouthern Poverty Law Center criticised Fox for identifying Fromm only as a "Free Speech Activist".[20]
In 2010, Fromm organized small protests across the country against the admission of a group ofSri Lankan Tamil refugees arriving on theMVSun Sea. In August he led a small protest inCalgary with members of theAryan Guard outside ofImmigration MinisterJason Kenney's constituency office which "so terrified the receptionist that she locked the door and would not accept Mr. Fromm's delivery of a letter until police arrived".[21] He also organized a small protest withDoug Christie inEsquimalt, British Columbia, where the boat was docked and also led small pickets later in the month in Ottawa and Hamilton.[21]
Fromm graduated from university with a master's degree in English and an education degree. He worked as a school teacher with thePeel Region Board of Education from 1974 until his dismissal in 1997. He temporarily tried to distance himself from groups that were visibly linked to explicitlyracist and neo-Nazi beliefs. He founded Countdown, which led to the creation of three organizations that attempted to make far-right views palatable to the mainstream. Fromm was elected as a Catholicschool trustee in 1976, after an unsuccessful attempt in 1974, and served on the MetroToronto Separate School Board until he was defeated in his bid for re-election two years later.[6] His father, Fred, was also defeated in his 1978 bid for a seat on the board.
In 1976, Fromm founded theCitizens for Foreign Aid Reform (C-FAR), which opposesforeign aid toThird World nations. The organization also deals with other issues, including crime and punishment,multiculturalism and immigration. It sponsors lectures by far-right individuals, and publishes pamphlets and books, mostly aboutrace and immigration.[22] In 1981, Fromm foundedCanadian Association for Free Expression (CAFE), in opposition to theCanadian Human Rights Commission. CAFE has been active defending the rights of accusedantisemites, racists andHolocaust deniers against prosecution underhate crime andhuman rights legislation.[22] Another group he founded was Canada First Immigration Reform Committee, which advocatesreduced immigration, and opposes immigration bynon-whites. These three groups still exist today and are still led by Fromm. Their membership and mandates overlap, and they are essentially a single organization. Fromm's leadership of these groups has given him some access to the mainstream media, such as radio talk shows and newspapers.[22]
In the late 1970s, Fromm also founded Canadian Friends ofRhodesia to support thewhite minority rule regime ofIan Smith and hisRhodesian Front. In the mid to late 1980s, Fromm's organizations were involved in advocacy on behalf ofSouth Africa'sapartheid regime, and opposing the movement to imposeeconomic sanctions on the country.[23]
Fromm attempted to enter mainstream political activity by joining theProgressive Conservative Party of Canada. He was elected treasurer of PCMetro, a network of 31Toronto PCriding associations on April 15, 1981.[24] He angered many people and embarrassed both the federal andOntario Progressive Conservatives when a profile inThe Globe and Mail quoted him as saying that breeding a "supreme race" for intelligence was a good idea, and as calling forVietnamese refugees to be sent to "desert islands" off thePhilippines andIndonesia rather than be accepted into Canada where they would "upset the racial balance".[6][25] His comments resulted in Progressive Conservative premierBill Davis being asked in the legislature whether he is willing "to tolerate such neo-fascist, if not fascist, ideas within the Conservative Party".[24] Federal Progressive Conservative immigration criticChris Speyer said Fromm's remarks were "entirely his and certainly don't represent the views of the party or the caucus".[24] Federal PC presidentPeter Blaikie asked Fromm to resign from the local executive, telling the press on April 30, 1981: "It's quite clear that that article, accurate or inaccurate, sets out a position which is clearly at variance with that of the party", and that the issue "has created some difficulty and embarrassment for the party".[26]
In 1983, Fromm was an active supporter of right-wing Member of ParliamentJohn A. Gamble's unsuccessful bid to win theleadership of the federal Progressive Conservatives.[27] Fromm's work with Gamble continued beyond his unsuccessful leadership bid, and included work in theWorld Anti-Communist League.[23] In 1993, Gamble was rejected as a candidate for theReform Party of Canada because of his long association with Fromm and other racist activists.[28][29]
In the late 1980s, Fromm was an active member of the Reform Party, but was essentially expelled in October 1988 when leaderPreston Manning sent Fromm a letter asking him to "dissociate" himself from the party, following complaints by party members about the racist tenor of a speech Fromm made at a Reform Party gathering.[30] In the1988 federal election, Fromm ran as a candidate for theConfederation of Regions Party in theriding ofMississauga East, and received 288 votes.[31]
In 1997, Fromm was a candidate for the public school board inPeel Region. He received 827 votes (10.39% of ballots cast), coming in last of four candidates.
Fromm was a candidate for mayor ofMississauga, Ontario in theOctober 25, 2010, municipal election, running on an anti-immigration platform.[32] Fromm reportedly made racist and homophobic comments during his campaign and displayed white supremacist and Holocaust denial literature at his campaign tables.[33] He claimed that train stations in the city looked "like flippin' Calcutta" and that the city had been "paved over with ticky tacky houses that are mostly filled with East Indians"[33] and is also quoted as saying "I wake up in the morning and I feel great. I'm high on hate".[33] On election day, Fromm came in ninth in a field of 17 with 917 votes which represented 0.65% of the total vote.[34] Fromm againran for Mayor of Mississauga in 2014 receiving 775 votes (0.48%) and coming in 10th in a field of 15.[35]
In the2011 federal election, Fromm stood inCalgary Southeast as the candidate of the far rightWestern Block Party againstimmigration ministerJason Kenney, on a platform advocating a freeze in immigration.[citation needed] Kenney was re-elected, winning over 76% of the vote, while Fromm received 193 votes, around 0.3%.
In 2016, Fromm attempted to join theConservative Party of Canada in order to support theleadership campaign ofKellie Leitch due to her support forimmigration reform and a "Canadian values" test for prospective immigrants. Leitch's campaign co-chair Sander Grieve wrote back to Fromm, saying: "We have not processed your membership and we will not be submitting it to the party, as we believe your public statements are not consistent with the principles of the party or the policies being advanced by our campaign."[36]
Fromm endorsed socially conservative candidate Tanya Granic Allen in the2018 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election.[37] Although she did not respond when originally asked for comment by theToronto Star, Granic Allen later publicly stated on Twitter that she rejects his endorsement with the statement: "No place in our party for white supremacists."[38]
Fromm was a candidate for theCanadians' Choice Party inEtobicoke Centre during the2018 Ontario general election, receiving 631 votes (1.1%).[39]
Fromm moved toHamilton, Ontario in 2018, after having lived in Mississauga for several decades, and registered as a candidate for Mayor of Hamilton in theOctober 2018 municipal election.[3][40] Fromm came in 7th in a field of 15 with 706 votes which represented 0.51% of the total vote.
In July 2019, Fromm posed for a photo withMaxime Bernier, party leader of thePeople's Party of Canada. He later endorsed Bernier on Twitter, writing that Bernier had "both the charisma and determination to put CANADA FIRST," and praising the former Conservative leadership contender's immigration policies as steps toward "regaining control" of Canada's border.[41]
He was a candidate in the2023 Scarborough—Guildwood provincial by-election, where he received 66 votes (0.43%).[42]

In the 1990s, Fromm spoke at severalHeritage Front events, including a celebration ofAdolf Hitler's birthday.[43] A video surfaced of him addressing the rally and referring to CanadianfascistJohn Ross Taylor as a "hero".[43] Taylor was one of two CanadianNazis interned by the government duringWorld War II. The video shows Fromm standing beside a Nazi flag during the Heritage Front's "Martyr's Day". The rally included shouts from the audience of "Sieg Heil!", "white power", "HailThe Order!" and "nigger, nigger, nigger, out out out".[13] Fromm, a high school English teacher at the time, was reprimanded by the school board after videos of him speaking at white supremacist rallies came to light in 1992.[44] He was transferred to an adult education centre by the board in 1993 pending the outcome of an investigation into his activities and then fired by the school board in 1997.[43][45]
In 2000, a published report alleged that developerMartin Weiche, a former leader of the Canadian Nazi Party, was one of Fromm's major financial backers.[46] Fromm organized rallies in support ofHolocaust denierErnst Zündel and has shared a stage withDavid Irving, another individual active in the same denialist movement.[22]B'nai B'rith legal counsel Anita Bromberg has said "Fromm is the one who has put himself out there most directly as supporting Zündel. He looks as though he's waiting in the wings."[22] In 2004, Fromm was associated withDavid Duke's efforts to unitewhite nationalists with theNew Orleans Protocol. In the 2000s, he has tried to revive the display of theCanadian Red Ensign flag.
In January 2005, Fromm defended himself at a disciplinary hearing of theOntario College of Teachers against charges including "failure to maintain professional standards; not complying with college regulations and bylaws; disgraceful, dishonourable, unprofessional and/or unbecoming conduct; and practising while in a conflict of interest."[43][47] Following three days of hearings, further deliberations were postponed. The hearing resumed in the spring of 2007[43] and on October 31, 2007, the college rendered its ruling stripping Fromm of his licence to teach in the province ofOntario.[45]
Fromm has acted as an advocate forfar-right activists who have been called before theCanadian Human Rights Tribunal (CHRT). Among those Fromm has represented are Glenn Bahr, the co-founder and former leader ofWestern Canada for Us, andTerry Tremaine, a formerUniversity of Saskatchewan mathematics lecturer.[48] In 2006, he represented theCanadian Heritage Alliance at a CHRT hearing in Toronto, and supported John Beck of the group BC White Pride at a CHRT hearing inPenticton, British Columbia.[49]Fromm has been described as a mentor to younger "far-right extremists" such as Melissa Guille and Jason Ouwendyk[22] and as a "'senior player' in the neo-Nazi movement in Canada."[50] He identifies himself as an advocate for "white nationalists".[2]
Fromm has repeatedly spoken at events sponsored by Thomas Robb'sKu Klux Klan faction, theKnights Party. In 2007, he was a keynote speaker at the group's White Christian Revival gathering.[51][52][53]
On March 21, 2009, Fromm participated in a "White Pride" march organized by theAryan Guard, a neo-Nazi gang inCalgary, Alberta.[54]
In March 2018, Fromm was being investigated by thehate crimes unit of the Hamilton police, after posting on his websiteThe Great Replacement, the white supremacist manifesto ofAustralianBrenton Harrison Tarrant, the terrorist who killed 51 people and injured 50 more atAl Noor Mosque andLinwood Islamic Centre inChristchurch, New Zealand, in theChristchurch mosque shootings.[55][56] Fromm described the manifesto as "cogent" and said violence was "not the way to go, but our vile elites have made it all but inevitable."[57]
Fromm's "Alternative Forum" meetings have been the targets of demonstrations, and have been disrupted and occasionally shut down by protesters.[58][59]
On August 19, 2006, dozens ofanti-fascist youths surrounded Fromm'sPort Credit, Ontario townhouse, challenging Fromm to come outside. Although he reportedly remained inside, approximately half a dozen neo-Nazis were present outside his home. Over 50 police officers were on call to protect Fromm and his supporters. The area was plastered in flyers advertising Fromm's home address and far-right political affiliations. The protest ended without incident.[60]
On his way to an April 19, 2007 Ontario College of Teachers hearing into his conduct, Fromm was involved in a scuffle withJewish Defense League (JDL) members in an elevator. Protesters claimed that Fromm shoved them, but Fromm asserts that the JDL members lunged at him. Police arrested two protesters, charging them with assault, assaulting police, and obstructing.[43]
In October 2007, theHouse of Commons of Canada unanimously passed a resolution banning Fromm and Alexan Kulbashian from theParliament of Canada buildings after they attempted to hold a press conference in the parliamentary press theatre. The resolution read: "That this House order that Alexan Kulbashian and Paul Fromm be denied admittance to the precincts of the House of Commons during the present session to preserve the dignity and integrity of the House".[61][62][63]
In 2015, Fromm said in an interview posted onYouTube that he was denied entry into the United States by theDepartment of Homeland Security.[64]
Fromm and hisCanadian Association for Free Expression were sued by Ottawa lawyerRichard Warman for libelling the anti-racist activist in various online posts. On November 23, 2007, Ontario Superior Court Justice Monique Métivier ruled in Warman's favour, ordering Fromm to pay Warman a total of $30,000 in damages and to post full retractions on all the websites on which he posted the defamatory comments within 10 days. Métivier found that Fromm posted statements about Warman "either knowing the fundamental falseness of the accusations he levelled at Mr. Warman, or being reckless as to the truth of these".[65] Métivier added that "The steady diet of diatribe and insults, couched in half-truths and omissions, all lead up to the finding of malice such that the defamatory statements are not protected by the defence of fair comment".[66]
On December 15, 2008, theOntario Court of Appeal upheld the original $30,000 defamation judgment against Fromm and added a $10,000 penalty in legal costs. Fromm posted a financial appeal complaining, "We are $17,500 behind in our legal bills – to say nothing of the possible $40,000 debt, if this judgment stands".[66] Richard Warman responded to news of the appeal court's ruling by saying it "sends the message that those who try to use the cloak of free speech to poison other people's reputations through lies and defamation do so at their own peril".[66]
TheSupreme Court of Canada rejected Fromm's application to appeal the judgement on April 23, 2009.[67]
| 2025 Ontario general election:Etobicoke Centre | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | ||||
| Progressive Conservative | Kinga Surma | 22,261 | 48.10 | –0.49 | ||||
| Liberal | John Campbell | 19,358 | 41.84 | +7.79 | ||||
| New Democratic | Giulia Volpe | 2,151 | 4.65 | –3.96 | ||||
| Green | Brian Morris | 1,000 | 2.16 | –2.33 | ||||
| New Blue | Mario Bilusic | 658 | 1.41 | –1.05 | ||||
| Canadians' Choice | Paul Fromm | 479 | 1.04 | N/A | ||||
| None of the Above | Richard Kiernicki | 192 | 0.41 | –0.03 | ||||
| Special Needs | Signe Miranda | 180 | 0.39 | N/A | ||||
| Total valid votes/expense limit | 46,263 | 99.40 | +0.04 | |||||
| Total rejected, unmarked, and declined ballots | 280 | 0.60 | –0.04 | |||||
| Turnout | 46,543 | 48.13 | –0.42 | |||||
| Eligible voters | 96,704 | |||||||
| Progressive Conservativehold | Swing | –4.14 | ||||||
Source(s)
| ||||||||
| Ontario provincial by-election, 27 July 2023:Scarborough—Guildwood | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | ||||
| Liberal | Andrea Hazell | 5,640 | 36.55 | -9.75 | ||||
| Progressive Conservative | Gary Crawford | 4,562 | 29.57 | -1.95 | ||||
| New Democratic | Thadsha Navaneethan | 4,041 | 26.19 | +9.53 | ||||
| Stop the New Sex-Ed Agenda | Tony Walton | 508 | 3.29 | |||||
| New Blue | Danielle Height | 151 | 0.98 | -0.29 | ||||
| Green | Tara McMahon | 146 | 0.95 | -1.88 | ||||
| No Affiliation | Reginald Tull | 139 | 0.90 | |||||
| Canadians' Choice | Paul Fromm | 66 | 0.43 | |||||
| Independent | Kevin Clarke | 57 | 0.37 | -0.14 | ||||
| Independent | Habiba Desai | 52 | 0.34 | |||||
| Independent | Abu Alam | 48 | 0.31 | |||||
| Independent | John Turmel | 20 | 0.13 | |||||
| Total valid votes | 15,430 | |||||||
| Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots | ||||||||
| Turnout | 21.84 | -19.79 | ||||||
| Eligible voters | 70,655 | |||||||
| Liberalhold | Swing | -3.90 | ||||||
| Candidate | Votes | % |
|---|---|---|
| Andrea Horwath | 59,216 | 41.68 |
| Keanin Loomis | 57,553 | 40.51 |
| Bob Bratina | 17,436 | 12.27 |
| Ejaz Butt | 1,907 | 1.34 |
| Solomon Ikhuiwu | 1,867 | 1.31 |
| Jim Davis | 1,433 | 1.01 |
| Michael Pattison | 1,422 | 1.00 |
| Paul Fromm | 898 | 0.63 |
| Hermiz Ishaya | 326 | 0.23 |
| Turnout | 143,375 | 35.38 |
| Source:City of Hamilton, 2022, "2022 Official Election Results" | ||
| Candidate | Popular vote | Expenditures | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | ±% | ||||||||||
| Fred Eisenberger(Incumbent) | 74,093 | 54.03% | +14.1% | |||||||||
| Vito Sgro | 52,190 | 38.06% | n/a | |||||||||
| George Rusich | 2,220 | 1.62% | n/a | |||||||||
| Jim Davis | 2,071 | 1.51% | n/a | |||||||||
| Nathalie Xian Yi Yan | 1,286 | 0.94% | n/a | |||||||||
| Michael Pattison | 899 | 0.66% | +0.04 | |||||||||
| Paul Fromm | 706 | 0.51% | n/a | |||||||||
| Carlos Gomes | 521 | 0.38% | n/a | |||||||||
| Todd May | 500 | 0.36% | n/a | |||||||||
| Henry Geissler | 494 | 0.36% | n/a | |||||||||
| Phil Ryerson | 479 | 0.35% | +0.13% | |||||||||
| Ute Schmid-Jones | 463 | 0.34% | n/a | |||||||||
| Edward Graydon | 409 | 0.30% | n/a | |||||||||
| Mark Wozny | 408 | 0.30% | n/a | |||||||||
| Ricky Tavares | 398 | 0.29% | -0.06% | |||||||||
| Total votes | 138,549 | 38.36% | +4.3% | |||||||||
| Registered voters | 361,212 | 100% | n/a | |||||||||
| Note: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. | ||||||||||||
| Sources:City of Hamilton, "Nominated Candidates"Archived May 4, 2018, at theWayback Machine | ||||||||||||
| 2018 Ontario general election:Etobicoke Centre | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | ||||
| Progressive Conservative | Kinga Surma | 24,432 | 43.00 | +10.58 | ||||
| Liberal | Yvan Baker | 19,708 | 34.68 | -14.02 | ||||
| New Democratic | Erica Kelly | 10,311 | 18.15 | +6.63 | ||||
| Green | Shawn Rizvi | 1,329 | 2.34 | -0.29 | ||||
| Canadians' Choice | Paul Fromm | 631 | 1.11 | |||||
| Libertarian | Basil Mummery | 252 | 0.44 | |||||
| Independent | Wallace Richards | 162 | 0.29 | |||||
| Total valid votes | 56,825 | 99.00 | ||||||
| Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots | 573 | 1.00 | ||||||
| Turnout | 57,398 | 61.91 | ||||||
| Eligible voters | 92,715 | |||||||
| Progressive Conservativenotional gain fromLiberal | Swing | +12.30 | ||||||
| Source:Elections Ontario[68] | ||||||||
| Candidate[69] | Vote | % |
|---|---|---|
| Bonnie Crombie | 102,346 | 63.49 |
| Steve Mahoney | 46,224 | 28.68 |
| Dil Muhammad | 2,429 | 1.51 |
| Stephen King | 1,874 | 1.16 |
| Masood Khan | 1,254 | 0.78 |
| Donald Barber | 1,225 | 0.76 |
| Derek Ramkissoon | 1,044 | 0.65 |
| Scott E. W. Chapman | 868 | 0.54 |
| Riazuddin Choudhry | 790 | 0.49 |
| Paul Fromm | 775 | 0.48 |
| Kevin Jackal Johnston | 741 | 0.46 |
| Andrew Seitz | 507 | 0.31 |
| Joe Lomangino | 415 | 0.26 |
| Grant Isaac | 392 | 0.24 |
| Sheraz Siddiqui | 315 | 0.20 |
| 2011 Canadian federal election:Calgary Southeast | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
| Conservative | Jason Kenney | 48,173 | 76.26 | +2.43 | $54,158 | |||
| New Democratic | Kirk Oates | 6,482 | 10.26 | +3.07 | $5 | |||
| Green | Brett Spencer | 4,079 | 6.46 | -3.80 | $5,584 | |||
| Liberal | Brian MacPhee | 4,020 | 6.36 | -2.36 | $11,237 | |||
| Independent | Antoni Grochowski | 225 | 0.36 | * | ||||
| Western Block | Paul Fromm | 193 | 0.31 | * | $5,393 | |||
| Total valid votes/Expense limit | 63,172 | 100.00 | – | $104,090 | ||||
| Total rejected ballots | 129 | 0.20 | – | |||||
| Turnout | 63,301 | 60.32 | – | |||||
| Eligible voters | 104,941 | – | – | |||||
| Candidate[70] | Vote | % |
|---|---|---|
| Hazel McCallion (X) | 107,643 | 76.40 |
| Dave Cook | 10,744 | 7.63 |
| George Winter | 4,783 | 3.39 |
| Ranjit Chahal | 4,199 | 2.98 |
| Ghani Ahsan | 3,744 | 2.66 |
| Ram Selvarajah | 2,241 | 1.59 |
| Peter Orphanos | 2,140 | 1.52 |
| Donald Barber | 1,513 | 1.07 |
| Paul Fromm | 917 | 0.65 |
| Martin Marinka | 644 | 0.46 |
| Bryan Robert Hallett | 575 | 0.41 |
| Shirley Vanden Berg | 516 | 0.37 |
| Ursula Keuper-Bennett | 329 | 0.23 |
| Andy Valenton | 293 | 0.21 |
| Antu Maprani Chakkunny | 249 | 0.18 |
| Andrew Seitz | 233 | 0.17 |
| Innocent Watat | 139 | 0.10 |
Public School Trustee, Peel Board of Education, November 10, 1997 municipal election
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal | GUARNIERI, Albina | 23,055 | |||
| Progressive Conservative | PALLETT, Laurie | 20,963 | |||
| New Democratic Party | GROZDANOVSKI, Walter | 5,677 | |||
| Libertarian | HARRINGTON, Sandra | 345 | |||
| Confederation of Regions | FROMM, Paul | 258 | |||
| Independent | DI PALMA, Adel | 189 | |||
| Commonwealth of Canada | VINING, Trevor I.D. | 79 | |||
Metropolitan Toronto Separate (Catholic) School Board Trustee, November 13, 1978 municipal election
Metropolitan Toronto Separate (Catholic) School Board Trustee, December 6, 1976 municipal election
Metropolitan Toronto Separate (Catholic) School Board Trustee, December 2, 1974 municipal election