Sheila White (politician)
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Sheila White (born ca. 1954) is a Canadian activist. She ran for elected office five times, in Toronto, Canada, but never won a seat.
White worked as a senior aide to then-North York mayor Mel Lastman from 1985 to 1998, in charge of communications, media and community programs. She was then employed for five years as special advisor to Howard Hampton and the Ontario New Democratic Party and worked as media and communications director for the party's 2003 election campaign. She served as executive assistant to Member of Provincial Parliament for Hamilton Centreand Ontario New Democratic Party Leader, Andrea Horwath from 2004 - 2011.
White is President and CEO of WORDS Media & Communications Inc, which she founded in 1998 to provide consulting expertise. See www.sheilawhiteseminars.com. She has appeared numerous times as a commentator on radio and television political panels. Currently White is the left-leaning municipal affairs panelist on CBC Radio One's "Here and Now".
White is an environmental pioneer in the study of litter and littering, is the owner and creator of www.litterpreventionprogram.com and publisher of a Sunday weekly newsletter, This Week in Litterland. On November 19, 2012, she and her partner Alex King filed an application under Section 61 of the Ontario Environmental Bill of Rights requesting the Province of Ontario to review the issue of littering. Source: Application#12EBR009.R
A talented musician and composer, Sheila White is Musical Director at Don Heights Unitarian Congregation in Toronto.
Family history
White is the daughter of a mixed race couple and part of a musically talented family. Her father, Order of Canada recipient Bill White, was a longtime member of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and ran as the party's candidate in Spadina in the 1949 federal election, becoming the first Black Canadian to run for federal office. Both Sheila and her parents are Unitarian Universalists.[1] She is also a cousin of Canadian Senator Donald Oliver and writer George Elliott Clarke, niece of famed contralto singer and national historic figure Portia White and labour union activist Jack White, and granddaughter of clergyman William A. White, who, during World War I, became the first Black officer in British North America. He led the Second Construction Battalion as chaplain, the only black chaplain in the entire British Army.
Electoral history
White has twice run as a municipal candidate for Toronto City Council in Scarborough's Ward 44, placing second in the 1999 by-election and 2000 municipal election.[2] She ran federally for the NDP in Scarborough—Guildwood in the 2004 federal election.
Subsequently, White was the NDP candidate in the provincial Scarborough—Rouge River by-election in November 2005 to replace Ontario Liberal Party Member of Provincial Parliament Alvin Curling.[3] Curling had held the riding or predecessors thereto for twenty years prior to his resignation, on August 19, 2005, to accept a diplomatic appointment.
In the ensuing byelection, the riding was won by Toronto city councillor Bas Balkissoon with 58% of the vote. White captured 15% of the vote, finishing third behind Progressive Conservative candidate Cynthia Lai with 24% of the vote. A snowstorm caused the worst voter turnout in 30 years. Only 19% of voters cast a ballot.
White ran again in Scarborough—Rouge River as the NDP candidate in the 2007 provincial election.[4] She again finished third.
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ± | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Bas Balkissoon | 22,362 | 65.2 | ||
Progressive Conservative | Horace Gooden | 4,962 | 14.5 | ||
New Democratic | Sheila White | 4,646 | 13.5 | ||
Green | Serge Abbat | 1,275 | 3.7 | – | |
Family Coalition | Joseph Carvalho | 581 | 1.7 | ||
Libertarian | Alan Mercer | 492 | 1.4 |
Ontario byelection, November 24, 2005 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | +/- | |
Liberal | Bas Balkissoon | 9,347 | 57.6 | -6.2 | |
Progressive Conservative | Cynthia Lai | 4,032 | 24.9 | -0.3 | |
New Democratic | Sheila White | 2,425 | 14.9 | +8.9 | |
Green | Steven Toman | 167 | 1.2 | -2.3 | |
Libertarian | Alan Mercer | 100 | 0.6 | - | |
Family Coalition | Rina Morra | 93 | 0.6 | -0.8 | |
Freedom | Wayne Simmons | 59 | 0.4 | - |
Canadian federal election, 2004 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | ||||||
Liberal | John McKay | 20,950 | ||||||
Conservative | Tom Varesh | 8,277 | ||||||
New Democratic | Sheila White | 5,885 | ||||||
Green | Paul Charbonneau | 1,106 | ||||||
Canadian Action | Brenda Thompson | 200 |