Read the complete write-up of Andrea Horwath net worth, salary, age, height, family, partner, husband, child as well as other information you need to know.
Introduction
Andrea Horwath is a Canadian politician. She currently serves as the leader of the Official Opposition in Ontario since 2018 and leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party (NDP) since 2009. She is a member of the Provincial Parliament (MPP) for Hamilton Centre since 2004.
She is the first woman to lead the Ontario New Democratic Party and one of only three women to serve as leader of a political party with representation in the Ontario provincial legislature (former Ontario Liberal Party leaders Kathleen Wynne and Lyn McLeod are the other two), being elected as a leader at the 2009 Ontario NDP leadership convention.
At the 2018 provincial election, Horwath led the Ontario NDP to official opposition status after 23 years without government or opposition status.
Early life
Name | Andrea Horwath |
Net Woth | $5 million |
Profession | Politician |
Height | 1.69m |
Age | 60 years |
Andrea Horwath was born on October 24, 1962 (age 60 years) in Hamilton, Canada. She was raised in Hamilton, Ontario, and has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Labour Studies from McMaster University. She worked part-time as a waitress to pay her way through university. Her father Andrew, an ethnic Hungarian, had immigrated to Canada from Slovakia and worked on the assembly line at the Ford Motor Company plant in Oakville, Ontario. Her mother, Diane, is of French and Irish descent.
She worked closely with the Hamilton labor movement for several years, programming and providing literacy, numeracy, and ESL training for workers. She subsequently got involved in the cooperative housing movement in Welland and later became a community development coordinator for Hamilton’s McQuesten Legal & Community Services, providing public legal education to groups working with tenants, injured workers, and people with disabilities.
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In 1996 Horwath earned a certificate of achievement in anti-racism training and was an organizer of Hamilton’s Days of Action campaign against provincial government cutbacks announced by Mike Harris. That year she received the Woman of the Year Award in Public Affairs from the Hamilton Status of Women Committee, in recognition of her work in the community.
She also dedicated her time and efforts toward the field of social housing and was subsequently awarded the Graham Emslie Award for Community Development in Housing by the Canadian Housing and Renewal Association.
Political career
In the Canadian federal election of 1997, she was the NDP candidate against incumbent Liberal Stan Keyes in the riding of Hamilton West. Although unsuccessful, her second-place finish was a significant improvement on previous NDP efforts in the riding and gave her an increased level of prominence in the city.
City councilor
Later in 1997, she was elected to Hamilton City Council for Ward Two, outpolling two incumbents who had represented the area for more than 20 years. She emerged as a prominent voice for the political left in the city and was re-elected to council in 2000 and 2003. During her three terms as a city councilor, she chaired the solid-waste-management committee and the municipal non-profit housing corporation.
Provincial politics
Horwath was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in a 2004 by-election in the then-extant provincial riding of Hamilton East, defeating Liberal candidate Ralph Agostino to succeed the deceased Liberal member Dominic Agostino, Ralph’s brother. Winning 63.6 percent of the vote, up from the NDP’s 29.4 percent in that riding six months earlier, her landslide victory boosted the NDP’s seat count over the threshold for official party status in the legislature and helped give the federal New Democratic Party a bounce in Hamilton that would continue into the federal election shortly thereafter.
In the 2007 election, Horwath ran in the new riding of Hamilton Centre, due to redistricting that divided her former Hamilton East riding between Hamilton Centre and the new riding of Hamilton East—Stoney Creek. Horwath’s new Hamilton Centre riding included approximately half of her former riding as well as a portion of the former Hamilton West riding where she had run federally in 1997. It also included her entire former city council ward.
In the lead-up to the campaign, Horwath was expected to face Hamilton West Liberal incumbent Judy Marsales. However, Marsales opted not to run for another term, and Horwath easily defeated Liberal candidate Steve Ruddick on election day.
NDP leadership campaign
On November 7, 2008, Horwath officially launched her campaign to win the party’s leadership. The leadership election was held March 6–8, 2009. Horwath led on the first two ballots and won on the third ballot with 60.4% of the vote defeating Peter Tabuns, Gilles Bisson, and Michael Prue.
The 2011 provincial election saw a rise in support for the NDP under Horwath’s leadership. The party won more than 20% of the popular vote for the first time since 1995 and almost doubled its seats to elect 17 members of the legislature. The election also resulted in the Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty being reduced to a minority government with the NDP holding the balance of power.
In April 2012, Horwath passed a leadership review at the party’s convention with 76% support.
In the 2014 provincial election, the NDP was able to maintain its seat count of 21 at dissolution despite the loss of three seats in Toronto but lost the balance of power when the Liberals took a majority win in the election.
Horwath has faced criticism from some party members and progressives for running a populist campaign that they described as right-wing. Despite criticism of her leadership from some quarters, Horwath received a slightly increased level of support, 77%, at the party’s post-election convention held on November 15.
Horwath ran in her third election as NDP leader against the Liberal government led by Kathleen Wynne and a Progressive Conservative Party led by Doug Ford. Horwath promised to introduce “Canada’s first universal Pharmacare plan”, highlighted by a universal dental plan and a prescription drug plan that “will initially cover 125 of the most commonly prescribed drugs”.
She also promised a child care plan in which seventy percent of Ontario parents “would either have free child care or pay an average of $12 a day in a licensed not-for-profit daycare”. Horwath promised to return Hydro One to public ownership by buying back privately held shares.
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Andrea also said that she would close the Pickering Nuclear Generating Station immediately, while the other party leaders have pledged to keep it open until 2024. The NDP promised to increase corporate tax rates from 11.5 to 12.5 percent, as well as introducing an income tax increase for those earning over $220,000 per year.
Horwath said the province would fund half of the operating cost of municipal transit and indicated that she would not introduce back-to-work legislation. The party’s support in public opinion polls increased in May 2018, leading to greater media attention and greater scrutiny. With her party gaining official opposition status, she became the Leader of the Official Opposition during the 42nd Parliament, the second-highest number of seats in the party’s history.
The NDP took all of old Toronto (i.e., what was the city of Toronto before the 1999 creation of the “megacity” of Toronto), as well as all but one seat in Hamilton and all but one seat in Niagara.
Awards
In March 2012, Horwath received the EVE award which is sponsored by Equal Voice, a non-profit organization focused on promoting women in politics. Past recipients have included women from every level of government.
Husband
Andrea Horwath is currently single. She lives in Hamilton with her son Julian who was born in November 1992. However, in March 2011 interview with the Toronto Star, she spoke publicly for the first time about the breakup of her longtime relationship with Julian’s father, Hamilton businessman Ben Leonetti. Horwath had met Ben Leonetti in her university years when she was working part-time as a waitress and he was a jazz musician. The two lived together for 25 years without getting married and split up in 2010.
Andrea Horwath net worth
How much is Andrea Horwath worth? Andrea Horwath net worth is estimated at around $5 million. Her salary is around $210,000. She is one of the influential politicians in Canada. Horwath’s successful career has earned her some of the luxurious lifestyle and some of the fancy cars.
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