Read the complete write-up of Caroline Mulroney net worth, age, husband, children, height, family, parents, salary, politics, party as well as other information you need to know.
Introduction
Caroline Mulroney is a Canadian businesswoman, lawyer and politician who currently serves as the Ontario Minister of Transportation and Minister of Francophone Affairs. She was the elected MPP for the riding of York—Simcoe in the 2018 election as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario and was a candidate in the 2018 Ontario Progressive Conservative Party leadership election, placing third. She served as Attorney General of Ontario from 2018 to 2019.
Mulroney lived and worked in the United States for 12 years until 2005 when she returned to Canada, worked in financial services and became involved in charitable work. She also served on the board of directors of the Windsor–Detroit Bridge Authority. Mulroney has been named a potential contender for the leadership of the Conservative Party in 2022, following Erin O’Toole’s resignation. Mulroney is an American and Canadian dual citizen.
Early life
Name | Caroline Mulroney |
Net Worth | $4 million |
Occupation | Politician, Businesswoman |
Height | 1.68m |
Age | 48 years |
Caroline Anne Mulroney Lapham MPP was born on June 11, 1974 (age 48 years) in Montreal, Canada. She is the eldest of four children and the only daughter of former Prime Minister of Canada Brian Mulroney and his wife, Mila. One of her younger brothers is CTV morning host Ben Mulroney. Her father won the 1983 PC leadership race on her ninth birthday. Her maternal grandfather, Dimitrije Pivnički, was a Montreal psychiatrist whose patients included Margaret Trudeau. From ages 10 to 19, she lived in 24 Sussex Drive, the home of the prime minister, and attended Lycée Claudel d’Ottawa. Her father said in his biography that he believed th at she was the most like him “in her mindset”. He also mentioned in an interview with La Presse that she would have been the most likely to follow in his footsteps and that he “would not want to be a candidate against her”.
When she was 14, Mulroney campaigned for Lucien Bouchard during the 1988 Lac St. Jean by-election. After his victory, Bouchard sent her a handwritten thank-you note for her efforts in getting him elected to the PC government. She felt betrayed after Bouchard defected from her father’s party to the Bloc Québécois. In 1990, she helped canvass for Ontario PC candidate Alex Burney in the 1990 Ontario election. On September 20, 2017, she attended the ground-breaking of the Brian Mulroney Institute of Government at St. Francis Xavier University with her father and mother.
Mulroney grew up in Ottawa, before being educated at Harvard University and the New York University School of Law. Mulroney has an undergraduate degree in Government from Harvard and a J.D. degree from New York University School of Law. During her time in law school, she developed an interest in public-interest law and interned at the New York Attorney General’s office. Mulroney is fluent in French, English, Spanish and Serbian.
Career
Caroline Mulroney worked as a financial analyst at Bear Stearns after university. She briefly worked as a lawyer and associate at Shearman & Sterling then as an associate director of the NYU Center for Law & Business. On July 29, 2002, Mulroney was admitted into the New York Bar. Mulroney was reinstated as an American lawyer on September 29, 2017, after her law license had lapsed. She is not qualified as a lawyer in Ontario or any other Canadian jurisdiction.
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Mulroney and her three sisters-in-law, Jessica Mulroney, Vanessa Mulroney and Katy Mulroney, co-founded The Shoebox Project, a non-profit that provides toiletries to women living in shelters in 2011. In 2015, she was a blogger for the website, GoGoNews, an online newspaper for children. In addition, she has been a member of the board for the SickKids Foundation, a governor of the National Theatre School of Canada, and a member of the board of directors of the Fraser Institute. In 2015, Mulroney became a vice president at BloombergSen, a Toronto investment counselling firm, until 2 August 2017, when she took a leave of absence upon announcing her candidacy.
On July 30, 2014, Minister of Transport Lisa Raitt appointed Caroline Mulroney to the Windsor–Detroit Bridge Authority, a body to oversee a second bridge across the Detroit River that separates Windsor, Ontario, from Detroit, Michigan. The authority will oversee the new bridge’s $4 billion construction, and the management of the bridge, once it has been completed, including setting the bridge tolls.
Politics
On December 12, 2015, the Toronto Sun published a profile of Caroline Mulroney, in which journalist Christina Blizzard speculated as to whether her father’s party would choose her as their new leader, to go head to head with Justin Trudeau, the current Prime Minister, the son of her father’s old rival, Pierre Trudeau. Blizzard quoted an unnamed “Tory insider”, on Mulroney’s performance, when she was the surprise keynote speaker at a 2009 event celebrating the 25th anniversary of her father’s administration. That unnamed source said: “She certainly has the smarts and the glamour to offset the current prime minister in any future election.”
Blizzard described her lack of political experience as a benefit since she “won’t wear any of the mistakes of the Stephen Harper government”. Andrew MacDougall, former director of communications to Stephen Harper, noted “But there’s a reason Tories—both provincially and federally—have dreamt for a Mulroney candidacy for years” because “she’s the closest thing the Tories have to royalty”.
When Caroline Mulroney served as joint master of ceremonies for the federal Conservative Party leadership convention in May 2017, she joked about Trudeau, “Who would want to run for their dad’s old job?”, but also said in a news interview, “I think politics is definitely something that I’ve always thought about as a career.” Mulroney responded to Blizzard with an email informing her that politics is not currently her priority telling her in an email: “While I am committed to public service and I am flattered by the suggestion, I am focused on my four young children and my work”.
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Patrick Brown recruited Mulroney as a star candidate for the PCs after meeting her when he helped collect donations for her charity. On August 2, 2017, Mulroney announced that she would seek the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario nomination in the York—Simcoe constituency for the 2018 provincial election by releasing a video in which she stated that the government needs to “get out of the way”, manage taxes properly and focus on affordability.
She explained that she chose Mulroney as her political name because Mulroney Lapham was too long and she didn’t run as Caroline Lapham because, “no matter what I do, people just always call me Caroline Mulroney.” On September 10, 2017, Mulroney has acclaimed the PC candidate in York—Simcoe. Her father had previously revealed that she had consulted him over a career in politics and that she had decided to enter provincial instead of federal politics to be closer to her family.
Ontario PC Party leadership bid
Caroline Mulroney’s name was raised as a possible successor following the sudden resignation of Ontario PC leader Patrick Brown on January 25, 2018, due to allegations of sexual misconduct. On February 4, 2018, she declared her candidacy for the leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario by releasing a video online. Mulroney has the most support from the federal Conservative caucus with 10 members.
Mulroney was supported by at least four former Patrick Brown advisers: PC campaign chair Walied Soliman, ex-campaign manager Andrew Boddington, ad guru Dan Robertson, and strategist Hamish Marshall, the former director of the controversial website The Rebel Media and the Conservative Campaign Chair for the 43rd Federal Election. Her campaign vice-chair was Derek Vanstone, Stephen Harper’s former deputy chief of staff and a former Air Canada executive.
She expressed concern to the Toronto Star on February 4, 2018, that sending her children to private school might be used as political fodder, and after the leaders’ debate on February 28, 2018, she walked away from the post-debate scrum when being asked about why she sends her children to private schools by the Ottawa Citizen’s David Reevely. Mulroney was criticized by some, including Doug Ford, for living most of her adult life in the United States, but she dismissed that by saying: “I’ve lived the majority of my life in Canada and Ontario”.
Also running for the leadership were Ford, Christine Elliott, Tanya Granic Allen, and, for a time, Patrick Brown who registered as a candidate on February 18, 2018, before withdrawing a week later. Notwithstanding her previous statements of having “great confidence” in Brown, Caroline Mulroney tweeted disapproval of his decision to run. Mulroney urged Brown to resign from the leadership race and asked the other candidates to join her call. However, Ford and Elliott did not do so with Elliott specifically saying that the party had decided who could run for leader. Mulroney criticized Ford and Elliott for their stance.
Two workers in Mulroney’s camp privately admitted to CBC News in separate conversations that she was not in the lead while two former MPs who had endorsed Mulroney, Paul Calandra, and Parm Gill, moved their support to Elliott. In the leadership election held March 10, 2018, Mulroney came in third, behind winner Doug Ford and runner-up Christine Elliott, and was eliminated after the second ballot.
42nd Parliament of Ontario
Caroline Mulroney was elected to serve as the MPP for York—Simcoe during the 42nd Parliament of Ontario in the 2018 Ontario Election. On June 29, 2018, Premier Doug Ford appointed Mulroney to be the Attorney General of Ontario, despite never having practiced law in Canada and Minister of Francophone Affairs in his Executive Council.
Mulroney voted in support of the Ford government’s September 2018 proposal to use Section 33 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, commonly called the “notwithstanding clause”, to overrule a judge’s decision that legislation intended to shrink the size of Toronto City Council was in fact in violation of Charter rights. For this position, she faced widespread condemnation from constitutional experts and politicians of all parties, particularly with respect to her duty to ensure the sanctity of the judicial process as Attorney General.
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In April 2019, as Attorney General of Ontario, Mulroney led a sweeping implementation of the budget austerity measures of the Ford administration on the justice file. This included a $133 million cut to Legal Aid Ontario, cutting over 30 percent of their anticipated $456-million provincial allocation for basic access to justice services for Ontario’s low-income citizens. The cuts were targeted at the community legal clinics serving the most vulnerable communities according to advocates. One group called the cuts a “directed attack” against Toronto and groups linked with challenges to the Ford political agenda.
Political positions
Caroline Mulroney criticized the Liberal government for its minimum wage hike after winning her riding nomination. During the leadership, Mulroney stated that she was in favour of using the “People’s Guarantee” as a “starting point” for the PCPO’s 2018 election campaign. She is opposed to the introduction of a carbon tax. She supports cuts in hydro rates and child care rebates and remained committed to spending $1 billion to build Hamilton’s light rail transit system. until Dec 23, 2019, when she publicly announced that the province was withdrawing the promised funding.
Husband
Caroline Mulroney is married to Andrew Lapham, they had their wedding in 2000. Her husband Andrew Lapham is a former executive advisor at Blackstone Canada, former principal at Onex Corporation, and the son of former Harper’s Magazine editor Lewis H. Lapham and grandson of Lewis A. Lapham. She met her husband Andrew Lapham at a blind date at a pub that was set up by one of her Harvard friends. The couple married on September 16, 2000, at the Church of Saint-Léon-de-Westmount in Westmount, Quebec. It was covered by The New York Times as well as Canadian media. Attendees included such notables as George H. W. Bush, Conrad Black, Queen Noor of Jordan, and Joe Clark. All attendees, including catering staff, had to sign confidentiality agreements.
Caroline Mulroney and her husband lived in the United States until 2005. She had the first of their four children on October 30, 2004, while still living in New York. In 2005, Mulroney, her husband, and her children moved back to Toronto and live in a private house in the city. She has two daughters Elizabeth Theodora Lapham, Miranda Brooke Lapham, and two sons Lewis H. Lapham III, and Pierce Lapham
Caroline Mulroney net worth
How much is Caroline Mulroney worth? Caroline Mulroney net worth is estimated at around $4 million. Her main source of income is from her career as a politician and businesswoman. Mulroney successful career has earned her some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. She is one of the richest and most influential politicians in Canada. Her salary for 2023 ranges from $162,574 to $475,483, but with bonuses, benefits and various other compensation, she made significantly more than her salary in the year 2022.