Read the complete write-up of Patrick Brown net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, salary, mayor, leadership race as well as other information you need to know.
Introduction
Patrick Brown is a Canadian politician who has served as the 51st and current mayor of Brampton since 2018. Prior to his election as mayor, Brown was the leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario and Ontario’s Leader of the Official Opposition from 2015 to 2018. In May 2015, Brown was elected leader of the Ontario PC Party and stepped down as a federal MP. He then won a provincial by-election on September 3, 2015, in Simcoe North and entered the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
Brown resigned as party leader in January 2018 after allegations of sexual misconduct, was expelled from the party caucus by interim leader Vic Fedeli on February 16, 2018, and left provincial politics after an aborted second run for the PC leadership Brown became the first permanent Ontario Conservative leader who did not lead the party into an election since George Frederick Marter. He ran for mayor of Brampton and defeated incumbent Linda Jeffrey in the 2018 municipal election. On March 13, 2022, Brown announced his candidacy for the Conservative Party of Canada leadership.
Early life
Name | Patrick Brown |
Net Worth | $5 million |
Occupation | Politician |
Height | 1.83m |
Age | 43 years |
Patrick Walter Brown was born on May 26, 1978 (age 43 years) in Toronto, Canada. He is the son of Irish and Italian descent and was raised in the Roman Catholic faith. His father, Edmond Brown, a criminal lawyer in Peel Region and former federal New Democratic Party candidate for the riding of Davenport in 1979 and 1980, was raised in England and Ireland before moving to Canada, and his mother, Judy Tascona Brown, is of partial Italian descent, and an educator (teacher and principal) from Barrie.
Brown graduated from St. Michael’s College School, a private Catholic school in Toronto. He studied political science at the University of Toronto and graduated with a law degree from the University of Windsor. During his second year at law school, he was one of 10 recipients of the As Prime Minister Award. He worked for Magna International in their legal department for four years.
He served two terms as President of the Progressive Conservative Youth Federation (PCYF), a position he held from 1998 to 2002. He also served as the executive of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario, as a vice president. As PCYF President, Brown was one of the early supporters of a united right and was criticized for his decision to support a united right from party leader Joe Clark and Member of Parliament Scott Brison.
Brown was later re-elected as PCYF president with 81 percent of the vote against Jonathan Frate of Manitoba. Brown was the Deputy Chairman of the International Young Democrat Union (IYDU). He has also represented Canada on a number of international assistance projects hosted by the IYDU.
Career
Patrick Brown was elected to the Barrie City Council in 2000 at age 22 and was re-elected in 2003. Brown served on various Committees, including the Budget Committee. Brown’s primary focus while on the council was health care, despite it being a provincial responsibility. In response to a shortage of doctors, Brown founded the Physician Recruitment Task Force with the Royal Victoria Hospital to help attract more doctors to Barrie.
Brown put his name forward as a candidate for the Conservative Party nomination race for the riding of Barrie in the lead up to the 2004 federal election. Brown defeated Rod Jackson and Douglas Edwards to win the party nomination in what Jackson considered a nasty race. In the election, he lost to Liberal incumbent Aileen Carroll by 1,295 votes. Brown ran again in 2006, this time defeating Carroll by 1,523 votes. He was re-elected in the 2008 election by 15,295 votes over Liberal candidate Rick Jones.
Check Out: Pierre Poilievre net worth
In November 2010, the Canadian Taxpayers Federation expressed concern about how Patrick Brown used his House of Commons of Canada account. He sent flyers to his riding which included a letter of support and a flyer from Barrie City Councillor Michael Prowse. Brown used his House of Commons account to pay for the mailing because Michael Prowse could not afford to send the flyer out himself.
Patrick Brown was elected to his third term in office in the 2011 election. In 2012, it was reported that Brown had the highest publicly funded expenditures on public service announcement flyers with $81,159.97. On September 28, 2014, he announced his intention to run in the 2015 Ontario PC party leadership election. He registered as a leadership candidate on November 20, 2014. He said that, unlike the other candidates, he was not involved in the four consecutive losses that have kept the Ontario PCs out of power since 2003. At the time of his jump to provincial politics, he chaired the Conservative Party of Canada’s Greater Toronto Area caucus and the Canada-India Parliamentary Association.
Provincial politics
Patrick Brown announced his intention to run in the contest to replace PC Party Leader, Tim Hudak in September 2014. From the outset of his campaign, Brown positioned himself as an outsider, challenging the leadership of the PC Party, which had been defeated in the last four provincial elections. In the most recent election campaign, in 2014, the party election platform included a commitment to cut 100,000 public service jobs over 4 years through attrition. As the only one of the original five leadership candidates who was not a member of the Ontario legislature, Brown was not involved in the promise, which he considered ill-advised, Brown’s rivals attempted to use this same lack of previous involvement in provincial politics as an argument against his leadership bid.
Brown emerged as the front-runner in the leadership election in March, having sold over 40,000 of the 70,000 memberships in the party. During the campaign, Brown was successful in bringing many new members to the party, many of whom came from ethnic communities. The past four leadership contests had been won by those who sold the most memberships. Brown was endorsed by the Campaign Life Coalition and the Ontario Landowners Association. During Brown’s leadership bid both special interest groups actively supported him by selling Ontario PC Party memberships amongst their members.
Patrick Brown was criticized by his main rival, Christine Elliott, for not resigning his federal seat during the leadership campaign. Brown was absent from the House of Commons for some votes during the leadership campaign, attending 56% of the votes from September to December in 2014. However, his overall attendance for votes in 2014 was 83%.
A spokesperson for Prime Minister Stephen Harper confirmed that members are not expected to step down but are expected to “continue to fulfill their parliamentary responsibilities, including membership on committees and attendance at votes.” The campaign started with five candidates including Vic Fedeli, Lisa MacLeod, and Monte McNaughton. All three withdrew in early 2015 citing membership recruitment or financial reasons.
Patrick Brown was elected leader on May 9, 2015, defeating his only remaining opponent, Christine Elliott, winning with 61.8% of the membership vote. Brown, who resigned his seat in the House of Commons on May 13, 2015, days after winning the provincial leadership, led the Progressive Conservative party from outside the legislature during most of the summer. On July 22, 2015, Garfield Dunlop agreed to step down as MPP for Simcoe North on August 1 in order to open up a seat for Brown. A provincial by-election, called for September 3, 2015, was won by Brown.
Under his leadership, the Ontario PC Party won five by-elections, including two seats that had been previously held by the governing Liberals – Sault Ste. Marie and Scarborough-Rouge River. Despite his record, Brown faced accusations of corruption and favouritism over hand-picked candidates and unfair nomination contests.
Sexual misconduct allegations and resignation
Patrick Brown was accused by two women of engaging in sexual misconduct on January 24, 2018, which dated back to the time he was a federal MP. Brown denied the allegations and initially refused to step down. Four senior staffers from Brown’s campaign had advised him that he should resign as party leader; he did not accept their advice. In consequence, all four staffers resigned from his campaign team. After pressure from within the party, he resigned as leader in the early hours of January 25. A day later, fellow MPP, Lisa MacLeod revealed that she heard rumors about similar allegations from former National Hockey League player, Eric Lindros.
Dimitri Soudas, former director of communications to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and volunteer for the campaign, suggested the allegations were baseless, saying, “All media organizations were turning over every single stone that they could find, and they couldn’t find anything.” A Globe and Mail article revealed that Brown’s staff had expressed similar concern with Brown’s past relationships after he became leader. One of these was with Tamara Macgregor, a former staffer within Brown’s office and daughter of Karma Macgregor, then former party candidate to Ottawa West—Nepean.
The day after he resigned, Brown was succeeded on an interim basis by Nipissing MPP Vic Fedeli. Fedeli, who was unanimously elected by caucus, asked Brown to take a leave of absence from Queen’s Park while he defended himself against the allegations. In addition, Fedeli announced that he would not sign Brown’s nomination papers if he attempted to run in a Barrie riding at the June 7 provincial election.
Brown had intended on running in Barrie—Springwater—Oro-Medonte in that election, but Fedeli’s announcement would mean that he would have to run as an independent. Four of Brown’s erstwhile advisers (PC campaign chair Walied Soliman, ex-campaign manager Andrew Boddington, ad guru Dan Robertson, and strategist Hamish Marshall, the Conservative Campaign Chair for the 43rd Federal Election) gave their support to Caroline Mulroney. The latter (who subsequently became Ontario’s Attorney-General) is the daughter of former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.
In one incident, there was an allegation that Brown exposed himself to a teenager and asked her to engage in oral sex after plying her with alcohol. The accuser alleged that she was an 18-year-old high school student when the oral sex incident occurred; but on February 13, three weeks after the first public report, she amended her claim to say she was a year older than she had previously maintained, and was therefore over the legal drinking age.
In the other incident, Patrick Brown was alleged to have kissed, without consent, a female aide in his employ while in his bedroom. Brown later took a lie detector test and claimed that he felt his name was cleared. No charges have been laid as a result of either alleged incident and on April 23, 2018, he sued CTV for $8 million in damages. He then entered the PC leadership race less than one or two hours before the deadline. In 2022, Brown and CTV had reached a settlement, where CTV expressed “regrets” over the articles relating to the accusation.
Expulsion from PC caucus and a brief second run for the leadership
Patrick Brown was ejected from the PC caucus on February 16, 2018, following reports that he was claiming he hadn’t actually resigned as party leader and a series of Facebook posts in which he attacked the credibility of his accusers. Later that same day, Brown registered as a candidate for the Progressive Conservative leadership election, pending approval from the party, and on February 21, after being vetted, Brown was given the “green light” by the PC Party to run for the leadership.
Brown officially launched his second leadership campaign on February 18 with a rally in Mississauga. On February 20, PC MPP Randy Hillier filed complaints to Ontario’s Integrity Commissioner alleging that Brown had breached the province’s ethics rules around down payments over his 2016 bought $2.3-million waterfront house on Lake Simcoe, a loan from a friend and undeclared travels. The house was listed for sale in 2018. On April 28, 2018, a 60-page report by the Commissioner found out that Brown breached the Member’s Integrity Act four times over matters involving his personal finances, but there was insufficient evidence to find him in breach over alleged travel violations.
He withdrew his candidacy for leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario on February 26, 2018, citing the difficulties of simultaneously running for leadership while fighting against allegations against him. His withdrawal came days after the revelation that Integrity Commissioner was investigating Brown for alleged financial improprieties and several hours after a report revealing his apparent interference, while he was leader, in a Tory candidate nomination that is now being investigated by Hamilton police for fraud.
Brown’s supporters cited harassment against members of his family as one cause of his decision to withdraw. Brown’s $100,000 registration fee was not refunded by the party. After the election of Doug Ford as the new leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party, there were rumors that Brown would not be allowed to run under their banner.
The Progressive Conservative Party’s nomination committee unanimously ruled on March 15, 2018, that Patrick Brown would not be eligible to run as a PC candidate in Barrie—Springwater—Oro-Medonte for the June 7, 2018 election. Brown announced on Twitter shortly afterward that he would not run as an independent candidate in Barrie—Springwater—Oro-Medonte. It was later reported by the National Post that a Snover Dhillon, a convicted fraudster banned by the Federal Conservatives, played a role in all those nomination irregularities. Following his departure from provincial politics, Patrick Brown restarted his law practice and accepted a job as vice-president of a telecommunications company in Vaughan.
Return to municipal politics and views
According to reports by the National Post Patrick Brown was “urged” by supporters to run for Chair of the Regional Municipality of Peel in the 2018 Peel regional and municipal elections, the first in which the position is directly elected, although Brown himself initially declined to confirm to the Post if he would run or not. Brown registered his candidacy for Peel Regional Chair on July 3, 2018.
On July 27, 2018, Patrick Brown registered his candidacy for the Brampton mayoral election following Premier Doug Ford’s announcement that regional chair elections in Peel Region would be cancelled. Incumbent Brampton mayor Linda Jeffrey suggested “that Brown jumped into the race, and city, at the last minute in a bid to ‘rehabilitate’ his career”, while Brown suggested that Jeffrey’s “lack of leadership has contributed to rising property taxes and shootings” in the city.
Check Out: Ben Mulroney net worth
Patrick Brown’s platform includes a “poverty action plan” that would require a minimum percentage of new housing to meet affordable standards, and rental properties being redeveloped to include equal amounts of rental spots before and after the process. His “Public Safety Initiative” would include more front-line police officers, strengthening the mental health program, and affordable recreation for youth.
Brown defeated incumbent Linda Jeffrey by a narrow margin in the Brampton mayoralty race on October 22, 2018. In his acceptance speech, he thanked former Premier Bill Davis for his endorsement and said, “I’ve got so much hope in my heart for what’s ahead for Brampton. You know why? I know we can turn this around, I know Brampton is going to be back, Brampton is going to become an economic engine”. According to the Toronto Star, Jeffrey had the backing of “PC party operatives — Doug Ford’s campaign manager organized a fundraiser for her”.
In June 2019, Patrick Brown and Brampton City Council launched a public pressure campaign demanding greater healthcare funding from the Provincial government. In this campaign, City Council asked citizens of Brampton to sign a petition and share their healthcare stories with the #FairDealforBrampton hashtag. In a media release, the City of Brampton highlighted that residents receive $1,000 less in healthcare funding per person than the provincial average, that there are 55% fewer hospital beds than other Ontario municipalities, and there are unmatched increases in funding compared to the exponential growth of Brampton each year.
The three demands of the Provincial government highlighted by City Council within the Fair Deal for Brampton campaign include – Immediate funding to Brampton Civic Hospital and Peel Memorial Centre to support the increasing demand from the community, arranging funds for the completion of Phase 2 at the Peel Memorial Centre and constructing a new healthcare facility for Brampton to meet the needs of the growing population.
On January 22, 2020, Brampton City Council declared a unanimous healthcare emergency for the City of Brampton. With data from William Osler Health System indicating a hospital occupancy rate consistently over 100% over 2019, the Mayor and Councillors’ motion called on the Provincial government to provide funding for Brampton Civic Hospital and Peel Memorial Centre and to assist in moving ahead with the Phase 2 expansion of 850 beds at Peel Memorial Centre.
On January 24, 2020, Premier Ford committed to the funding of a new hospital in Brampton in a scheduled press conference announcing $20.5 million in funding for Peel police. In a statement to the Brampton Guardian, Brown said “I recognize the fact that the crisis we’re in wasn’t created in a year. That this has been a crisis that has emerged over the last 15 to 20 years and the fact that we’re at the table talking to the premier directly about it when only two days ago we had our physicians and patients come forward with a plea for help.”
In June 2019, Patrick Brown and Brampton City Council passed a unanimous motion to support a legal challenge to Quebec’s Bill 21, a secularism based law that would make it illegal for public service employees (public school teachers, police officers, judges, etc.) to wear religious symbols at their place of employment. Brampton has one of the largest south Asian populations in Canada, one of the populations that this bill would specifically impact. In explaining the justification for passing this motion as a municipality outside of Quebec, Brown stated, “Brampton is Canada’s most diverse big city. And if Brampton’s not going to defend Canadian multiculturalism, then who is?”
Patrick Brown also invited other municipalities to replicate the City of Brampton’s motion and join the legal challenge. In addition to joining the legal challenge, Brown also seconded a motion at the Peel Police Services Board to direct Peel police to “place select advertising within Quebec promoting a career at the Peel Regional Police.” The motion stood to recruit and provide opportunities for Quebecers who would be negatively impacted by Quebec’s Bill 21.
Political views
Patrick Brown identifies himself as a “pragmatic conservative” and after becoming a leader he tried to move the Ontario PC Party in a socially liberal and fiscally conservative direction. At his first Ontario PC Convention as the new leader, Brown confirmed his belief in man-made climate change and announced his support for a revenue-neutral price on carbon. Brown was also the first Ontario PC leader to march in the Toronto Pride Parade.
Brown lists former Ontario Premier Bill Davis, former Quebec Premier Jean Charest and former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney among his political mentors. Much of Brown’s time at Queen’s Park was spent criticizing and debating the government’s energy policies. He promised to dismantle the Green Energy Act, rein in executive salaries at Hydro One, and place a moratorium on the signing of new energy contracts.
Patrick Brown’s first Private Member’s Bill in the Ontario Legislature was Bill 136, the Estate Administration Tax Abolition Act, which was an attempt to eliminate Ontario’s estate administration (probate) tax (originally introduced by the PC government of Mike Harris in 1998). The bill was supported by Brown’s fellow PCs but opposed by the governing Liberals and third party New Democrats, and was voted down 51-24 on division at second reading.
During his tenure as Ontario PC leader, Brown was noted for his close relationship with many of Ontario’s diverse ethnic communities. He spoke in the Legislature in support of a motion condemning Islamophobia and was one of the first Canadian politicians to refer to the Tamil Genocide. Brown has a personal relationship with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who refers to him as “Patrick Bhai” (“Brother Patrick”) and named him an honorary citizen of Gujarat.
His critics called him “policy-lite” since he made no policy statements during the Progressive Conservative leadership campaign. After winning the leadership race, he focused his plan on four main issues which he suggested would lead to a more prosperous province: less red tape, improved transportation corridors, affordable energy, and addressing Ontario’s growing skills gap.
Patrick Brown’s shift of the party to the political center stood in contrast to his time in federal politics. As a federal MP, Brown had been one of the more socially conservative members of the Conservative caucus. As an MP, Brown voted to re-open the same-sex marriage and abortion debates, and also voted against legalizing euthanasia and including gender expression in the Human Rights Act. He later said those votes were to represent his constituents. Brown said that he didn’t intend to revisit any of these issues in the provincial legislature.
In June 2015, Brown expressed his intent to participate in the Toronto Pride parade. His decision to do so marked the first time a PC leader has ever officially marched in the major Toronto Pride parade event and signified a departure from the party’s more socially conservative history with the LGBTQ+ community. In the email to his caucus, Brown said, “If there is anyone in your riding that you want me to call who may not support my decision, I am happy to call them personally.” Brown marched alongside the advocacy group LGBTory in the parade, a group that he has consulted with on several occasions, including when the Ontario Liberal government introduced LGBT-inclusive sex-ed curriculum changes in 2015.
Check Out: Christine Elliott net worth
In an interview with the Canadian Press, Patrick Brown stated, “Any policy that attempts to limit a woman’s right to choose or the ability of same-sex couples to marry are off-limits, period.” In addressing the prospect of losing members of the party because of this change in tone and direction for the Ontario PCs, Brown said, “Frankly, I think I opened the party up to tens of thousands more who simply want a reasonable, thoughtful, modern, inclusive PC party,” so I’m not worried about a few leaving.”
As Mayor of Brampton in June of 2019, Brown wrote an op-ed in the Toronto Star discussing the historical and political importance of the Toronto’s Pride Parade and called on Provincial and Federal Conservative leaders including Doug Ford and Andrew Scheer to officially march in the Toronto and Ottawa parades. In 2019, Brown and Brampton City Council marched in the Toronto Pride Parade as an official delegation for the first time in the city’s history.
Patrick Brown is a critic of the Sri Lankan government, particularly of its treatment of Sri Lankan Tamils. He has labeled the atrocities faced by Tamil civilians in Sri Lanka genocide. Brown was an advocate of Bill 104, which officially declared the Sri Lankan government’s actions a genocide. In January 2021, following the demolition of a Mullivaikkal monument at Jaffna University by university authorities, he vowed to build a similar monument in Brampton. In November 2021, Brown commemorated Maaveerar Naal on behalf of the city.
Hockey Night in Barrie
Patrick Brown founded a charity hockey game known as Hockey Night in Barrie in 2007. Hockey Night in Barrie was a yearly summer event hosted at the Barrie Molson Centre that had participation from current and former NHLers, known personalities from across Canada, and locals from the police department, fire department, and hospitals in Simcoe County. All funds raised from each game contributed to local hospitals and charities in the Simcoe County region.
Hockey Night in Barrie raised $2 million, with the majority of proceeds going towards the development of the Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre’s Cancer Centre and a new eight-bed youth mental health inpatient unit. In addition to the Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre, the game also supported for the Orillia Soldiers’ Memorial Hospital and Georgian Bay General Hospital for the 9th annual charity game in 2016. Money raised from the game contributed to the Orillia Soldiers’ Memorial Hospital’s new Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit.
The game has featured NHL players like Connor McDavid, Aaron Ekblad, Steven Stamkos, Rick Nash, Brian Little, Mark Scheifele, and Andrew Mangiapane; former NHLers such as Wendell Clark, Darcy Tucker, Mike Gartner, Dale Hawerchuk, Bernie Nicholls, Gary Roberts, and Shane Corson; and has featured personalities like Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Hockey Night in Canada’s Don Cherry and Ron Maclean, Ontario journalist Steve Paikin, Alan Thicke, Walter Gretzky and Jennifer Robinson, among others. In 2018, Brown passed on organizational leadership to Barrie-Springwater-Oro-Medonte MP Alex Nuttall for its eleventh annual charity hockey game.
In August of 2019, Patrick Brown held the first-ever Hockey Night in Brampton aimed at fundraising for Brampton Civic Hospital and Osler Health Centre. In total, the game raised $411,000, with proceeds contributing directly to the Cardiology Program at Brampton Civic Hospital. The game saw participation from NHLers, Jason Spezza, Sean Monahan, Malcolm Subban, Connor Brown, Casey Cizikas and personalities such as Nav Bhatia.
Wife
Patrick Brown is married to Genevieve Gualtieri, they had their wedding in 2018. His wife Genevieve Gualtieri is currently working with the SickKids Foundation. She is the niece of current Progressive Conservative MPP Rudy Cuzzetto who represents Mississauga—Lakeshore. They lived in the Lorne Park neighborhood of Mississauga, but simultaneously had a lease in Brampton; they have since moved within the city. In July 2019 the couple announced the birth of their first child, a boy. Brown is the nephew of Joe Tascona, a former Progressive Conservative MPP who represented Barrie—Simcoe—Bradford.
Patrick Brown net worth
How much is Patrick Brown worth? Patrick Brown net worth is estimated at around $5 million. His main source of income is from his career as a mayor. Brown successful career has earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. He is one of the richest and influential mayors in Canada. His salary for 2022 ranges from $162,574 to $475,483, but with bonuses, benefits and various other compensation, he made significantly more than his salary in the year 2020. After his forced resignation, Patrick Brown penned a book called Takedown: The Attempted Political Assassination of Patrick Brown. The book was released as scheduled, in October 2018, which happened to be after Brown won the mayoralty of Brampton. There was negative reaction to the release from the Ontario provincial government of Doug Ford, and from the previous incumbent, Linda Jeffrey.