Monte McNaughton, Ontario Labour Minister, leaving government 'after much soul searching'

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,908
3,051
113
Monte McNaughton, Ontario Labour Minister, leaving government 'after much soul searching'
He said he's accepted a job in the private sector

Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Sep 22, 2023 • Last updated 2 days ago • 3 minute read

WSIB will increase the benefits paid to injured workers by more than 6% next year while holding the line on premiums paid by businesses.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford lost a third cabinet minister in as many weeks Friday, with top performer Monte McNaughton resigning as labour minister to work in the private sector.


McNaughton said it had been the “honour of a lifetime” to be labour minister, but the time was right to leave. The departure, he said, was unrelated to “recent events.”


“It is always difficult to know the right time to leave politics,” he wrote in a statement. “After much soul searching over the summer months, I have accepted a job in the private sector.”

McNaughton, who has been the provincial representative for Lambton-Kent-Middlesex in southwestern Ontario since 2011, said he will step down from his cabinet post immediately and resign his seat in the days ahead. He will not seek re-election.

Ford said he wished McNaughton the very best and thanked him for all of his work.

“He made this decision based on what is best for him and his family at this point in his life and career,” Ford wrote in a statement.


“Whether tackling Ontario’s generational labour shortage, connecting workers to better jobs with bigger paycheques, or breaking the stigma of skilled trades, Monte has been instrumental in our government’s plan to put workers at the centre of Ontario’s economy and unprecedented growth.”

McNaughton’s departure delivers a blow to Ford’s cabinet bench strength. His work over the past four years as labour minister, particularly through his push to get more recognition and funding for the skilled trades, had the political benefit of garnering support from trade unions and some key figures in the labour movement who are not traditionally aligned with the Tories.

“Monte helped build a coalition of private-sector union support that has never existed in the history of the Ontario PC Party,” Ford wrote.


“He introduced groundbreaking measures to protect workers’ rights and ensure that more workers are in the driver’s seat of their own careers.”

McNaughton, who also served as infrastructure minister for a year before taking over the labour portfolio, suggested that his departure had nothing to do with the Ford government’s Greenbelt scandal.

Still, the departure comes not long after both the resignation of Steve Clark as municipal affairs and housing minister and Kaleed Rasheed as minister of public and business service delivery, related to the Greenbelt.

The premier pledged Thursday to return lands to the protected Greenbelt after his government removed them late last year in order to build housing.

NDP Leader Marit Stiles said the losses point to a party in chaos.


“This is a government in complete and utter disarray, fractured after lurching from scandal to scandal,” she wrote in a statement.

“Ford’s Conservatives are now down three Cabinet ministers in just three weeks. Will there be any cabinet ministers left on Monday?”

Interim Liberal Leader John Fraser struck a more collegial tone.

“I’ve known Monte for all the years that I’ve been in this legislature and although there’s a lot of times that we didn’t agree, I always knew I could trust Monte,” Fraser said at a press conference. “I’m going to miss him.”

Liberal leadership candidate Ted Hsu echoed that sentiment, writing in a social media post that McNaughton was “a bright spot in the Ford government.”

Known for striking cross-partisan friendships, McNaughton got his start at the legislature long before his election, serving as a legislative page in 1991.

He also ran for the party’s leadership in 2015, though he ultimately backed out of the race and threw his support behind Patrick Brown. At the time he was opposed to then-premier Kathleen Wynne’s changes to the sex-ed curriculum, championing a key cause for social conservatives, but has since publicly left those stances behind.