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Greg Sorbara
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Gregory Samuel Sorbara (born September 4, 1946) is a former politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a Liberal member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1985 to 1995, and again from 2001 to 2012 who represented ridings north of Toronto in the city of Vaughan. Sorbara served as a cabinet minister in the governments of David Peterson and Dalton McGuinty.
Key Information
He resigned from cabinet October 11, 2005, following a police investigation involving his family's real estate development firm and was reinstated on May 23, 2006 after a judge ruled that there was no cause for including Sorbara's name on a search warrant. Sorbara chaired the party's successful 2007 election campaign but announced on October 26, 2007 that he was leaving the cabinet to spend more time with his family but would continue as a backbench MPP. On August 1, 2012, Sorbara announced that he was retiring from the legislature but would stay on as chair of the Liberal's election campaign.[1] Sorbara was chancellor of York University from June 2014 to May 2023, succeeded by Kathleen Taylor.
Family life and legal career
[edit]Sorbara was born in Toronto, Ontario in 1946. His father, Sam Sorbara, immigrated to Canada from Italy in the 1920s.[2] Sorbara graduated from St. Michael's College School and attended University of Toronto for four years but left without graduating. In 1967 he joined the Company of Young Canadians in Vancouver, where he met his future partner, Kate Barlow. Later, he completed his education at York University and Osgoode Hall Law School, and began to practise law.[3] His daughter Martina Sorbara is a singer-songwriter.[4]
On October 11, 2005, the RCMP raided the Sorbara Group offices as part of the Royal Group Technologies investigation. The police warrant stated that there were reasonable grounds to believe Sorbara and other directors of Royal Group defrauded the company and shareholders when they bought land in Brampton, that was owned by a subsidiary of the Sorbara Group. Sorbara initially resisted opposition calls for him to step down, but later resigned as Minister of Finance the same day.[5]
In 2017, Sorbara and family donated $5 million to the construction efforts of the Mackenzie Vaughan Hospital.[2]
Political career
[edit]In the 1985 provincial election Sorbara ran as the Liberal in the riding of York North, a suburban riding north of Toronto. He defeated Progressive Conservative incumbent William Hodgson by 4,100 votes.[6] The Liberals under David Peterson were able to form a minority government after this election, and Sorbara was appointed Minister of Colleges and Universities and Minister of Skills Development on June 26, 1985.[7]
Sorbara was re-elected in the redistributed riding of York Centre in the 1987 provincial election.[8] On September 29, 1987, he became Minister of Labour with responsibility for Women's Issues.[9] Following a cabinet shuffle in August 1989, he became Minister of Consumer and Commercial Relations.[10]
In 1990 the Liberals were upset by the New Democratic Party in the election which followed, though Sorbara won in his riding.[11]
1992 leadership race
[edit]On November 14, 1991, Sorbara announced that he was joining the race to replace Peterson as leader of the party.[12] He stated, "We have to stop this province's slide into a low-wage, no-growth economy," and spoke of infrastructure investment.[13] During the convention which was held in Hamilton, Ontario on February 9, he finished third on the first ballot, and remained in this position until dropping from the race after the fourth ballot. Sorbara subsequently refused to support either Murray Elston or Lyn McLeod (the eventual winner) on the fifth and final ballot.[14] and did not seek re-election in 1995.[15]
Sorbara supported Dalton McGuinty's successful bid for the provincial party leadership at the 1996 leadership convention. He did not run in the 1999 provincial election, but was elected Party President over Alvin Curling in November 1999.[16] He later won a 2001 by-election in the redistributed Greater Toronto Area riding of Vaughan—King—Aurora, defeating Progressive Conservative candidate Joyce Frustaglio by almost 10,000 votes.[17] Sorbara delivered a statement in May 2010, supporting the minority Muslim sect, Ahmadiyya, who were recently attacked in Lahore for practicing their faith.[18]
Minister of Finance
[edit]The Liberals won the 2003 election, and Sorbara was appointed Minister of Finance in the Ontario Cabinet on October 23, 2003.[19]
Sorbara became involved in a conflict-of-interest controversy not long after his appointment. In late 2003, the Ontario Securities Commission informed Sorbara's office that Royal Group Technologies would be announcing they were under investigation by the OSC. As a former director of Royal Group, this placed Sorbara in a conflict of interest as he also oversaw the OSC. Sorbara could not consult the Premier concerning the conflict of interest as he was restricted by the province's Securities Act from informing anyone else of the impending announcement by the company. Royal Group did not announce the investigation for almost two months.
There were calls for Sorbara to resign after the controversy became public knowledge, but he was cleared of any wrongdoing by the provincial integrity commissioner in August 2004.
On May 18, 2004, Sorbara released the McGuinty government's first budget. The centrepiece was a controversial new Health Premium of $300 to $900, staggered according to income. This violated a key Liberal campaign pledge not to raise taxes, and gave the government an early reputation for breaking promises. The Liberals defended the premium by pointing to the previous government's hidden deficit, and McGuinty claimed he needed to break his campaign pledge on taxation to fulfill his promises on other fronts. This broken promise has created a lasting public relations difficulty for the Liberal Party.
The Ontario Health Premium also became a major issue in the early days of the 2004 federal election, called a week after the Ontario budget. Most believe that the controversy hampered Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin's bid for re-election.
Also controversial was the elimination of coverage for health services not covered by the Canada Health Act including eye examinations and physical therapy. Other elements of the McGuinty government's first budget were a four-year plan to tackle the deficit left behind by the Conservatives, free immunization for children, investments in education and investments to lower waiting times for cancer care, cardiac care, joint replacement and MRI and CT scans.
On May 11, 2005, Sorbara delivered his second budget. The flagship of the budget was the "Reaching Higher" plan. Investing $6.2 billion over four years, the plan increased accessibility for low-income students with loans and grants while funding more enrollments, expanded medical school spaces, and invested in new faculty, graduate scholarships and research.
The budget also projected breaking a vow to balance the future 2007–08 budget. Sorbara instead aimed at balance in 2008–09.
Sorbara also moved to expand infrastructure spending by encouraging Ontario's large pension plans to invest in the construction of new roads, schools and hospitals. Specific projects in the budget included a 10-year expansion of the TTC and Go Transit, 15,000 new affordable housing units and improved border crossings. NDP leader Howard Hampton described this move as "privatization by stealth."
After a cabinet shuffle on June 29, 2005, Sorbara was also named as the Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet.
Sorbara was re-elected to the Legislature in the 2007 election, and subsequently on October 26, 2007, he announced that he no longer wanted to sit in Cabinet, citing he wanted to devote more time for his constituents and his family.[20]
Electoral record
[edit]| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal | Greg Sorbara | 36,928 | 56.14 | 15.97 | |
| Progressive Conservative | Carmine Iacono | 21,744 | 33.06 | -21.64 | |
| New Democratic | Mike Seaward | 4,697 | 7.14 | 4.22 | |
| Green | Adrian Visentin | 2,412 | 3.67 | 2.73 | |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal | Greg Sorbara | 28,961 | 61.9 | 5.76 | |
| Progressive Conservative | Gayani Weerasinghe | 8,773 | 18.8 | -14.26 | |
| New Democratic | Rick Morelli | 5,417 | 11.6 | 4.46 | |
| Green | Russell Korus | 2,978 | 6.4 | 2.73 | |
| Independent | Savino Quatela | 624 | 1.3 | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal | Greg Sorbara | 26,176 | 53.02 | -8.7 | |
| Progressive Conservative | Tony Genco | 15,409 | 31.21 | 12.41 | |
| New Democratic | Paul Donofrio | 5,584 | 11.31 | -2.9 | |
| Libertarian | Paolo Fabrizio | 934 | 1.89 | ||
| Green | Brendan Frye | 695 | 1.41 | -4.99 | |
Bibliography
[edit]- The Battlefield of Ontario Politics (2014) Dundurn Press ISBN 9781459724617
References
[edit]- ^ "Liberal MPP Greg Sorbara resigns". CBC.ca. August 1, 2012. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
- ^ a b "Inspiring donations kick start campaign". mackenziehealth.ca.
- ^ Greg Sorbara (2014). Greg Sorbara: the battlefield of Ontario politics. Dundurn Press.
- ^ Iannacci, Elio (September 3, 2009). "It's all about them". Maclean Magazine.
- ^ "Ontario finance minister quits over fraud probe". CBC News. October 12, 2005. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
- ^ "Results of vote in Ontario election". The Globe and Mail. May 3, 1985. p. 13.
- ^ "Liberals pledge reform as they take over in Ontario". The Gazette. Montreal, Que. June 27, 1985. p. B1.
- ^ "Results from individual ridings". The Windsor Star. September 11, 1987. p. F2.
- ^ "Wrye gets new cabinet job". The Windsor Star. September 29, 1987. p. A1.
- ^ Allen, Gene (August 3, 1989). "Veterans bear load as 8 ministers cut in Peterson shuffle". The Globe and Mail. p. A1.
- ^ "Ontario election: Riding-by-riding voting results". The Globe and Mail. September 7, 1990. p. A12.
- ^ "McLeod and Sorbara join Liberal race". The Hamilton Spectator. November 14, 1991. p. A10.
- ^ Todd, Paula (January 6, 1992). "Liberals propose economic 'rescue'". Toronto Star. p. A9.
- ^ Rand Dyck; Sam Bottomley (1998). David Leyton-Brown (ed.). Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs (1992). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 161.
- ^ Dexter, Brian (May 19, 1995). "Tory wheeler-dealer in tough race". Toronto Star. p. NY2.
- ^ Mallan, Caroline (November 29, 1999). "Dalton defeats dissent; Liberal leader gets strong party support". The Hamilton Spectator. p. D5.
- ^ "Ontario: Liberal romps to byelection win". Kingston Whig-Standard. June 29, 2001. p. 11.
- ^ "Greg Sorbara, MPP - Vaughan". Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-06-04.
- ^ "Premier Dalton McGuinty and his 22-member cabinet were sworn in Thursday". Canadian Press NewsWire. October 23, 2003. p. 1.
- ^ "Sorbara quits cabinet". Toronto Star. October 26, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
External links
[edit]Greg Sorbara
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Gregory Samuel Sorbara was born on September 4, 1946, in Toronto, Ontario, to Sam Sorbara and Grace Chirchiglia.[3] His parents were first-generation Italian immigrants who arrived in Canada seeking economic opportunity through diligence.[2] Sam Sorbara emigrated from Calabria, Italy, in 1925 at age 14, escaping rural poverty amid family hardship, including an alcoholic father and the early death of his mother after arrival.[10][11] Sam overcame early adversities—such as bootlegging during the Great Depression and a three-year prison term for passing counterfeit bills, for which he received a pardon decades later—by transitioning into agriculture, selling mineral feed to farmers, and acquiring land, eventually founding the Sorbara Group real estate firm in 1942.[10][11] This enterprise grew into a billion-dollar entity by the time of Sam's death in 2002, providing the foundation for family prosperity.[10] Sorbara grew up in a large family alongside siblings including elder brother Joseph, brother Edward, and sister Marcella Tanzola, amid the expanding Sorbara Group operations in the Toronto area.[4][10] Unlike his father's impoverished youth in Guelph and Toronto, Sorbara's childhood unfolded in relative affluence in Toronto, which he later described as having a "silver spoon lodged firmly in my mouth," reflecting the generational shift enabled by his parents' entrepreneurial success.[11] This environment, rooted in Italian-Canadian immigrant values of perseverance, shaped his early exposure to business and community leadership in Vaughan and surrounding regions.[2]Academic and Professional Training
Sorbara earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from York University's Glendon College in 1978.[9][2] He subsequently obtained a Bachelor of Laws degree from Osgoode Hall Law School in 1981, qualifying him for legal practice.[9][2] Following graduation, he commenced his professional training in law at the firm of Stikeman Elliott, a prominent Canadian legal practice.[2] This early career phase established his foundation in corporate and commercial law before transitioning to broader business and political endeavors.[12]Pre-Political Career
Legal Practice
Sorbara obtained his Bachelor of Laws degree from Osgoode Hall Law School following undergraduate studies at York University's Glendon College.[13] In 1971, he co-established the law firm Tanzola & Sorbara Professional Corporation with his brother-in-law, Pasquale Tanzola, to handle legal matters for the Sorbara Group's real estate development activities in the Vaughan area.[14] The firm operated as a small practice focused on corporate and property-related work integral to the family's expanding business interests, which included land acquisition and development projects north of Toronto.[14] Sorbara also gained experience at the national law firm Stikeman Elliott LLP, contributing to his professional credentials in commercial law before his initial entry into provincial politics via the 1985 election.[15]Involvement in Family Business
Prior to his initial entry into provincial politics in 1985, Sorbara's direct professional involvement in the family business was limited, as he focused on legal practice following his graduation from Osgoode Hall Law School in 1981, including work at Stikeman Elliott LLP and Tanzola & Sorbara Professional Corp.[15] The Sorbara Group of Companies, founded by his father Sam Sorbara as a real estate development and property management firm, formed the core of the family's enterprise in Ontario, with operations centered in areas like Vaughan.[16][2] Sorbara joined the Sorbara Group as a partner in 1995 after losing his seat in the Ontario legislature, marking his primary active engagement with the family business during a hiatus from politics.[2] In this capacity, he participated in the company's land development and property management activities, which had grown into a significant operation by the late 1990s.[2] He also directed related entities, such as Royal Group Technologies Ltd., from 1995 to 2003.[3] His tenure in the business ended with his return to elected office in 2003.[2]Political Entry and Early Roles
First Election and Legislative Service
Sorbara was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario on May 2, 1985, in the provincial general election, representing the suburban riding of York North north of Toronto.[1] The Liberal Party, under leader David Peterson, secured a minority government with 48 seats, ending 42 years of Progressive Conservative dominance in York North, where Sorbara won with 21,291 votes against the incumbent Tory's 18,000.[2][17] This victory contributed to the Liberals' upset against Premier Frank Miller's short-lived Progressive Conservative administration, formed just weeks earlier after Bill Davis's resignation.[18] In the ensuing 33rd Parliament (June 4, 1985 – July 31, 1987), Sorbara joined Peterson's cabinet as Minister of Colleges and Universities and Minister of Skills Development, marking him as the first Italian-Canadian appointed to an Ontario cabinet position.[1][11] He served until the 1987 election, focusing on post-secondary education expansion and workforce training initiatives amid economic recovery efforts from the early 1980s recession. Sorbara was re-elected on September 10, 1987, in the redistributed riding of York Centre, capturing 27,096 votes as the Liberals won a majority with 80 seats.[1][17] In the 34th Parliament (1987–1990), he held multiple cabinet portfolios, including Minister of Labour with responsibility for women's issues, and later Minister of Consumer and Commercial Relations following a 1989 shuffle, overseeing labor relations, consumer protection, and business regulation during a period of economic growth and free trade debates.[1][2] The Liberals lost power in the October 1, 1990, general election to Bob Rae's New Democratic Party. Sorbara retained York Centre with re-election on November 19, 1990, entering the 35th Parliament (1990–1995) in opposition.[1] There, he served as Liberal critic for urban affairs, transportation, the Greater Toronto Area, and attorney general, while participating in standing committees on general government, estimates, public accounts, and the administration of justice.[1] He did not seek re-election in the June 8, 1995, provincial election, concluding a decade of service marked by government roles in education and labor policy followed by opposition scrutiny of the Rae administration's economic measures.[1][3]1992 Ontario Liberal Leadership Bid
Greg Sorbara, a Liberal Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for York North since 1985 and a cabinet minister in David Peterson's government, entered the 1992 Ontario Liberal Party leadership race following the party's defeat in the September 1990 provincial election.[1][19] As an MPP with experience in government operations, Sorbara positioned himself as a candidate drawing on his legislative record and appeal to the party's moderate wing, marking him as the first Italian-Canadian to seek the provincial Liberal leadership.[20] The leadership convention, convened on February 8–9, 1992, in Toronto, featured a multi-ballot contest among several candidates, including Sorbara, Lyn McLeod, and David Cooke.[21] Sorbara garnered substantial initial support, polling in the mid-teens percentage range on early ballots and securing third place overall before releasing his delegates to bolster McLeod's bid.[20] The protracted process lasted 11 hours across five ballots, culminating in McLeod's victory as the party's new leader and Ontario's first female leader of a major party.[21] Sorbara's campaign highlighted his roots in a Conservative-leaning family that shifted to Liberal allegiance, reflecting his personal commitment to the party despite its recent electoral setback.[2]Ministerial Positions
Roles in Transportation and Government Operations
Sorbara was appointed Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet on November 19, 2003, a position he held concurrently with his role as Minister of Finance until September 10, 2007.[1] The Management Board of Cabinet in Ontario is tasked with reviewing government expenditures, approving policy frameworks, and ensuring operational alignment across ministries to support fiscal discipline and administrative effectiveness.[13] In this capacity, Sorbara contributed to the McGuinty government's early efforts to streamline public sector operations following the 2003 election, including oversight of inter-ministerial coordination for resource allocation amid a projected $5.6 billion deficit inherited from the previous Progressive Conservative administration.[13] As Chair, Sorbara also served as Chair of the Treasury Board, which handles collective bargaining, employee compensation, and fiscal planning for the provincial public service, employing over 70,000 workers at the time.[1] [2] These roles positioned him at the intersection of financial oversight and operational execution, facilitating decisions on government-wide efficiencies such as procurement reforms and program evaluations to address budgetary pressures without immediate tax increases, as pledged in the 2003 Liberal platform.[13] While not holding a dedicated transportation portfolio, Sorbara's influence extended to infrastructure funding decisions through these operational chairs, supporting provincial investments in roads, bridges, and transit systems as part of broader economic recovery initiatives.[22] For instance, during his tenure, cabinet-approved allocations aided public transit expansions, including gas tax revenues redirected to municipal systems to reduce congestion and stimulate job growth.[23] Earlier, in opposition, he had served as Transportation Critic from November 19, 1990, to April 28, 1995, critiquing provincial policies on highways and urban transit amid rapid growth in the Greater Toronto Area.[1]Initial Tenure as Minister of Finance (2003–2005)
Greg Sorbara was appointed Minister of Finance on October 23, 2003, shortly after the Ontario Liberal Party's victory in the October 2, 2003 provincial election.[1] In his initial Fall Economic and Fiscal Review on December 17, 2003, Sorbara projected a $5.6 billion deficit for the 2003-04 fiscal year, attributing it to underestimated liabilities from the previous Progressive Conservative government, with potential additional off-balance-sheet liabilities of up to $2.2 billion.[24] [25] This assessment contrasted with the prior administration's claims of a balanced budget, setting the stage for fiscal restraint amid campaign promises of balanced budgets and no new taxes that were later adjusted through legislative changes.[26] The 2004 Ontario Budget, tabled on May 18, 2004, introduced the Ontario Health Premium—a income-based fee ranging from $60 to $900 annually, projected to generate $1.6 billion in 2004-05 to fund health care investments.[27] [28] [29] The budget outlined a multi-year plan to reduce the deficit from an interim $6.2 billion in 2003-04 to $2.2 billion in 2004-05 and $2.1 billion in 2005-06, incorporating spending controls, cuts to certain services such as chiropractor payments and limits on vision and physiotherapy coverage, while increasing allocations for health and education.[30] [31] Sorbara conducted pre-budget consultations across regions like Sudbury and Toronto to gather stakeholder input.[32] [33] In March 2005, revised figures revealed the 2004-05 deficit had exceeded initial projections by approximately $6 billion due to updated spending and revenue estimates.[34] The May 12, 2005 budget implemented spending reductions in non-priority areas but leveraged unexpected tax revenues to boost funding for colleges and universities by nearly $500 million, maintaining the deficit at $3 billion while prioritizing health care wait-time reductions and infrastructure.[35] These measures reflected a pragmatic approach to fiscal management amid inherited challenges, though they drew criticism for deviating from pre-election commitments on taxation and deficits.[27]Major Controversies
2005 RCMP Investigation into Family Business
In October 2005, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) launched raids on the offices of Sorbara Group, a real estate development firm owned by the family of Ontario Finance Minister Greg Sorbara, in Toronto and Woodbridge, Ontario, as part of a broader fraud investigation into Royal Group Technologies Ltd.[36][37] The probe centered on allegations of fraudulent activities in two specific land sale transactions between Sorbara Group and Royal Group, where properties were sold at prices that generated substantial profits for Sorbara Group.[38][39] The RCMP's sealed search warrant reportedly implicated Sorbara personally, alongside Royal Group executives including Chairman Victor De Zen and CEO Douglas Dunsmuir, in claims of deceiving Royal Group through misrepresentations that facilitated the deals.[36][40][41] These transactions involved the sale of industrial properties, with one deal alone yielding profits exceeding $20 million for Sorbara Group after resale, raising questions about the accuracy of valuations provided to Royal Group.[39] Sorbara maintained that he had no direct involvement in the day-to-day operations of the family business since entering politics and described the inclusion of his name in the warrant—without public disclosure of details—as "unfair," arguing it created undue political pressure despite the lack of charges against him at the time.[36][42] The investigation stemmed from internal concerns at Royal Group about potential executive misconduct, prompting the RCMP's involvement in examining financial records, contracts, and communications related to the property transfers dating back several years.[38][43] While the raids uncovered documents pertinent to the fraud allegations against Royal Group principals, the specific focus on Sorbara Group's role highlighted tensions between private business dealings and public office, though no immediate arrests or charges were filed against Sorbara or his family members.[44][40] The RCMP confirmed the scope included Sorbara family business transactions but withheld further details due to the ongoing nature of the probe.[38]Resignation, Legal Clearance, and Political Return
In October 2005, Greg Sorbara resigned as Ontario's Minister of Finance amid an RCMP investigation into alleged fraud related to a land transaction involving his family's real estate firm, Sorbara Development Company, and Royal Group Technologies.[36] The probe stemmed from a 1980s deal where Sorbara's company was accused of misrepresenting property values to secure financing, though Sorbara maintained he had no direct involvement in the transactions after leaving the family business in 1996.[45] His resignation, announced on October 12, 2005, followed a police raid on Sorbara Group offices and the inclusion of his name in a search warrant, despite Premier Dalton McGuinty initially defending him; opposition parties, including the NDP, demanded his removal pending the investigation's outcome.[46][41] Sorbara challenged the inclusion of his name in the warrant through legal action, arguing it was erroneous and lacked evidence of his personal wrongdoing.[47] On March 9, 2006, Ontario Superior Court Justice Ian Nordheimer ruled in his favor, ordering the removal of Sorbara's name from the document after reviewing RCMP affidavits that failed to substantiate direct links to fraudulent activity.[6] No charges were ever laid against Sorbara personally, and he publicly described the RCMP's actions as a "terrible mistake," vindicating his decision to step aside voluntarily to avoid distracting the government.[48] The clearance highlighted procedural issues in the investigation, with critics noting the RCMP's reliance on outdated allegations from the company's past without implicating Sorbara's post-1996 conduct.[49] Following the court's decision, Sorbara was reinstated to cabinet on May 23, 2006, resuming his role as Minister of Finance in a shuffle by Premier McGuinty, just seven months after his resignation.[50] The swift return was praised by supporters as evidence of his innocence and the investigation's lack of merit, allowing him to continue contributing to Liberal fiscal policy without further legal encumbrance.[49] Sorbara retained his seat as MPP for Vaughan and later reflected on the episode as a test of political resilience, emphasizing that proactive resignation preserved government operations amid unfounded scrutiny.[51]2012 Resignation from Provincial Politics
On August 1, 2012, Greg Sorbara announced his resignation as the Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for Vaughan, ending a 21-year tenure in that riding since his 1995 reelection.[52][53] His departure from the legislature followed over 25 years of cumulative public service, including an earlier stint as MPP from 1985 to 1990.[54] Sorbara attributed the decision primarily to family considerations, stating that discussions with his family guided his choice to retire from elected office at that time.[55] As a veteran Liberal and close confidant of Premier Dalton McGuinty, he had served in senior roles including two terms as Minister of Finance, but his resignation occurred amid broader challenges for the Ontario Liberal government, such as fiscal pressures and upcoming elections.[52][56] Despite stepping down, Sorbara committed to remaining active in politics as co-chair of the Ontario Liberal Party's provincial election campaign, signaling that his exit from the legislature did not mark a full withdrawal from public life.[53] His resignation triggered a byelection in Vaughan, scheduled for later that fall, which the Liberals ultimately retained.[54][58]2018 Family Succession Dispute at Sorbara Group
The Sorbara Group, a Vaughan-based real estate development firm founded by Sam Sorbara in the 1950s and holding assets worth approximately $1.4 billion as of 2018, became the center of a public family succession dispute in October of that year.[10] The conflict pitted the four siblings—Joseph (eldest, aged 76), Greg, Edward, and sister Marcella Tanzola—each owning an equal 25% stake in the company against one another, stemming from unresolved governance and leadership transition issues following Sam's death in 2002.[59] Without a formal succession agreement, tensions escalated over control of executive roles and profit distributions.[59] The dispute's legal roots trace to October 2016, when Joseph Sorbara filed an application in Ontario Superior Court alleging oppressive conduct by his siblings, including the wrongful dismissal of his son Paul as co-CEO—a position Joseph had advocated for as part of generational handover planning.[16] Joseph and Edward had jointly served as co-CEOs from 1989 until 2015, but Paul’s termination without cause, allegedly after he uncovered financial irregularities, prompted Joseph's demands for a fair valuation and buyout of his shares or, alternatively, corporate dissolution under Ontario's Business Corporations Act.[16][59] Prior mediation efforts collapsed in March 2016, leaving the matter unresolved and fueling claims of personal animosity, such as Edward's alleged insults toward Joseph.[16] By 2018, the feud had intensified, with Joseph accusing Edward of unilaterally diverting funds from profitable ventures to unrelated projects, potentially undermining shareholder value.[60] Greg Sorbara, positioned as a mediator amid the acrimony, described the issues as centered on succession planning rather than outright malice, expressing confidence in an eventual family resolution without detailing specifics.[10][59] The siblings' equal ownership and absence of binding governance mechanisms exacerbated the deadlock, highlighting risks in family enterprises lacking predefined handover protocols.[59] Allegations remained unproven in court as of late 2018, with the litigation poised to extend for years and threatening operational stability at the firm, which specializes in commercial and residential developments.[16]Later Political Career
Second Term as Minister of Finance (2007–2012)
Sorbara returned to cabinet as Minister of Finance on May 23, 2006, following his legal clearance and victory in a Vaughan by-election earlier that year.[1] In this capacity, he oversaw fiscal planning amid a robust provincial economy, with Ontario's GDP growth projected at 2.9% for 2007.[61] On March 27, 2007, Sorbara tabled the 2007 Ontario Budget, titled "Investing in People, Expanding Opportunity," which forecasted a $537 million surplus for the fiscal year and emphasized poverty reduction alongside infrastructure investments.[62] A key initiative was the introduction of the Ontario Child Benefit, a refundable tax credit providing up to $1,100 annually per child under 18 for eligible low-income families, phased in starting July 2007 and fully implemented by July 2008, benefiting approximately 800,000 children.[52] The budget also committed $6.2 billion to capital spending on highways and transit, while maintaining a contingency fund of $1.5 billion to buffer against economic risks. Critics, including the Progressive Conservatives, argued the spending increases risked fiscal sustainability, though Sorbara defended the measures as targeted investments yielding long-term returns.[61] Sorbara's term concluded abruptly on October 27, 2007, when he resigned from cabinet ahead of a shuffle, citing a desire to reduce his workload and focus on constituency duties after over four years in the finance role across two stints.[63] Dwight Duncan succeeded him, inheriting oversight as the global financial crisis emerged later that year. Sorbara remained as MPP for Vaughan until announcing his retirement from provincial politics on August 1, 2012, amid the Liberals' minority government challenges, during which he contributed to caucus strategy but held no further executive positions.[56]Fiscal Policies, Achievements, and Criticisms
During his second tenure as Minister of Finance from May 2006 to October 2007, Sorbara tabled the 2007 Ontario Budget on March 22, which projected a deficit of just under $1 billion for the 2006-07 fiscal year after utilizing reserves, with a commitment to fiscal balance by 2008-09 through a medium-term plan incorporating $0.8 billion in reserves for 2007-08.[64] [62] The budget's core policies centered on "investing in people" and "expanding opportunity" to drive economic strength, including targeted social investments to reduce child poverty, enhanced support for developmental services with $200 million allocated over four years, and $7 million for related initiatives.[61] [65] Tax measures featured income tax reductions for senior couples via a new credit mechanism, alongside broader efforts to bolster infrastructure by urging large pension plans to increase domestic investments.[61] These policies built on Sorbara's earlier emphasis on human capital development, aiming to complete the Liberal government's initial mandate by prioritizing education, health, and poverty alleviation amid a strong pre-recession economy. Achievements included framing Ontario's fiscal outlook as robust, with the budget's optimistic growth projections (implicitly around 2-3% GDP expansion based on contemporaneous economic data) contributing to the party's re-election victory on October 10, 2007, where fiscal prudence was a key campaign theme.[66] The approach also advanced partial mandate fulfillment, such as expanded child benefits and service accessibility, without immediate sharp tax hikes, maintaining revenue stability through existing structures like the health premium established in his first term.[18] Criticisms focused on the budget's delayed balance target—shifting from prior vows for 2007-08 equilibrium—and perceived over-reliance on reserves and economic upswing without deeper spending restraints, as Ontario's net debt stood at approximately $143 billion entering the period.[67] Opposition Conservatives argued it risked fiscal slippage by prioritizing investments over cuts, especially as early signs of U.S. subprime vulnerabilities loomed, a view echoed in post-budget analyses warning of potential billions in required adjustments by winter 2008.[68] Left-leaning groups, like the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, contended Sorbara underutilized fiscal flexibility to aggressively reduce debt servicing costs or bolster reserves further, potentially exposing the province to downturns.[69] In retrospect, the projections proved overly sanguine, as the 2008 global financial crisis—unfolding months after Sorbara's resignation—derailed balance under his successor, highlighting vulnerabilities in the plan's causal assumptions tying social spending directly to sustained growth without contingency buffers.[70]Electoral History
Sorbara first won election to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario as the Liberal candidate in the York North riding during the May 2, 1985, general election, securing 21,291 votes.[71] He was re-elected in that riding in the September 10, 1987, general election and the September 6, 1990, general election amid the New Democratic Party's upset provincial victory. Sorbara did not seek re-election in York North in the 1995 general election, which saw a Progressive Conservative majority under Mike Harris. Returning to provincial politics after serving as Ontario Liberal Party president, Sorbara won a June 28, 2001, by-election in the redistributed Vaughan-King-Aurora riding, defeating the Progressive Conservative candidate in a result described as a significant setback for the Harris government.[72] He retained the seat, renamed Vaughan following further redistribution, in the October 2, 2003, general election that returned a Liberal majority under Dalton McGuinty.[2]| Year | Election | Riding | Party | Votes | Percentage | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1985 | General | York North | Liberal | 21,291 | — | Won[71] |
| 1987 | General | York North | Liberal | — | — | Won |
| 1990 | General | York North | Liberal | — | — | Won |
| 2001 | By-election | Vaughan-King-Aurora | Liberal | — | — | Won[72] |
| 2003 | General | Vaughan | Liberal | — | — | Won[2] |
| 2007 | General | Vaughan | Liberal | 28,964 | 61.90% | Won[71] |
| 2011 | General | Vaughan | Liberal | 26,174 | — | Won[71] |
Post-Political Engagements
Chancellorship and Academic Roles
Gregory Sorbara was appointed as the 13th Chancellor of York University on April 28, 2014, for an initial three-year term commencing upon installation.[74] He was formally installed in a ceremony on June 13, 2014, during which he took the oath of office administered by the chair of York's Board of Governors.[75] As an alumnus who earned a Bachelor of Arts from York's Glendon College, Sorbara's selection emphasized his longstanding ties to the institution.[2] The chancellorship, a largely honorary position, involved serving as the ceremonial head of the university, presiding over convocations, conferring degrees, and representing York in official capacities.[74][76] Sorbara was reappointed to the role on May 31, 2017, for an additional three-year term starting June 1, 2017, extending his service beyond the original period.[77] His tenure ultimately spanned more than eight years, concluding in December 2022, after which he was designated Chancellor Emeritus.[78] During this time, he participated in key university events, including public conversations and support for institutional initiatives, as noted in his final engagements in October 2022.[79] Beyond the chancellorship, Sorbara held no other formal academic positions post-politics, though his prior service as Ontario's Minister of Education and Training from 2003 to 2004 had involved oversight of provincial postsecondary institutions.[75] York University conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws (LLD) upon him, recognizing his contributions to public service and education.[9]Philanthropy and Business Activities
Following his resignation from provincial politics in 2012, Sorbara resumed involvement in family business ventures, including real estate development through the Sorbara Group, a company founded by his late father Sam Sorbara in the mid-20th century.[10] However, in 2018, he became embroiled in a public succession dispute among four siblings—himself, Edward Sorbara, Joseph Sorbara, and Marcella Tanzola—over control and share distribution at the firm, which had grown into a billion-dollar enterprise focused on land development and property management in Ontario.[10] The conflict, initiated by a 2016 lawsuit from Joseph Sorbara alleging mismanagement, highlighted tensions in transitioning leadership after Sam's death in 2002, though court proceedings and settlements were not publicly detailed beyond ongoing family reconciliation efforts.[16] Post-dispute, Sorbara shifted focus to hospitality and agriculture in Prince Edward County, Ontario, where he and his wife Kate led family efforts to restore a historic farm property and rebuild the Royal Hotel, a derelict site transformed into a boutique hospitality venue blending farming, fintech elements from family members' expertise, and local tourism.[4] This venture incorporated diverse family skills, including architecture and film production, to create a multifaceted operation emphasizing sustainable rural development rather than large-scale urban real estate.[4] He also served as honorary chair for the County FM 2022 Radiothon, a fundraising event supporting local community initiatives.[80] In philanthropy, Sorbara has participated in family-led donations to health and education sectors. In 2018, he joined siblings Edward and Marcella in contributing $5 million to Mackenzie Health for enhancing stroke care programs at the Mackenzie Vaughan Hospital.[81] The Sorbara Family donated $1 million in August 2024 to Ontario Tech University, funding high-tech facilities and student scholarships to support engineering and innovation programs.[82] These efforts align with broader family giving through entities like the Sam Sorbara Charitable Foundation, which in 2021 directed $50,000 to the Welcome Collective, a housing initiative associated with Sorbara.[83]Personal Life and Writings
Family and Personal Relationships
Sorbara has been married to Kate Barlow since approximately 1969; the couple met as young activists in the Company of Young Canadians, a federal program aimed at social change.[6] Barlow, who comes from a farming background, has been described by Sorbara as central to his life, with the pair raising six children together.[2] As of 2012, they had 12 grandchildren, a number that grew to 18 by 2023, including partners of the children.[55][4] The Sorbaras' children have pursued diverse paths, with notable involvement in family enterprises. Two of the children operate Edwin County Farms in Prince Edward County, Ontario, expanding a garden into commercial production that supplies the family's restored Royal Hotel property, reflecting Kate's lifelong emphasis on home-grown food.[84][85] One son, Nick, has been instrumental in these agricultural ventures.[84] Sorbara has cited family priorities, including time with his children and grandchildren, as a key factor in his 2012 resignation from provincial politics.[15] Sorbara grew up in a large immigrant family as one of four children of Sam Sorbara, founder of the Sorbara Group real estate firm, and maintained close ties with siblings Edward, Joseph, and sister Marcella Tanzola, all variably involved in the family business.[2][4] These relationships faced strain during a 2018 succession dispute at the Sorbara Group, where the four siblings clashed over leadership, with Joseph advocating for his son Paul as co-CEO; Sorbara positioned himself as a mediator amid the conflict.[10][16] Despite such tensions, Sorbara has emphasized family as the core of his personal life, alongside interests in tennis and baseball.[2]Memoir and Public Reflections
In 2014, Sorbara published The Battlefield of Ontario Politics: An Autobiography with Dundurn Press, offering a personal account of his nearly three-decade career in Ontario politics across two Liberal governments.[86] The 222-page work details behind-the-scenes dynamics of the Ontario Liberal Party, including leadership conventions, election strategies, and the rise and fall of premiers, while interweaving reflections on policy development and the pragmatic demands of political decision-making.[87] Described as candid and self-reflective, the memoir highlights Sorbara's contributions to policy innovation, such as economic reforms and public service enhancements, and was shortlisted for the 2015 Speaker's Book Award.[88] Post-retirement, Sorbara shared public reflections on his experiences through speeches and interviews. In a November 5, 2014, address to the Empire Club of Canada titled "Reflections on Two Very Different Governments," he contrasted the David Peterson administration (1985–1990), which prioritized codifying citizen rights via measures like the Freedom of Information Act, pay equity laws, and environmental protections such as the Spills Bill, with the Dalton McGuinty era (2003–2013), focused on bolstering public infrastructure including hospital expansions, education improvements, and the introduction of the Harmonized Sales Tax (HST) to fund services.[89] He emphasized both governments' responsiveness to era-specific challenges, while critiquing premature endings to their tenures amid what he viewed as disproportionate public backlash.[89] In a November 25, 2014, TVO interview with Steve Paikin, Sorbara reflected on his quarter-century in politics, underscoring his role in reinvigorating Liberal policy agendas and navigating fiscal constraints.[90] Later commentary included a 2017 statement asserting that the Ontario Liberals had "extremely unlikely" chances of winning the 2018 election under Premier Kathleen Wynne, urging a leadership review to avert defeat.[91] These reflections consistently portrayed politics as a "battlefield" requiring bold action over partisan loyalty, informed by his firsthand observations of governance trade-offs.[11]References
- https://www.[cbc.ca](/page/CBC.ca)/news/canada/toronto/liberal-mpp-greg-sorbara-resigns-1.1230920
