not be disappointed if I didn’t get very far despite my competence
and work ethic, because I was black, a woman, not Canadian born,
married, a mother and Roman Catholic! This was my first real
indication that my race, while irrelevant in Jamaica, might matter
in Canada.
In 2003, constituents … white constituents, in the electoral riding
in which I sought to be elected to political office, informed me that
the incumbent, a white man who had held the position for the
previous 8 years, while campaigning, had chosen to use my race as
a reason why people should not vote for me. But I had also been
encouraged to run by people who told me I didn’t “fit the profile”.
They also told me that I should not let political office change me.
Public opinion polls conducted while I held political office,
revealed that I would have been re-elected, if I had run again in
2007.
Currently, the only black member in the Ontario Legislature is a
woman who I invited to run in my riding when I decided not to
seek re-election. There were a number of other black candidates
who ran in other electoral ridings, for all three Political Parties, but
none of them were successful. Had my Party not accepted the
person I proposed, the current Ontario Legislature might today, be
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