Ontario’s Tories greenlight Patrick Brown’s quest for leadership
TORONTO — Patrick Brown’s quest to regain the leadership of Ontario’s Progressive Conservatives cleared a key hurdle Wednesday when the 39-year-old politician, who resigned amid sexual misconduct allegations, received the party’s stamp of approval for a run in the spring election.
A party nomination committee tasked with vetting all Tory leadership candidates announced that Brown and three others vying for his former job — Christine Elliott, Doug Ford and Tanya Granic Allen — had been approved for the contest. Caroline Mulroney, another leadership hopeful, had already been approved by the committee.
Brown thanked his supporters Wednesday and vowed not to let them down in a statement posted on social media after the party’s decision was announced.
“This is about a movement to get Ontario back on track,” Brown said on Twitter. “I want to finish the job that we started. The People’s Guarantee (election platform) is our path to victory and … I am the only candidate in this race that stands behind our plan.”


