Alan Tonks
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| Incumbent | |
|---|---|
| Riding | York South-Weston |
| In office since | 2000 election |
| Preceded by | John Nunziata |
| Born | April 02, 1943 (age 63) Toronto |
| Residence | Toronto |
| Political party | |
| Profession(s) | Teacher |
| Spouse | Cecile Tonks |
Alan Tonks (born April 2, 1943 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian politician, and was the final Metro Toronto Chairman before the amalgamation of Metro Toronto into the new City of Toronto.
Tonks is the son of Chris Tonks who was a mayor and alderman in what was then the Borough of York in Metropolitan Toronto. After graduating from York Memorial Collegiate Institute Alan Tonks attended York University where he earned a Master's degree in political economy and the University of Toronto where he received a Masters in Education. He spent time working for a Canadian aid agency in Jamaica before becoming a teacher for the Scarborough Board of Education for several years.
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Tonks entered municipal politics in the 1970s and served as an alderman in York before being serving as mayor from 1982 to 1988.
He first ran for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1975 provincial election as a candidate of the Ontario Liberal Party, and finished third in York South against former New Democratic Party leader Donald C. MacDonald.
He was also unsuccessful in the 1987 Ontario election, losing to NDP leader Bob Rae by only 333 votes in York South.
In 1988, Tonks was elected Chairman of the Municipality of Metropolitan Toronto by the other members of Metro Toronto Council defeating incumbent Metro Chairman Dennis Flynn, the first and only time a sitting Metro Chairman would be defeated by a challenger. Tonks served as Metro Chairman until 1997 when the municipality was amalgamated by the provincial government of Mike Harris resulting in the abolition of Metro Council and the replacement of the Metro Chairman by a new Mayor of Toronto directly elected by all voters. Tonks was a supporter of the city's amalgamation, and led the Transition Team responsible for administering the new City of Toronto. He did not run in the 1997 "Megacity" election for the position of mayor and retired from elected municipal politics. In 1999, he was appointed chair of the Greater Toronto Services Board and served until 2000.
He was elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the 2000 election as the Liberal MP for York South—Weston defeating Independent MP (and former Liberal) John Nunziata by 1,497 votes. He served as a parliamentary secretary in 2003, and was re-elected by a much greater margin in the federal elections held in 2004 and 2006 and is currently, with the rest of the Liberal caucus, sitting on the Opposition benches.
Married to Cecile, Tonks has three adult children, Chris, Matthew and Alison.
| Preceded by John Nunziata |
Member of Parliament for York South—Weston 2000- |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Preceded by Dennis Flynn |
Metro Toronto Chairman 1987—1997 |
Succeeded by Abolished - see List of Toronto mayors or Mel Lastman |
Categories: 1943 births | University of Toronto alumni | Liberal Party of Canada MPs | Members of the Canadian House of Commons from Ontario | Living people | Mayors of York, Ontario | Metro Toronto councillors | York University alumni | Current Members of the Canadian House of Commons | Candidates in Ontario provincial elections | Upper Canada College alumni