Chris Ward (politician)
Christopher Campbell Ward (born
June 21,
1949 in
Birmingham,
England) is a former politician in
Ontario,
Canada. He served in the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario as a
Liberal from
1985 to
1990, and was a
cabinet minister in the government of
David Peterson.
Ward was raised in Ontario, and educated in
Dundas. He was elected a ward councillor in
Flamborough in
1978, a regional councillor in
1980 and
mayor in
1982.
Ward first ran for the Ontario legislature in a
by-election for the constituency of
Wentworth North, held on
December 31,
1984. He lost to
Progressive Conservative Ann Sloat by 169 votes, but a few months later defeated Sloat by 5,168 votes in the
1985 provincial election amid a general surge in support for the Liberal Party. He was re-elected handily in the
1987 election.
Ward served as
parliamentary assistant to the
Minister of Health from
June 26,
1985 to
January 9,
1987, and as the assistant to
Attorney General Ian Scott from January to September 1987. He was promoted to cabinet as
Minister of Education on
September 29,
1987. Following a cabinet shuffle on
August 2,
1989, he was named
Minister of Government Services and
Government House Leader.
Going into the
1990 provincial election, Ward's Wentworth North constituency was seen as the safest Liberal constituency in the province. The Liberals unexpectedly lost power by the
New Democratic Party, however, and Ward lost his seat to NDP candidate
Don Abel by a mere 88 votes. During the campaign, Ward was targeted by a group of local lawyers who opposed the Peterson government's no-fault auto insurance program.
He attempted to return to the legislature in the
1995 election, but lost to Progressive Conservative candidate
Toni Skarica by over 10,000 votes.
He supported
Gerard Kennedy for the leadership of the Ontario Liberal Party in
1996.
After leaving politics, Ward became Vice-President of Strategic Planning and Communications for Canada's Research-based Pharmaceutical Companies. He now runs Ward Health Strategies, a consulting firm based in
Toronto and
Washington,
D.C. He has provided briefings to legislators in several American states on behalf of the
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.