Arthur C. Eggleton (born September 29, 1943) is a retired Canadian politician who served as the
59th and longest-serving
mayor of Toronto
The mayor of Toronto is the head of Toronto City Council and chief executive officer of the municipal government. The mayor is elected alongside city council every four years on the fourth Monday of October; there are no term limits. While in ...
from 1980 to 1991. He was elected to Parliament in 1993, running as a
Liberal in
York Centre and served as a
member of Parliament
A member of parliament (MP) is the representative in parliament of the people who live in their electoral district. In many countries with Bicameralism, bicameral parliaments, this term refers only to members of the lower house since upper house ...
(MP) until 2004 when he declined to seek re-election. Eggleton held a number of cabinet positions from 1993 to 2002 including
Treasury Board president
The president of the Treasury Board () is a minister of the Crown in the Canadian Cabinet. The president is the chair of the Treasury Board of Canada (a committee of Cabinet in the Privy Council) and is the minister responsible for the Treasury ...
,
minister of infrastructure,
minister of international trade, and
minister of national defence. He was appointed to the
Senate in 2005, serving until he reached the mandatory retirement age of 75 in 2018.
City council
Eggleton, an accountant by profession, was first elected to
Toronto City Council in the
1969 municipal election as the junior alderman for Ward 4. He served as budget chief in the council elected in 1973 under
David Crombie. He was the Liberal Party candidate in the October 16, 1978, federal
by-election
A by-election, also known as a special election in the United States and the Philippines, a bye-election in Ireland, a bypoll in India, or a Zimni election ( Urdu: ضمنی انتخاب, supplementary election) in Pakistan, is an election use ...
held in Toronto's west-end
Parkdale electoral district in which he was defeated by
Progressive Conservative candidate
Yuri Shymko.
He ran for re-election to Toronto City Council in Ward 4.
finishing first in a field of 10 candidates to become Ward 4's senior alderman on council (at the time, two alderman were elected from each ward).
Mayor of Toronto
Eggleton was a member of Toronto City Council and the Metropolitan Toronto Council for 22 years. He was Mayor of Toronto from 1980 to 1991, when he retired from municipal politics as the longest-serving mayor in Toronto history.
In 1980, he was elected
Mayor of Toronto
The mayor of Toronto is the head of Toronto City Council and chief executive officer of the municipal government. The mayor is elected alongside city council every four years on the fourth Monday of October; there are no term limits. While in ...
after defeating incumbent
John Sewell. The city moved forward on implementing its new official plan, which resulted in several new significant buildings in the downtown west, or the railway lands area, including the
Convention Centre, the
SkyDome, and the
CBC Broadcast Centre. Under his leadership, the city also produced a record level of social housing projects for low-income people; of new parks; and innovative new responses to the problems of the homeless and emotionally-troubled with projects like Street City, the Singles Housing Opportunities Program, and the Gernsteins Centre.
Eggleton established the Mayor's Committee on Community and Race Relations to help bring about the successful integration of people from different cultural, racial, and ethnic backgrounds. His relationship with the city's gay community was one of "unease" that began after a mass arrest of 286 men in the city's
gay bathhouses in 1981 known as
Operation Soap. The subsequent protests would evolve into
Gay Pride Parade, with which Eggleton had a publicly acrimonious relationship when organizer's annual requests for the mayor to make an official declaration were repeatedly denied. An independent review of the city's relationship with the gay community provided 16 actionable measured for Eggleton's government to take to ease tensions, however, the majority were never implemented and only some came to pass after his tenure.
Eggleton maintained a stance that Pride was "not appropriate for the naming of a day.” In 1990, Toronto Pride organizers filed a complaint with the
Ontario Human Rights Commission after Eggleton once again refused to proclaim the Pride event, but opted to recognize an official city day for
Muppet Babies. In 1991, Eggleton's final year as mayor, he still refused to attend Pride. In 2016, without apology, he stated that he had "come to see things differently" but maintained that at the time he did not see the event as appropriate for a mayor's official declaration.
Eggleton was finally outvoted by his fellow council members in 1991, his last year in office, and
Pride Day was proclaimed.
Eggleton's only serious re-election challenge occurred at the
1985 Toronto municipal election when city councillor
Anne Johnston, a fellow Liberal, ran against Eggleton for the mayoralty. Eggleton won by a significant margin, receiving 92,994 votes to Johnston's 59,817.
In recognition of his service to the city, Eggleton received Toronto's highest honour, the Civic Award of Merit in 1992.
Member of Parliament

Eggleton ran in the
1993 election in the suburban Toronto riding of
York Centre, again as a Liberal, and won election. He was appointed to the position of
President of the Treasury Board and
Minister for Infrastructure in the new cabinet.
From January 1996 to June 1997, he served as
Minister for International Trade
The Minister of State for Trade Policy is a mid-level role at the Department for International Trade in the Government of the United Kingdom. It is currently held by Greg Hands, who took the office on 9 October 2022. The minister deputizes for ...
. Eggleton retained his
seat
A seat is a place to sit. The term may encompass additional features, such as back, armrest, head restraint but also headquarters in a wider sense.
Types of seat
The following are examples of different kinds of seat:
* Armchair (furniture), ...
in the
1997 election, and was appointed
Minister of National Defence. In 1999, Eggleton supported Canada's involvement in
NATO
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO, ; french: Organisation du traité de l'Atlantique nord, ), also called the North Atlantic Alliance, is an intergovernmental military alliance between 30 member states – 28 European and two No ...
's campaign in Kosovo.
He was re-elected again in the
2000 election, and continued as Minister of Defence, focusing on sweeping changes to the National Defence Act which implemented changes to the military justice system, including the set up of several oversight entities including a Military
Ombudsman and a Military Police Complaints Commission. He also improved
compensation and benefits for Canadian Forces personnel and their families. In January 2002, Chrétien and Eggleton were accused of misleading Parliament. Both Chrétien and Eggleton when asked in Question Period if Canadian troops had handed over captured Taliban and al-Qaeda members in Afghanistan to the American forces amid concerns about the treatment of POWs at
Guantanamo Bay, replied that was in Chrétien's words only a "hypothetical question" and that the Canadians had taken no POWs.
Critics of the government such as
Joe Clark then proceeded to point out that in the previous week, the Toronto newspaper the ''Globe & Mail'' had run on its frontpage a photo of Canadian soldiers turning over POWs to American troops.
Eggleton maintained that he and the rest of the Cabinet had been kept unaware that the Canadian Forces were taking POWs in Afghanistan and turning them over to the Americans, claiming that he had only learned of the policy of handing over POWs several days after the photo had appeared in the ''Globe & Mail''.
Eggleton resigned from the cabinet in May 2002, amid allegations he hired a former girlfriend for a research contract. The ethics commissioner, Howard Wilson, concluded Eggleton breached conflict guidelines for cabinet ministers, and Eggleton voluntarily stepped down. This happened during the growing leadership turmoil between Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien and
Paul Martin
Paul Edgar Philippe Martin (born August 28, 1938), also known as Paul Martin Jr., is a Canadian lawyer and politician who served as the 21st prime minister of Canada and the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada from 2003 to 2006.
The son o ...
, who left the cabinet the following week in disputed circumstances. Increased scrutiny on Chrétien's government and cabinet may have contributed to Prime Minister Jean Chrétien pressuring him to resign.
Eggleton then became a member of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade. On May 13, 2004, Eggleton announced he would not be a candidate in the
2004 federal election, making way for the nomination of
Ken Dryden as the Liberal candidate in York Centre.
Senator for Ontario
He was appointed to the Senate by
Paul Martin
Paul Edgar Philippe Martin (born August 28, 1938), also known as Paul Martin Jr., is a Canadian lawyer and politician who served as the 21st prime minister of Canada and the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada from 2003 to 2006.
The son o ...
on March 24, 2005. He served as both chair and Deputy Chair of the Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs, Science, and Technology for 12 years in which his focus was on social justice and health care issues. He served on the Bureau of Liberal International, representing the Liberal Party of Canada, as a vice-president for two years and treasurer for one year. He was co-opted to the Bureau of
Liberal International
Liberal International (LI) is a worldwide organization of liberal political parties - a political international. It was founded in Oxford in 1947 and has become the pre-eminent network for liberal parties, aiming to strengthen liberalism aroun ...
as a vice president at the 185th Executive Committee in Cape Town, South Africa in November 2010. Art Eggleton also served on the Senate Modernization Committee, and at different times on the National Finance, Transportation and Communications committees
On January 29, 2014, Liberal Party leader
Justin Trudeau
Justin Pierre James Trudeau ( , ; born December 25, 1971) is a Canadian politician who is the 23rd and current prime minister of Canada. He has served as the prime minister of Canada since 2015 and as the leader of the Liberal Party since ...
announced all Liberal Senators, including Eggleton, were removed from the Liberal caucus, and would continue sitting as Independents. The Senators will refer to themselves as the
Senate Liberal Caucus even though they are no longer members of the parliamentary Liberal caucus.
Eggleton's recent focus has been Toronto's community housing. On the Social Affairs Committee he has been instrumental in studies and reports on such matters as poverty, housing, and homelessness; early learning and child care; autism; the Health Accord; prescription pharmaceuticals; obesity; and dementia. In 2012, he founded the All-Party, Anti-Poverty Caucus.
He also started and convened the Open Caucus a non-partisan discussion open to all Senators and MPs on major issues of the day bringing together expert panelists to dialogue with parliamentarians.
In 2015–16, in addition to his Senate work, he served as the volunteer chair of the Toronto Mayor's Task force on Toronto Community Housing which recommended substantive reforms for the largest social housing provider in Canada. Many of the recommendations are now in different stages of implementation.
Eggleton retired from the Senate on September 29, 2018, upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 75.
References
External links
Liberal Senate ForumOfficial WebsiteOfficial Website Biography*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Eggleton, Art
1943 births
Living people
Mayors of Toronto
Defence ministers of Canada
Members of the 26th Canadian Ministry
Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Ontario
Liberal Party of Canada MPs
Toronto city councillors
Liberal Party of Canada senators
Canadian senators from Ontario
Members of the King's Privy Council for Canada
Metropolitan Toronto councillors