Rob Burton

Rob Burton is a Canadian businessman, journalist and politician. He currently serves as the mayor of Oakville, Ontario, in Canada. He was elected in the municipal elections of 2006,[1] having failed to unseat Ann Mulvale in 2003.[2] He was re-elected to office in the 2010,[3] 2014[4] and 2018 municipal elections.[5]


Rob Burton
45th Mayor of Oakville
Assumed office
13 November 2006
Preceded byAnn Mulvale
Personal details
Spouse(s)Wendy Burton
ResidenceOakville, Ontario, Canada
Alma materUniversity of New Mexico
Columbia University
Websiteoakville.ca

In a 2014 endorsement of his re-election campaign, the Toronto Star editorial board called Burton "among the best mayors in the Greater Toronto Area."[6]

Early career and education

Burton graduated from the University of New Mexico with a degree in history and economics before receiving a Master's of Science in Journalism from Columbia University.

After receiving his master's degree in 1971, he became a journalist for the Watertown Daily Times in New York State. He was recruited shortly after by CBC to help establish their new consumer rights programme Marketplace. He worked as a journalist and television producer until 1988, when he led the creation of the youth-focused television station YTV.[7] After founding the station, he went on to work as the general manager and vice-president of programming and production.[8]

Political career

Burton first ran for Mayor in 2003. A dark-horse candidate up against five-term incumbent Ann Mulvale, Burton ultimately lost his first bid for Mayor by a grand total of 28 votes.[9] Burton ran again in 2006, managing to unseat Mulvale by a nearly 2000-vote margin.[10] Mulvale challenged Burton for the mayorship once again in 2010, but was soundly defeated by over 4000 votes.[11]

In his time as Mayor, Burton has been an outspoken advocate for growth control, environmental protection and greenspace. He is a vocal supporter of Ontario's Greenbelt, founding the "Municipal Leaders for the Greenbelt" alongside Ajax Mayor Steve Parrish and Toronto Councillor Glenn de Baeremaker, which he still chairs today. He is a vocal critic of Ontario's development industry, describing large developers as a 'cartel' in 2017, after suggestions that developers wanted to ease planning restrictions and greenspace protections to improve housing affordability.[12]

In 2015, Burton apologized for a series of tweets comparing Stephen Harper's use of veterans in the Canadian Corps of Commissionaires to Mussolini's Blackshirts and Hitler's Brownshirts.[13]

Burton is the founder and chair of the Ontario Auto Mayors, a group of municipal leaders in communities with a large automotive manufacturing presence, advocating for more coordinated support of Ontario's automotive sector among all three levels of government.[14] He has also served as the Chair of the Halton Police Services Board since 2014.[15]

See also

References

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