The 1997 Brantford municipal election was held on November 10, 1997, to elect a mayor, councillors, and school trustees in the city ofBrantford, Ontario. Some of the rural and small-town communities outside of Brantford also held elections on the same day. Chris Friel was easily re-elected as mayor of Brantford, defeating right-wing challenger Andy Woodburn.
Results
Wayne Barlett was a first-time candidate in 1997. He has served on Brantford's economic development board.
Patrick Clement was a first-time candidate in 1997. He intended to run for mayor a second time in 2000, but was informed that he could not do so because he had not filed an expenses report for the 1997 campaign. Clement had planned to run on a platform of reducing taxes and pursuing an anti-poverty strategy and described his disqualification as a prejudicial act.
Robert Corby was a first-time political candidate. He was barred from running in the 2000 election after not filing an expenses return for 1997.
Ron Rattie has been active with disability issues in Brantford. He has chaired Brantford's Operation Lift program and co-chaired the Brantford Equal Access Team, and was a peer support coordinator of the Canadian Paraplegic Association of Ontario. He himself was involved in a car accident in 1981 that resulted in his becoming a quadriplegic. Rattie was named as Brantford's Citizen of the Year in 2002 and served on the board that chose his successor in 2003. In June 2003, he wrote a public letter criticizing excessive political correctness in the language around disability issues.
Source: "City Council," Brantford Expositor, 8 November 2000, D4.
Surrounding communities
In 1998, the newly amalgamated community of Brant County held a special municipal election to elect a mayor and councillors. Veteran politician Ron Eddy was elected as mayor.
William Stewart was the reeve of Onondaga Township from 1951 to 1957. He later became a perennial candidate for public office, running for reeve of Onondaga in 1972 and 1974 and for mayor of Brantford in 1978, 1982, 1985, 1988, and 1991. He came within seven votes of winning in 1972, but in every election thereafter he lost by a significant margin. Described as a "down-to-earth farmer," Stewart was outspoken on many issues, including what he believed was high taxation. On one occasion, he recommended removing all parking meters from Brantford's downtown. The 1998 election seems to have been his last bid for public office. He died in 2000, at age seventy-nine.