Julia Munro, the longest-serving woman MPP in Ontario’s history, has died.
The former York-Simcoe MPP retired last spring after 23 years in politics.
Premier Doug Ford tweeted his “deepest condolences” after the news broke late this afternoon.
“She was a trailblazer and her memory will live on for years to come,” he wrote on Wednesday.
“Julia was a tireless and dedicated advocate for the people of York-Simcoe. Her service to her community and her province is an example for all of us privileged to serve at Queen’s Park.”
MPP Caroline Mulroney took over the York-Simcoe riding in last June’s provincial election.
“Julia Munro loved Ontario and served York-Simcoe with pride. She left a legacy and example for all of us to live up to now and in the future,” Mulroney said.
“I am so proud of the friendship we shared and I will cherish her memory. My deepest condolences thoughts and prayers go out to her family. I will miss her.”
Munro started her career as a history teacher, and she was first elected as an MPP in June 1995.
Eventually, she became known around the legislature as ‘Lady Munro.’
She went on to introduce six bills in the legislature, including a small business bill of rights, and another to fine dog abusers up to $60,000.
Her passion for animals began at age 14 when she started competing show dogs.
She kept up the hobby throughout her entire adult life with standard poodles and borzois.
“Love me, love my dog,” Munro told BradfordToday last year.
“On my honeymoon (with husband, John), we actually visited a kennel. It was a kennel that had really great show dogs and I had seen them advertised. The people who owned the kennel were just dumbfounded. They were very charming about it, but… ‘You’re on your honeymoon?’”
Throughout her career, Munro held more than a dozen different positions, such as official Opposition critic for the poverty reduction strategy, deputy speaker of the legislative assembly, and the Progressive Conservatives (PC) caucus’ critic for the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan.
“I told my father when I was about 17 or 18 that he’d brought me up to compete with little boys and that’s what I intended to do,” Munro told BradfordToday last May.
“He was upset because he could see that that would take me out of the stay-at-home mother and sort of mid-century expectations. It was OK to be bright and educated but you don’t want to flaunt it, I guess. All that’s changed with very few exceptions.”
In an interview last year, Munro said she was a minority as a woman in education and then politics, but it never bothered her.
“Is this a big deal? No, I don’t think it is,” she told BradfordToday.
Barrie-Innisfil MPP Andrea Khanjin said Munro set the standard for women in politics.
“In her role as Parliamentary Assistant to (the) Premier and as Deputy Speaker, she set a shining example of how women are able to be both elegant and powerful,” she wrote in a statement.
“She left a tremendous impact on the province and helped to make it a better place.”