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	<title>The Auroran</title>
	<link>https://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran</link>
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	<pubDate>Thu May 28 19:37:21 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Conservative Lois Brown looks to regain community’s support</title>
			<link>http://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran/?p=25006</link>
			<pubDate>Thu May 28 19:37:21 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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<p><strong>By Brock Weir</strong></p>
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<p>Four years ago, incumbent Lois Brown lost the 2015
Federal Election by less than 1,500 votes to rookie Kyle Peterson.</p>
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<p>Now, after what she describes as “quite a deliberation”,
Ms. Brown is looking flip the riding blue again and return to Ottawa as
Newmarket-Aurora's Conservative Member of Parliament.</p>
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<p>“I feel in my core I have more work to do,” Ms. Brown
tells The Auroran. “I have all my life been a very active person, very involved
in serving the community, and the opportunity to do that as a Member of
Parliament, where I can help people, really help people, and resolve issues
just compelled me to go back.”</p>
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<p>Helping to spur her decision to throw her hat back into
the political arena is what she says are budget overruns under the incumbent
Liberal government which won't be balanced for decades if things continue as
they are</p>
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<p>“It is distressing to me that my kids are the ones who
are going to be paying this bill for the rest of their lives,” she says. “I
hear the issue of ‘affordability' at the door every day. I talk to people who
say, ‘Look, we're not badly off, we're both working, we have reasonably good
jobs, but we just can't get ahead.' I don't want that for my kids, and I don't
want that for anybody's kids. I want our young people to have opportunity for
growth and opportunity for success. That's one of the reasons I am driven.”</p>
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<p>Indeed, affordability is one of Ms. Brown's top issues in
this campaign. A factor in that, she notes, is the Liberals' plan for carbon
pricing and changes to the tax system.</p>
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<p>“As Conservatives we're going to be talking about that,”
she says. “It was a Conservative initiative to put the Child Tax Benefit in
place, but with the changes that have happened, fewer and fewer people are
actually getting the full amount of the Child Tax Benefit, so it is costing
them more to raise their children. At the same time that Justin Trudeau said,
‘We're going to give you a little bit more than what the Conservatives say they
will give you,' they took away all of the tax credits that actually allowed
families to reduce their taxable income. They removed the Child Tax Credit for
sports, for the arts, from textbooks, which is making our university kids have
to pay more for their education. They removed the transportation tax credit.
All of those things are areas that are reducing the cost of living for ordinary
Canadian families. We want to see those things come back. We believe they are
good for families, and we believe families know best how to spend their money
for what is in their own best interests of their family.”</p>
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<p>While Ms. Brown states the Conservatives will scrap the
“carbon tax,” she says she is an environmentalist at heart. A native of
Kettleby, she says she grew up in a home with a chemical engineer father who
taught her that engineers “learn to do more with less.” There has never been a
time where she didn't recycle, she says, nor when she didn't “shop in her
sister's closet all the time.”</p>
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<p>“We always composted, always reused, and it is time that
we ensured that individuals are tasked with their own responsibilities,” she
says. “(Husband) Kelvin and I often walk the trails and I find it so sad
walking through the part through East Gwillimbury and we weren't 400 yards down
the trail and there was somebody's Tim Hortons' cup sitting in the crook of the
tree. I think we have to invest personal responsibility because that's what's
really going to make a difference.</p>
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<p>“I have suggested the Conservative party that we need to
have a program where we are planting trees. Aurora has been, unfortunately,
attacked a lot by the Emerald Ash borer and we have seen the pine needle beetle
here as well. We have lost a lot of our foliage. I would love to see a program
through our Federal government that says, ‘You know, we're going to plant a
million trees and work with our municipalities to ensure that that happens.' I
don't think we can dictate where they go or what kind, but certainly
municipalities to ensure that those things happen.”</p>
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<p>This Federal election is shaping up to be one of clear
and distinct visions for Canada and, in the run-up to last week's election
call, the Liberals have been trying to sell a message that a vote for
Conservative leader Andrew Scheer is a vote for Doug Ford-style politics. This
is a claim Ms. Brown rejects outright, branding them “scare tactics.”</p>
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<p>“Let Justin Trudeau run against Andrew Scheer,” she says,
noting the Liberal leader is not running against the Ontario Premier. </p>
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<p>“The Liberals are always going to try and paint the
Conservatives with all kinds of scare and accusation,” says Ms. Brown. “They
are trying to be scare mongers with all kinds of issues and accuse Andrew
Scheer of all kinds of issues that aren't on the agenda for the Conservative
party. We have a 15-year history of the Conservative party, doing exactly what
we said we were going to do and let them accuse. We are going to stand firm on
the things that we know Canadians need to have done.” </p>
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			<excerpt-encoded><![CDATA[Newmarket-Aurora Votes 2019]]></excerpt-encoded>
			<wp-post_id>25006</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2019-10-18 19:14:21</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2019-10-18 23:14:21</wp-post_date_gmt>
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