Having grown up without a father and being especially aware of the strain that put on a family, Comartin had delayed any political aspirations until after his children were grown. Comartin ran for MP in his home riding of
Windsor—St. Clair in the
1997 Canadian federal election. Comartin campaigned on job creation and expanding healthcare coverage against Liberal incumbent
Shaughnessy Cohen, who was considered vulnerable after a personal finance scandal in which she defaulted on her debt. Other notable candidates included Mayor of
Tecumseh Harold Downs for the
Reform Party, and national party treasurer
Bruck Easton for the Progressive Conservatives. Despite the scandal and frequent appearances on his behalf by Leader of the NDP
Alexa McDonough, Comartin was defeated, placing second to Cohen. The 1997 election was also marred by personal tragedy; Comartin's mother died in the first week of the campaign, with her second husband having predeceased her seven years earlier, and in the week following the campaign, Comartin's youngest son Adam was in a motorcycle accident which left his right arm permanently paralyzed. After Cohen's sudden death in office, Comartin ran in the 1999 by-election to replace her. Comartin's main opponent was city councillor
Rick Limoges, who defeated Cohen's widower, Jerry Cohen, for the Liberal nomination. While the by-election was mainly considered a competition between Comartin and Limoges, Bruck Easton was once again fielded as the candidate of the Progressive Conservatives, while Reform nominated mortgage broker and former magician Scott Cowan. Comartin's campaign manager Joe MacDonald was assigned to him by the NDP. MacDonald was a well-known party insider and campaign manager. Comartin ultimately lost by less than one hundred votes to Limoges in what was initially expected to be a Liberal landslide. Besides a general decline in Liberal popularity, it was speculated that the closeness of the race was in part because of high ticket sales in Windsor for an anticipated
Detroit Tigers game happening on the same day. The game may have deflated voter turnout to the detriment of Limoges. Comartin later claimed that MacDonald had not believed that he had a chance of winning and had not worked as hard as he could have because of it. MacDonald denied the allegation, and charged that the problems with the campaign were because of interference by Comartin's family. Comartin challenged Limoges again
the next year with environmental protection as his main issue. The rematch was very similar to the previous year, with it being mainly considered a competition between Comartin and Limoges, and with Bruck Easton appearing yet again as the Progressive Conservative candidate. Since the by-election, the Reform Party had rebranded as the
Canadian Alliance in anticipation of a merger with the Progressive Conservatives. The Alliance nominated autoworker Phil Pettinato as their candidate. In their second bout, Comartin narrowly defeated Limoges. Besides the strong support expected from progressives and union members, Comartin also benefitted from conservatives who
strategically voted for him in the hopes of harming the ruling Liberals. Comartin's victory was attributed to the conservative strategic vote. Through his victory, Comartin became the first New Democrat to be elected in Ontario in ten years, and the first New Democrat to represent an Ontario riding in seven;
Michael Breaugh had won a by-election in
Oshawa in 1990, but had been defeated with the NDP's nine other Ontario MPs in the
1993 Canadian federal election. Shortly after being elected, Comartin was appointed as his party's critic for the environment. Following the
September 11 attacks, Comartin caused controversy by opposing direct military intervention to assist the United States in its
invasion of Afghanistan. He did, however, support greatly expanding the Canadian military budget in order to properly meet pre-existing commitments. In 2002, Deputy Prime Minister
Herb Gray of
Windsor West was removed in a cabinet shuffle by Prime Minister
Jean Chretien. Instead of serving out the rest of his term, Gray decided to resign from parliament to become Canadian Chair of the
International Joint Commission. In the ensuing by-election, Comartin supported the campaign of city councillor
Brian Masse, who went on to win Gray's old seat. Masse became the NDP caucus' second Ontario MP after Comartin, and the NDP would go on to control both of Windsor's federal ridings for the next seventeen years. Comartin and Masse had a close working relationship, and were nicknamed "The Twindsors."
Leadership bid Almost immediately after being elected, Comartin was talked about in Windsor as a potential successor to Alexa McDonough as Leader of the NDP. Comartin did not hide his interest in the position, and a Toronto political scientist suggested that he would have a strong starting position as the NDP's only MP from Ontario. In preparation for declaring his candidacy, Comartin recruited prominent union activist Peter Leibovitch as his campaign manager. Comartin intended to announce his candidacy on July 29, 2002. Comartin had previously made an agreement with leadership competitor
Lorne Nystrom to have the latter's announcement made on July 31, 2002, but a misprint in
The Canadian Press reported that Nystrom would be announcing his candidacy on the 29th as well. Initially believing it to be an intentional slight, Comartin cancelled his announcement to avoid having it on the same day as Nystrom. Comartin instead announced his candidacy on August 13, becoming the last candidate to enter the race. Comartin was not considered a serious candidate by the campaigns of the perceived frontrunners,
Toronto city councillor
Jack Layton, NDP House Leader
Bill Blaikie, and veteran MP Lorne Nystrom: The Layton campaign dismissed the idea that Comartin could draw Ontarian support away from Layton, Nystrom's campaign manager (and Comartin's campaign manager in the 1999 by-election) Joe MacDonald questioned why Comartin was running, and Blaikie's campaign manager
Iain Angus criticised his inexperience as an MP. Howard McCurdy, Comartin's longtime associate, wrote off Comartin's leadership bid as an attempt to raise his profile, and endorsed Blaikie later in the campaign. Additionally, despite his close association with them, the CAW withheld support for Comartin in anticipation of a potential entry into the race by President of the CAW
Buzz Hargrove. Hargrove ultimately decided not to run but only endorsed Comartin late into the campaign, which limited the amount of formal assistance he received from the CAW. To win the leadership, Comartin intended to build a coalition of labour unions, farmers,
anti-war activists,
Arab Canadians, and
Muslim Canadians, with most of his energy focused on the latter two groups. Comartin was frequently involved with Windsor's large Arab community, and had been a vocal critic of the
post-9/11 discriminatory backlash against Arabs and Muslims. Comartin's bold positions on foreign policy caused frequent controversy. During the campaign, Comartin was approached by the
Palestine House non-profit organisation, which suggested that he go on a trip to Iraq to observe the
2002 Iraqi presidential referendum. Comartin agreed to the trip, which was paid for by a businessman associated with Palestine House. Comartin observed the vote, and met with Deputy Prime Minister
Tariq Aziz. While in Iraq, Comartin called for an end to embargoes on Iraq on humanitarian grounds, and declared his opposition to a
potential American invasion of Iraq. Comartin was criticised for a photo taken of him in Iraq which had a large picture of
Saddam Hussein in the background. He dismissed the criticism, stating, "The purpose of the picture is simply to establish that I went to Iraq... If anybody knows anything about Iraq, and the police state that it is, it's almost impossible to be in any public building without a picture of Saddam Hussein." Comartin was very critical of Hussein, describing him as an authoritarian and dictator, and comparing him to
Satan. Once back in Canada, Comartin called for the Canadian government's ban on
Hezbollah to be lifted, on the grounds that there was not sufficient evidence to categorise it as a terrorist group. Comartin was criticised by those who held Hezbollah responsible for the
1983 Beirut barracks bombings. Of all the candidates running in the leadership race, Comartin was considered the most sympathetic toward
Palestinians, including supporting the
Palestinian right of return. Critics noted that Comartin's website, which mainly focused on foreign affairs, was highly critical of
Israel but made no mention of Palestinian terrorism, unlike the websites of all the other candidates. This prompted allegations that Comartin was using
anti-Zionist policy positions as a cover for antisemitism. In response, Comartin said that his opposition to Palestinian terrorism "goes without saying."
Ish Theilheimer, a Jewish news publisher and former aide to Leader of the ONDP
Howard Hampton, endorsed Comartin, and rejected the idea that he was antisemitic or supported antisemitic violence in any way. Despite the frequent controversy, analysis suggested that Comartin gained more support from his foreign policy positions than he lost. Notably, party membership sign-ups made by the
Montreal Muslim community with the intention of voting for Comartin in the leadership race more than doubled the NDP's small
Quebec membership. In total, Comartin sold approximately 4,000 new memberships, placing him close behind NDP House Leader
Bill Blaikie, who sold 5,500, but far behind Layton, who sold 8,100. Going into the convention, Comartin predicted that he was in third place behind Layton and Blaikie. He hoped that he had enough support from sign-ups and unions to prevent Layton from winning on the first ballot. Comartin then expected that high turnout in Ontario would allow him to pass Blaikie on the second ballot and eventually defeat Layton. Comartin's theme songs at the convention were
Small Town by
John Mellencamp and
A Little Less Conversation by
Elvis Presley. The
Toronto Star sarcastically described the latter choice as appropriate due to the extensive length of the speeches of his surrogates. At the convention vote Layton won a majority on the first ballot, with Comartin placing fourth behind Blaikie and Nystrom. Comartin's poor showing was attributed to a late start and a lack of focus on domestic issues. Comartin said that it was unlikely he would run for the party's leadership again in future. At the end of the campaign, Comartin had a budget surplus of $6,800 out of a total campaign revenue of $70,000.
Political career following leadership bid Following the leadership race, Layton praised Comartin for "helping to shape the future of this party" and appointed him energy critic and multiculturalism critic, as well as maintaining his previous position as environment critic. Comartin ran for re-election in
2004 in a second rematch against Rick Limoges. The
Conservative Party, created from a merger of the Canadian Alliance and Progressive Conservatives, nominated autoworker Rick Fuschi. The riding, Windsor—St. Clair, had been slightly re-districted and renamed Windsor—Tecumseh. Comartin ran mainly on healthcare expansion and border issues. He prominently criticised an unpopular plan to convert the residential area
Michigan Central Railway Tunnel into an international highway, and supported putting stricter measures in place to prevent American police from pursuing suspects into Canada after recent incidents in Windsor and
Niagara Falls. Comartin also campaigned on expanding Windsor's auto industry through business incentives for pollution-efficient manufacturing, and through protectionist policies to prevent outsourcing to the United States. During the campaign, Comartin had a public disagreement with Layton; Layton had declared that Prime Minister
Paul Martin's budget cuts to affordable housing made him personally responsible for homeless people who died of exposure. Layton was widely criticised for his statement, including by Comartin, who considered it sensationalist. Polling indicated that Comartin's constituents approved of his public disagreement with Layton. Despite the row, Comartin and Layton still made several campaign appearances together, and Comartin defeated Limoges by a wider margin than in 2000. Following the 2004 election, Comartin was discharged as energy critic and appointed as justice critic. In his role as justice critic, Comartin was described by the
Toronto Star as "one of the opposition's best... knowledgeable, quotable, accessible... and a more effective justice and public safety critic than the
former justice minister." Comartin spent most of the summer of 2004 travelling to the United States,
United Kingdom,
Australia, and
New Zealand as part of the Committee of Parliament on National Security, which engaged in a series of international hearings on national security and intelligence sharing in the wake of 9/11. Comartin submitted that the 9/11 attacks could have been prevented if American intelligence agencies had engaged in intelligence sharing with each other instead of hoarding information out of sense of interdepartmental rivalry. Comartin recommended that Canada consolidate its intelligence and security agencies into one department. He also supported the expiry of temporary changes to the
Criminal Code made after 9/11 which allowed the police to make arrests without a warrant and which could force witnesses to testify in closed courts.
Gay marriage controversy Comartin had a voting record in favour of gay marriage. In 2003 he voted to reject legally defining marriage as being between a man and a woman. When the
Supreme Court of Canada ruled that parliament had the right to legalise gay marriage, Comartin called for a vote to legalise it. Believing it to be a civil rights issue and therefore not ethically up for debate, Comartin rejected the idea of a
free vote, and wanted the Liberal Party,
Bloc Québécois, and NDP to uphold their previous promises to legalise gay marriage by enforcing a vote along party lines. In January 2005, the Martin Government indicated that it would introduce a vote on gay marriage. In response, Bishop
Ronald Fabbro of London, Ontario called on the members of his
diocese to lobby against gay marriage. Fabbro also asked the pastors of his diocese to make pronouncements against gay marriage at their sermons. Comartin, a self-described devout
Catholic, attended Our Lady of the Rosary Church, which was a part of Fabbro's diocese. Comartin also participated in extensive volunteer work with the church, including teaching a marriage preparation course with his wife. As it passed through parliament in 2005, Comartin
consistently voted in favour of the
Civil Marriage Act, which legalised gay marriage in Canada. Following the passage of the
Civil Marriage Act, Fabbro published an open letter announcing that Comartin would be suspended from all liturgical privileges and public church activities. He instructed Gerry Compeau, the pastor of Our Lady of the Rosary, to read the letter aloud to the congregation and hand out copies. Jim Roche, the episcopal vicar of Windsor, clarified that Comartin remained a Catholic in good standing and would still be able to receive
communion, but otherwise supported Fabbro's position. The public censure was also endorsed by Cardinal
Marc Ouellet. The reading of the bishop's letter prompted a walkout of 30 of the 150 attendants of the sermon. In a special section of the
Windsor Star dedicated to letters of opinion on the controversy, a majority of the letters printed by the
Star supported Comartin. Other Catholic MPs criticised the Catholic Church for inconsistency; of all the Catholics in parliament, only Comartin and fellow NDP MP
Charlie Angus were excluded from church activities for supporting gay marriage. Comartin attended the sermon following his censure at Our Lady of the Rosary, where he was well received, after which he attended a picnic hosted by the CAW Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Caucus. Comartin stood by his support for the
Civil Marriage Act, calling it "the fair and just thing to do." In 2007, Our Lady of the Rosary was shut down along with eleven other Windsor Catholic churches. Spokesman Ron Pickersgill, representing Bishop Fabbro and the London diocese, announced that the decision had been made because of declining attendance and high upkeep costs. The building was later purchased and converted into the
Water's Edge Event Centre Parliamentary leadership roles In early 2005, the Liberal Martin Government altered its annual budget after negotiations with the NDP in order to prevent the fall of its minority government. Late in 2005, after the conclusion of the investigation into the Liberal
Sponsorgate scandal, the Liberals were unwilling to meet the NDP's terms for their continued support. As a result, the NDP voted in favour of a motion of no-confidence put forward by the Conservative Party, which forced a rare winter election scheduled to take place in
January 2006. Like the rest of the NDP caucus, Comartin voted in favour of both the altered Liberal budget and the no-confidence vote. Early in the campaign, President of the CAW Buzz Hargrove eschewed his usual endorsement of the NDP. Instead, he encouraged CAW members to only support the NDP in ridings they were likely to win, and to otherwise support Liberal candidates to prevent Conservative candidates from winning. Comartin described Hargrove's position as "disappointing," but noted that the local CAW backlash against Hargrove's decision was so great that it actually helped his campaign. Comartin was endorsed by CAW Local 444 President
Ken Lewenza Sr., who went on to become President of the CAW after Hargrove's retirement. After the campaign, Hargrove was expelled from the NDP, which Comartin opposed. Comartin's main competition in the election was Bruck Easton, who was running as the Liberal candidate in a final attempt at elected office. After serving as the party's national treasurer, Easton became the final president of the Progressive Conservative Party before it merged with the Canadian Alliance. Easton had been guarded about the merger, and switched to the Liberal Party after prominent Reform/Alliance member
Stephen Harper was chosen as the new Conservative Party's first leader. Easton was notably endorsed by Howard McCurdy, who Easton had run against in his first attempt at elected office in 1988. Comartin dismissed McCurdy's ability to influence the election outcome. The Conservatives renominated Rick Fuschi. As in previous elections, Comartin emphasised expanding healthcare coverage and protectionist trade policies to maintain Windsor's auto industry. Despite expectations of a potentially close race, Comartin won a commanding victory, with Easton barely outpolling Fuschi for a distant second place. Following the 2006 election Comartin began to take on a series of parliamentary leadership roles. In February 2006, Comartin was appointed Deputy House Leader of the NDP, serving under
House Leader of the NDP
Libby Davies. That same year, Comartin was appointed vice-chair of the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security. Comartin was part of a Canadian delegation to
Russia in June 2006 along with Conservative MP
Stockwell Day and Liberal MP Irwin Cotler, when Cotler was allegedly poisoned by the Russian government. Cotler had previously acted as the lawyer or public advocate for Russian dissidents
Natan Sharansky,
Andrei Sakharov,
Alexander Nikitin, and
Sergei Magnitsky. In 2007, Comartin was voted "most knowledgeable member of parliament" by other MPs in a
Maclean's poll. Comartin did not vote in the poll as he had a personal boycott against Maclean's for being "grossly unfair and inaccurate" in its consistently low ranking of the University of Windsor as a school. He was also elected "most knowledgeable member of parliament" in 2009 and 2011. Comartin supported the legalisation of
sports betting as a means of generating revenue and as a way to regulate underground sports betting already taking place. Comartin's secondary objective was to generate more revenue for the
Canadian Football League (CFL) in order to prevent the American
National Football League (NFL) from expanding into Canada. Comartin made his first attempt to legalise sports betting in 2008 by introducing a private member's bill into parliament. His first attempt did not progress pass its first reading. His second and third attempts made in 2011 and 2013 both passed through the House of Commons but expired in the Senate. A fourth unsuccessful attempt was made by Brian Masse on Comartin's behalf in 2013. Sports betting was eventually legalised in 2020, after Comartin's retirement from parliament, with a private member's bill introduced by Conservative
Kevin Waugh. Comartin was commended for his role on the ethics committee investigation into charges of bribery against former prime minister Brian Mulroney in the
airbus affair. Branch 261, Mike Glovasky, at Tecumseh's 2008
Remembrance Day ceremony.] Comartin was widely expected to win in the
2008 Canadian federal election, and ran against a collection of novice candidates. The Conservative candidate was business management consultant Denise Ghanam, while the Liberals ran government relations manager Steve Mastroianni. Comartin was easily elected to a fourth term. While still placing fourth, the Green Party notably had its best-ever result in the riding with candidate Kyle Prestanski, an environmental science graduate student. Following his re-election, Comartin called for greater cooperation between the NDP and the Liberals, foreshadowing his support for an unsuccessful attempt by the two parties to
form a coalition government after the election. It was speculated that if the coalition government had successfully formed that Comartin would have been made
Minister of Justice. However, during the coalition negotiations Comartin also mounted an unsuccessful challenge against Liberal incumbent
Peter Milliken for the role of
Speaker of the House, placing fourth on the fifth ballot behind Millikin and Conservatives
Andrew Scheer and
Mervin Tweed. Having won by a wider margin in every election, Comartin was concerned that low turnout by overconfident supporters would threaten his chances of re-election in the
2011 Canadian federal election. Comartin campaigned on job creation, expanding pensions, lowering the tax rate on small businesses, and providing business incentives for the renewable energy sector. The Conservatives nominated Denise Ghanam for a second time, while future MP
Irek Kusmierczyk was the Liberal candidate. Comartin's concerns turned out to be misplaced, as he won with his best ever result, gaining a near-majority of the vote. The 2011 election was also the NDP's best ever result, becoming the
Official Opposition for the first time. With the NDP becoming the Official Opposition, Comartin was promoted to Deputy House Leader of the Official Opposition, as well as vice-chair of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights, and vice-chair of the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs. His former superior, Libby Davies, was replaced by
Tom Mulcair as House Leader of the Official Opposition, although Davies remained Co-Deputy Leader of the NDP alongside Mulcair. Shortly after, Jack Layton took a leave of absence as Leader of the NDP and Leader of the Opposition for health reasons, appointing
Nycole Turmel as interim leader. Layton subsequently died of complications related to cancer. Under Turmel's interim leadership, Comartin retained his role of justice critic. After Mulcair stepped down as House Leader to
run for leadership of the party, Comartin was made the new House Leader. Comartin declined to make a second attempt at leadership of the party, citing his advanced age (he turned 64 in 2011). He also declined to formally endorse a candidate in the leadership race in order to maintain his impartiality as House Leader, but spoke highly of
Niki Ashton and hosted her campaign event in Windsor. At the leadership convention Ashton was eliminated on the first ballot after placing last, with Mulcair winning on the fourth ballot. Following Mulcair's election as leader in 2012, Comartin was replaced as House Leader of the Opposition by
Nathan Cullen and replaced as justice critic by
Francoise Boivin. He was, however, appointed critic for democratic reform. The apparent demotion was attributed to Cullen's greater prominence in the party after placing third in the leadership race, and a desire to give Boivin, a former Liberal MP turned New Democrat MP, a prominent position to improve her chances of re-election. That same year, Comartin was acclaimed as Deputy Speaker of the House, serving under Speaker of the House Andrew Scheer. Comartin replaced fellow New Democrat
Denise Savoie, who had resigned from parliament for health reasons. Upon being acclaimed, Comartin declared that his priorities would be to maintain the civility and decorum of the House. Comartin's first act as Deputy Speaker was to censure Brian Masse for using his debate time to congratulate him on his acclamation to Deputy Speaker when it was not the topic of debate. Assuming the role of Deputy Speaker required Comartin to step down from his remaining critic roles and committee positions. Two months into his tenure, Comartin admitted that he preferred being able to participate in debate rather than act as a neutral arbiter. After fourteen years in office, including two years as Deputy Speaker, Comartin announced that he would not run for re-election in the
2015 Canadian federal election. In a four-way race,
Cheryl Hardcastle, the former deputy mayor of Tecumseh, was selected as the NDP nominee to succeed Comartin in Windsor—Tecumseh. Hardcastle's main competitor for the nomination was Comartin staffer and co-founder of the Canadian Afghanistan War Veterans Association Bruce Moncur. Hardcastle held the riding for the NDP in 2015, but nationally the party dropped back down to third place despite anticipation from supporters that the party could form government for the first time. Hardcastle would later lose in an upset to Liberal Irek Kusmierczyk, who had himself placed a distant third to Comartin in 2011. ==Consul General of Canada==