In 2010, Henry ran for Mayor of Oshawa. He defeated the incumbent
John Gray by 6,295 votes. There was widespread dissatisfaction with Gray's record including his decision to drive a taxpayer funded vehicle, a
2010 Camaro SS and for approving use of city funds to pay MBA education expenses for his executive assistant and another councillor. Due to Henry's expense policy for his election campaign and his previous councillor work he was dubbed "Rob Ford East" by the
Toronto Sun. On September 3, 2013, a raucous council meeting resulted in two members of the public being arrested. The issue being discussed at the meeting was a report by the city's auditor general about a real estate deal. When city security staff tried to deal with them, a struggle ensued. Undercover Durham Regional Police officers who were also sitting in the room then arrested two men and charged them with assault. The charges against them and the security men involved were all withdrawn at a later date. In April 2015, the
Supreme Court of Canada ruled that reciting the
Lord's Prayer in a Quebec municipal council meeting violated that province's
Charter of Rights. While several cities outside of Quebec also decided to discontinue the practice, Henry said that it would continue in Oshawa, despite constitutional opinions that said the ruling likely also applied to the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Henry said, "We ask that people please join in the Lord's Prayer or take a moment of reflection... I am open to debate, but in the meantime at the next council meeting we will continue with the practice." A recent Ontario Ombudsman investigation found Henry had "illegal meetings", this "shameful" decision was well documented in all local newspapers like Oshawa this week and Oshawa express." ==Legal issues==