Ontario Finance Minister Rod Phillips Resigns Following Caribbean Vacation

Ontario Finance Minister Rod Phillips Resigns Following Caribbean Vacation
Ontario Finance Minister Rod Phillips looks on as he delivers baked goods and coffee to frontline health workers at Humber River Hospital ahead of the Ontario budget during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto on Nov. 5, 2020. The Canadian Press/Nathan Denette
The Canadian Press
Updated:

TORONTO—Ontario’s finance minister resigned from his cabinet position Thursday, hours after returning from a Caribbean vacation amid a provincewide lockdown.

Rod Phillips travelled to St. Barts on Dec. 13 despite provincial guidelines urging people to avoid all non-essential travel.

Premier Doug Ford announced the finance minister’s resignation in a written statement.

“At a time when the people of Ontario have sacrificed so much, today’s resignation is a demonstration that our government takes seriously our obligation to hold ourselves to a higher standard,” Ford said.

The premier said he has asked Treasury Board President Peter Bethlenfalvy to assume the role of minister of finance and deliver the government’s 2021 Budget.

“This appointment will help ensure economic stability in the months ahead, as we support Ontario families, workers, and businesses through the COVID-19 pandemic, and as we chart our path to long-term economic recovery,” he said.

Upon his arrival at Toronto Pearson International Airport on Thursday morning, Phillips told reporters he wanted to stay on as finance minister.

“There’s very important work that still needs to be done, and I'd like to continue to be a part of that. But I do understand, people are angry, they deserve to be angry, I have to earn back their confidence,” he said.

Ford said Wednesday he first learned about the trip shortly after Phillips arrived in St. Barts. He said he should have asked the finance minister to immediately return to Ontario, but he didn’t—calling it a mistake.

Phillips, who will remain a member of the provincial legislature, said Thursday that he regrets his decision and understands that he needs to earn back the public’s confidence.

“It was a significant error in judgment, a dumb, dumb mistake,” he said. “Again, I apologize for it, I regret it, but all I can do now is make that apology and move forward.”

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath criticized Ford for his role in the leadup to Phillips’ resignation.

“Doug Ford knew about Rod Phillips’ trip to St. Barts two weeks ago,” she said in a statement. “Not only did Ford not fire him then, he helped him keep the trip a secret. Phillips’ resignation from cabinet today is not because of Phillips’ vacation, it’s because they got caught.”

Green party Leader Mike Schreiner said there must be accountability for Phillips’ “deliberate disregard” for public health rules.

“There shouldn’t be one rulebook for the Ford government, and a different rulebook for everyone else,” he said.

Phillips, 55, entered public life in 2017 when he was acclaimed as the Progressive Conservative candidate for the Ontario riding of Ajax.

He briefly contemplated a run for the leadership of the party after then leader Patrick Brown resigned in early 2018 but instead backed Caroline Mulroney, who eventually lost to Ford.

Phillips won a seat in the legislature later that year and was appointed environment minister as the new government dismantled the previous Liberal’s cap-and-trade climate change plan.

He was tasked with rolling out the province’s controversial new strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that fall.

Prior to entering politics, Phillips was the CEO of the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation, and chairman of newspaper publisher Postmedia.

He also served as chief of staff to former Progressive Conservative labour minister Elizabeth Witmer and former Toronto mayor Mel Lastman.