James Francis (Frank) Drea
(July 7, 1933 - January 15, 2003) was a Canadian
journalist,
broadcaster, politician and racehorse
enthusiast.
Drea was
born in St.
Catharines
, Ontario
, and
educated at Canisius
College
in Buffalo
, New York
, USA
. He
was hired by the
Toronto Telegram
in 1955, and was a long-time reporter and columnist at the paper.
In 1961, he won the
National Newspaper Award and the
Heywood Broun Award for Crusading Journalism for his work
as a labour reporter for his coverage of a strike by
Italian-Canadian building trade
workers.
From 1963
to 1965, he worked as public relations director for the United Steel Workers of
America in Sudbury
, Ontario
. A
fervent
anti-Communist, Drea played a
leading role in the Steelworkers' unsuccessful campaign to raid and
destroy the
Communist
Party influenced
Mine, Mill and Smelter
Workers Union which had dominated the mining industry in
Sudbury. Drea's campaign was a failure, and he was fired.
He returned to the Telegram in 1965 as the paper's
Action
Line columnist, serving as an early consumer advocate. He
remained with the newspaper until shortly before its demise in
1971.
He
also served with Dale Goldhawk as an
outspoken, open-line host at CHIC Radio in Brampton,
Ontario
and worked for CTV on the public affairs program
W5.
Drea was first elected to the
Legislative Assembly of
Ontario in the
1971
provincial election as the
Progressive
Conservative Member of Provincial
Parliament for
Scarborough
Centre. He defeated incumbent
New Democrat Margaret Renwick by 4,873 votes. Drea was
re-elected with smaller pluralities in the
1975 and
1977 elections, and by a
larger percentage in
1981.
After serving for several years on the
backbench, he was brought into the
provincial
cabinet of
Bill Davis following the
1977 provincial
election as
Minister of
Correctional Services.
He initiated reforms in the province's system
of jails, including the closure of the original Don Jail
. On entering cabinet, Drea publicly revealed
his battle with
alcoholism, pledging to
stop drinking in order to set an example for prisoners.
In 1978, he was appointed
Minister
of Consumer and Commercial Relations. After the
1981 provincial election, he
became
Minister of
Community and Social Services, and is credited with improving
the status of people with
disabilities.
He served in cabinet until Bill Davis retired as
Premier of Ontario in 1985. Drea
supported
Roy McMurtry's bid to succeed
Davis as party leader, and voted for
Larry Grossman on the second ballot following
McMurtry's elimination. Interestingly, he supported
Frank Miller over Grossman on the third
and final ballot. Drea explained that he had planned to support
Miller after McMurtry's elimination, and only went to Grossman for
one ballot on McMurtry's recommendation. He was not re-appointed to
Miller's cabinet and instead served as
parliamentary assistant to the
premier, a position which carries little actual authority. He did
not run in the
1985
election.
The Miller government lost power and Miller's successor,
Liberal Premier
David Peterson, appointed Drea chairman of
the Ontario Racing Commission. Drea remained chairman until his
retirement in 1994. He died on January 15, 2003 from
pneumonia.
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