Patrick Johnstone

Patrick Johnstone
38th Mayor of New Westminster
Assumed office
November 7, 2022
Preceded byJonathan X. Côte
New Westminster City Councillor
In office
December 1, 2014 – November 7, 2022
Personal details
Born
Kootenays, British Columbia
PartyCommunity First New West
Other political
affiliations
Alma materSimon Fraser University
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionGeoscientist
Websitewww.patrickjohnstone.ca

Patrick David Johnstone is a Canadian politician and geoscientist who has served as the mayor of New Westminster, British Columbia, since 2022. Prior to becoming mayor, he served two terms as a city councillor on the New Westminster City Council from 2014 to 2022. He has been a member of Community First New West, a social democratic municipal political party, since 2022.[1]

Aside from his work in local government, Johnstone also runs his blog, Ask Pat, where he writes about city council proceedings from his perspective and responds to online questions submitted by members of the public. On occasion, Johnstone will also set up an Ask Pat booth at local gatherings where he answers questions and speaks with members of the public.

Early life and education

Patrick Johnstone is from the Kootenays region of British Columbia, where he was born and lived during his youth. He attended Simon Fraser University and completed a bachelor of science degree in geography in 1997, and a master of science degree in earth science in 2006.

According to his blog, Johnstone first arrived in New Westminster during the 1980s, and decided to live there permanently in the early 2000s.

Prior to entering politics, Johnstone worked as a project scientist for SNC-Lavalin from 2005 to 2009, and became the environmental coordinator for the City of Richmond in 2009.[2] Jonhstone also got involved in his neighbourhood's Brow of the Hill Residents’ Association, the Royal City Curling Club, and began writing his blog. He was named New Westminster's Citizen of the Year in 2013 by the New Westminster Chamber of Commerce for his contributions to the city of New Westminster.[3]

Political career

After many years of working for various municipalities in Metro Vancouver, Johnstone decided to enter politics by running for New Westminster City Council in the 2014 election. On election day, he placed fifth and was elected to city council given the city's plurality-at-large electoral system. He was re-elected in 2018.

In 2022, Johnstone helped create Community First New West, a social democratic municipal political party in New Westminster. Johnstone subsequently won the party's nomination for the 2022 British Columbia municipal elections.[4] In October 2022, Johnstone won the mayoral election, after receiving 41.93% of votes in a three-candidate race.[5]

Johnstone attended the 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) in December 2023, following an invite from the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group and the ICLEI to represent the City of New Westminster.[6] His trip became the subject of controversy when opposing city councillors criticized Johnstone for not informing city council of his plan to attend the conference.[7] New Westminster City Council eventually rejected the request for a report into the mayor's trip, as New Westminster did not have rules that require elected officials to disclose their travel itinerary to city council, and the trip was not funded by the city's budget.[8][9] However, the city's ethics commissioner later ruled that his trip to the conference did breach the city's ethics rules, and recommended that Johnstone receive additional ethics training.[10]

Johnstone oversaw several upgrades to New Westminster's cycling and pedestrian network, including the extension of the network to New Westminster Secondary School via Sixth Street, and the construction of a protected bike path along the Stewardson Way section of the BC Parkway.[11][12] Johnstone's government also advocated for more speed and red-light cameras to be installed by the provincial government in New Westminster, arguing that one third of police and fire department responses in the city were caused by traffic incidents that could be mitigated with traffic enforcement cameras.[13]

Electoral record

2022 New Westminster municipal election: Mayor
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
  Community First New West Patrick Johnstone 6,676 41.93 Y
  New West Progressives Ken Armstrong 5,227 33.05
Independent Chuck Puchmayr 3,912 26.74
Total valid votes 15,815 99.32
Total rejected ballots 108 0.68
Turnout 15,923 37.52
Source: CivicInfoBC[14]
2018 New Westminster municipal election: City council
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
Independent Nadine Nakagawa 7,764 54.04 Y
Independent Patrick Johnstone 7,270 50.60 Y
Independent Mary Trentadue 7,202 50.13 Y
Independent Jaimie McEvoy 6,799 47.32 Y
Independent Chinu Das 6,716 46.74 Y
Independent Chuck Puchmayr 6,595 45.90 Y
  New West Progressives Daniel Fontaine 5,297 36.87
  New West Progressives Ellen Vaillancourt 4,760 33.13
  New West Progressives Paul McNamara 4,531 31.54
  New West Progressives Bryn Ward 4,490 31.25
Independent Mike Ireland 3,253 22.64
Independent Angela Sealy 3,013 20.97
Independent Troy Hunter 2,638 18.36
Independent Benny Ogden 1,299 9.04
2014 New Westminster municipal election: City council
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
Independent Chuck Puchmayr 6,262 43.00 Y
Independent Lorrie Williams 6,087 41.79 Y
Independent Jaimie McEvoy 5835 40.06 Y
Independent Bill Harper 5634 38.68 Y
Independent Patrick Johnstone 5582 38.33 Y
Independent Mary Trentadue 5,517 37.88 Y
Independent Catherine Cartwright 5,165 35.46
Independent Tej Kainth 5,111 35.09
Independent Calvin Donnelly 4,394 30.17
Independent David Brett 3,383 23.23
Independent Scott McIntosh 2,579 17.71
Independent John Ashdown 1,895 13.01
Independent Tracey Block 1,847 12.68
Independent Gavin Palmer 1,773 12.17
Independent Mike Folka 1,637 11.24
Independent Marge Ashdown 1,636 11.23
Independent Harm Woldring 1,610 11.23
Independent Jim Bell 1,562 10.73
Independent Raj Gupta 1,235 8.48
Independent Gerry Liu 791 5.43
Independent Matt Kadioglu 269 1.85

References

  1. ^ Theresa McManus (19 April 2022). "New political party to field candidates in New West civic election". New Westminster Record. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  2. ^ Ria Renouf (16 October 2022). "Two-term councillor Patrick Johnstone is New West's mayor-elect". New West Anchor. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  3. ^ Theresa Mcmanus (23 July 2014). "[NEWS] "Rabble-rouser" and citizen of the year Patrick Johnstone seeks seat on council". New West Record. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  4. ^ Julie MacLellan (29 April 2022). "Community First officially out of the gate in New Westminster". New Westminster Record. Retrieved 1 March 2024.
  5. ^ Julie MacLellan (15 October 2022). "Election Night 2022: Johnstone wins New Westminster mayor's race". New West Record. Retrieved 1 March 2024.
  6. ^ Patrick Johnstone (28 December 2023). "COP28 (PART 1)". patrickjohnstone.ca. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  7. ^ Darrian Matassa-Fung (3 January 2024). "New Westminster city councillors question mayor's trip to COP28 summit in Dubai". Global News. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  8. ^ Janet Brown & Simon Little (22 January 2024). "New Westminster mayor defends trip to climate summit in Dubai". Global News. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  9. ^ Theresa McManus (23 January 2024). "New West council rejects request for report from mayor on Dubai trip". New Westminster Record. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  10. ^ Holliday, Ian (November 1, 2024). "B.C. mayor's 'luxury' trip to Dubai climate conference was against ethics rules: commissioner". CTV News. Retrieved December 25, 2024.
  11. ^ McManus, Theresa (April 4, 2023). "New West unveils mitigation measures for Sixth Street bike lanes". New West Record, via Vancouver is Awesome. Retrieved February 1, 2026.
  12. ^ "BC Parkway upgrades now complete in New Westminster". TransLink. June 5, 2025. Retrieved February 1, 2026.
  13. ^ Raynaldo Suarez and Charles Brockman (October 28, 2025). "Not a 'cash cow': New Westminster mayor urging province to help install speed cameras". City News. Retrieved February 1, 2026.
  14. ^ "2022 election results: New Westminster". CivicInfoBC. Retrieved February 1, 2026.