Rocco Rossi

Rocco Rossi
Rossi in 2013
Born (1962-02-06) February 6, 1962
Occupation(s)President & CEO of Ontario Chamber of Commerce, Lobbyist

Rocco Rossi (born February 6, 1962) is a Canadian businessman currently serving as president and chief executive officer of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, and was formerly the president and CEO of Prostate Cancer Canada.

Background

Rossi attended schools in Canada and the United States. He attended Upper Canada College (UCC). After graduating from UCC, Rossi studied at McGill University in Montreal, followed by studies at Princeton University in New Jersey, where he graduated with a master's degree in politics.

Career

After graduating from Princeton, Rossi returned to Toronto to pursue a career in the private sector with roles at Advanced Material Resources (now NeoMaterials), the Boston Consulting Group, Torstar, Labatt/Interbrew and MGI Software.[1] He was recruited from Torstar by Interbew and became president of beer.com.[2]

Rossi was the chief executive officer of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario from 2004 to 2009. Under Rossi's leadership the Heart and Stroke Foundation built a $130-million reserve of tax-receipted funds. While some have criticized collecting and not using millions in funds for which tax exemptions were issued, Rossi has remarked, "It's a criticism I will bear with honour... I'm proud that we built a healthy, long-term balance sheet".[3]

In 2013, Rossi was appointed chief executive officer of Prostate Cancer Canada.[4]

Rossi became President and CEO of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce in 2017.[5]

Rossi has sat on numerous boards including the United Way of Greater Toronto, AMR, the Ivey Foundation, the Internet Advertising Bureau of Canada, Toronto's 2008 Olympic Bid and the Empire Club of Canada. He currently serves as a member of the Board and Audit Committee of TerraVest Industries.[6]

Politics

Rossi ran for Mayor of Toronto in the 2010 Toronto mayoral election.[7] In 2011, he won the PC nomination for the riding of Eglinton—Lawrence and ran as a candidate for MPP in the 2011 Ontario general election.[8] Rossi is a former national director of the federal Liberal Party of Canada,[9] and also managed John Tory's campaign for Mayor of Toronto in the 2003 Toronto municipal election.[10]

Personal life

Rossi is an adventurer who has completed numerous endurance feats including walking the Camino de Santiago,[11] which is a major Christian pilgrimage route, cycling the 1,900 km length of Yonge Street for charity,[12] and kayaking over 500 km from Toronto to Ottawa.[13]

In 2018, Rossi, acting as President of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, was one of several "business leaders" who lobbied Ontario Premier Doug Ford[14] to repeal Bill 148, legislation implemented by the previous provincial government. Among other things, that legislation guaranteed workers paid sick days, equal pay for part-time work, and a C$1/hour raise to a minimum wage of C$15/hour, to begin on January 1, 2019.[15] Rossi publicly celebrated when Bill 148 was repealed, cancelling the planned increase of minimum wage.[16] On December 31, 2018, the day before the cancelled minimum wage increase was to take place, Rossi tweeted photos of caviar, Veuve Clicquot champagne and pastries, with the statement "Celebrating New Year’s the 1-percenter way! Let them eat cake:-)." Rossi was roundly criticized by other Twitter users in the replies to his tweet, and has since deleted it and apologized, claiming the tweet was "satire."[17]

Electoral records

2011 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Mike Colle 20,752 54.15 +11.10
Progressive Conservative Rocco Rossi 12,857 33.55 -3.97
New Democratic Gerti Dervishi 3,763 9.82 -0.46
Green Josh Rachlis 575 1.50 -5.70
Freedom Michael Bone 152 0.40  
Independent Jerry Green 146 0.38  
Independent Sujith Reddy 79 0.21  
Total valid votes 38,324 100.00
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 185 0.48
Turnout 38,496 51.81
Eligible voters 74,309
Liberal hold Swing +7.54
Source: Elections Ontario[18]
2010 City of Toronto mayoral election
Candidate Number of votes % of popular vote
Rob Ford 383,501 47.114%
George Smitherman 289,832 35.607%
Joe Pantalone 95,482 11.730%
Rocco Rossi 5,012 0.616%
George Babula 3,273 0.402%
Rocco Achampong 2,805 0.345%
Abdullah-Baquie Ghazi 2,761 0.344%
Michael Alexander 2,470 0.304%
Vijay Sarma 2,264 0.277%
Sarah Thomson 1,883 0.232%
Jaime Castillo 1,874 0.231%
Dewitt Lee 1,699 0.209%
Douglas Campbell 1,428 0.176%
Kevin Clarke 1,411 0.173%
Joseph Pampena 1,319 0.162%
David Epstein 1,202 0.148%
Monowar Hossain 1,194 0.147%
Michael Flie 1,190 0.146%
Don Andrews 1,032 0.127%
Weizhen Tang 890 0.11%
Daniel Walker 804 0.098%
Keith Cole 801 0.098%
Michael Brausewetter 796 0.098%
Barry Goodhead 740 0.091%
Charlene Cottle 735 0.09%
Tibor Steinberger 733 0.09%
Christopher Ball 696 0.085%
James Di Fiore 655 0.08%
Diane Devenyi 629 0.078%
John Letonja 592 0.073%
Himy Syed 582 0.071%
Carmen Macklin 575 0.07%
Howard Gomberg 477 0.058%
David Vallance 444 0.055%
Mark State 438 0.054%
Phil Taylor 429 0.053%
Colin Magee 401 0.049%
Selwyn Firth 394 0.049%
Ratan Wadhwa 290 0.036%
Gerald Derome 251 0.031%
Total 813,984 100%

References

  1. ^ "Rossi's mayoral bid surprises observers", Toronto Star, December 12, 2009
  2. ^ Ann Perry (October 13, 1999). "Belly up to the Web bar for new taste of beer.com; Interbrew site aims to satisfy online thirst". Toronto Star. Archived from the original on November 2, 2012. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
  3. ^ Existential crises and a rage to save the Liberals. Toronto Star, February 1, 2009.
  4. ^ Canada, Prostate Cancer. "Prostate Cancer Canada Appoints Rocco Rossi CEO". www.newswire.ca. Retrieved Dec 4, 2022.
  5. ^ "OCC Welcomes Rocco Rossi as New Incoming President and CEO". occ.ca. Sep 7, 2017. Retrieved Dec 4, 2022.
  6. ^ "Overview of Management and Directors". terravestindustries.com. Retrieved Dec 4, 2022.
  7. ^ "Liberal Party national director Rocco Rossi to run for Toronto mayor". CP24. Dec 14, 2009. Retrieved Dec 4, 2022.
  8. ^ Mirror, Lisa Queen | North York. "Rossi wins PC nomination in Eglinton-Lawrence". Toronto.com. Retrieved Dec 4, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ "Liberal Party Head to Run For Mayor". The Star. December 12, 2009.
  10. ^ "I'm not running: John Tory". nationalpost. Retrieved December 4, 2022.
  11. ^ Rossi, Rocco (16 October 2013). "Rocco Rossi: Why I'm starting a 250-kilometre pilgrimage for prostate cancer research". The Globe and Mail.
  12. ^ Best, Patricia (24 May 2007). "Cyclist wins hearts, funds with Ontario odyssey". The Globe and Mail.
  13. ^ Geddes, John (Jan 21, 2009). "Indomitable showman". Retrieved Dec 4, 2022.
  14. ^ Crawley, M, "Ford government's top political staff hold 'secretive' meeting with business leaders", CBC, Dec 6 2018
  15. ^ Crawley, M, "Business groups lobby Ford government to repeal workplace reforms", CBC, Sept 27 2018
  16. ^ Media Release, "Chamber Cheers Repeal of Bill 148", CBC, Oct 24 2018
  17. ^ Freeman, J. (January 1, 2019). "Ont. Chamber of Commerce CEO apologizes for 'one-percenter' tweet". www.cp24.com.
  18. ^ "Official return from the records / Rapport des registres officiels – Eglinton—Lawrence" (PDF). Elections Ontario. 2011. Retrieved 5 June 2014.

Media related to Rocco Rossi at Wikimedia Commons