Gary Bennett is a Canadian politician and businessman who served as mayor of Kingston, Ontario from 1994 to 2000. He was a candidate of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario in the 2018 and 2022 provincial elections.
Bennett graduated from Loyalist Collegiate and Vocational Institute in 1972. He later earned a BA Honours in Political Science and a MasterâÂÂs in Public Administration from QueenâÂÂs University at Kingston. He has been involved with the riding associations of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, its successor, the Conservative Party of Canada, and the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario.
Bennett began serving on Kingston City Council after being elected as the city councillor for St. Lawrence Ward in 1988. From 1988 to 1994, he served two consecutive terms as councillor for the St. Lawrence district in the City of Kingston.
During his time in the council, Bennett served on various civic boards within the region. He was also active in the Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO), serving on the Large Urban Caucus.
Bennett was elected to two terms as mayor of the City of Kingston, serving his first term from 1994 to 1997. As mayor, he was involved in the amalgamation process that created the new City of Kingston through the merger of the former City of Kingston, Kingston Township, and Pittsburgh Township. The area reached a locally negotiated agreement on amalgamation, which was not universally achieved in Ontario. As part of the amalgamation agreement, the local Public Utilities Commission was also assumed by the new City of Kingston. Bennett served as the last mayor of the former City of Kingston.
In 1996, during his first term in office, Bennett spoke at the yearly gravesite ceremony honouring Canada's first prime minister, John A. Macdonald, who was also a Kingston resident. His address was later published by the Kingston Historical Society.
Bennett was elected in 1997 as the first mayor of the newly amalgamated City of Kingston, serving from 1997 to 2000. During his term, the city responded to a locally declared civic emergency, the Ice Storm of 1998. Also during his term, the city established a yearly capital surcharge on all property tax classes. Bennett also chaired a local United Way campaign.
Bennett ran unsuccessfully for re-election in 2000, losing to Isabel Turner. Challenges associated with the new city's first post-amalgamation government were cited as a factor in the election outcome.
On June 11, 2017, Bennett was nominated to represent the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party in Kingston and the Islands in the 2018 provincial election. He succeeded against three other challengers for the nomination, but was defeated in the subsequent provincial election, placing third behind the NDP and Liberal candidates.
In 2022, Bennett again ran for the Kingston and the Islands riding and again placed third.