Glen Murray 1st to run for Ontario Liberal leadership

Toronto Centre MPP Glen Murray has become the first candidate to formally launch a campaign to become the next leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, telling supporters he wants to lead his party’s renewal process.

"I want to become the next premier of this province and I want to become leader of the Ontario Liberal Party," Murray said during a Sunday morning press conference at Toronto’s Maple Leaf Gardens.

Murray’s announcement came a day after he resigned his cabinet portfolio, a step Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty has said is necessary for all cabinet ministers who are pursuing the leadership.

Two weeks ago, McGuinty announced he was leaving public office after nine years as premier and 16 years as party leader. He also prorogued the legislature and indicated his successor will determine when it is recalled.

The person who takes over his role as Liberal leader will inherit a minority government that could face a sudden election as soon as the legislature resumes.

For that reason, Murray said it is necessary for the Liberals to choose a leader who is ready for anything.

"This race is about picking someone who has a clear agenda and a premier who is ready, if forced, to take the Liberals into an election and win another mandate," Murray said.

Murray, 50, is a former mayor of Winnipeg, a job he held from 1998 to 2004.

His experience leading a large government gives him a leg up on his competition for the top job in the Ontario Liberal Party, he said Sunday.

"I've been a big city mayor. I have successfully led a large government through similar challenges to the ones we face now and I did that with people of all political stripes," he said during the press conference.

Murray later moved to Ontario and he was a visiting fellow at the University of Toronto for two years before he served as the president and CEO of the Canadian Urban Institute.

He was first elected as the MPP for Toronto Centre in a 2010 byelection and he was subsequently re-elected last year.

Murray joked Sunday being the first to declare a leadership bid made him "the front-runner" and thus, "for this singular, brief shining moment, I know what it feels like to be Justin Trudeau."

But that does not mean he would not face tough competition in the leadership race.

Don Valley West MPP Kathleen Wynne has also resigned her cabinet post and it is expected she will formally announce her intentions to run for leader on Monday.

McGuinty has already said he believes she is going to enter the race.

Sandra Pupatello, the former cabinet minister and Windsor West MPP, recently said she is "leaning toward" launching a leadership bid.

A number of cabinet ministers in McGuinty's government have said they will not run for the party leadership.

They include Finance Minister Dwight Duncan, Energy Minister Chris Bentley, Education Minister Laurel Broten and Brad Duguid, the minister of economic development and innovation.

Ottawa Centre MPP Yasir Naqvi, president of the Ontario Liberal Party, has also said he will not seek the party's leadership.