May 17, 2026

I’m running. Here’s what you can hold me to.

I’m running to listen, advocate, and work with residents to create meaningful change.

Here’s what you can hold me to:

  • Being accessible to residents
  • Speaking with honesty and integrity
  • Respecting taxpayers and how your money is spent

I invite you to walk this journey with me, ask questions, challenge me, and hold me accountable.


I want to start with something my grandmother used to say: “Don’t tell me what you stand for. Show me what you’ll stand against.”

I’ve thought about that a lot over the last few years.

I’ve watched neighbours grow quieter at community meetings. I’ve heard seniors say they’ve stopped calling the city because nothing changes anyway. I’ve seen good people — hardworking, hopeful, decent — feel like their voices stop at the curb of City Hall. And every time I heard it, I felt the same small pull: someone needs to do something about this. Why not me?

So here I am. Today, I’m officially announcing that I’m running for Brampton City Council in the October 26, 2026 election. And I’m not going to ask you to trust me. Trust is not something you ask for. Trust is something you earn — slowly, publicly, and in writing.

Three words I won’t run from

My campaign is built on three words: Truth. Trust. Transparency.

They’re not slogans. They’re a contract. And here’s how I want you to hold me to it.

Truth — even when it costs me

If I don’t know something, I’ll say so. If I change my mind on an issue, I’ll tell you why. If I make a mistake — and I will — you’ll hear about it from me first. Politicians who only give you the comfortable answer aren’t doing you any favours. I’d rather lose a vote than lose your respect.

Trust — earned every single week

I’m committing to a monthly resident update — published openly on this site — covering how I voted at council, what I’m working on, and what I’m hearing from you. No filter. No spin. If you want to see my work, you’ll never have to file a freedom-of-information request to do it.

Transparency — even when it’s uncomfortable

Every meeting I take with a developer, a lobbyist, or anyone whose business depends on a council vote — published. Every gift over the legal threshold — published. Every conflict of interest — declared, in plain language, before the vote, not after. That’s not extra credit. That should be the baseline.

What I’m running toward

I’m running because the people I love deserve a city that works for them, not around them.

A city where a senior on a fixed income isn’t sitting in the dark wondering if they can afford another tax hike. Where parents don’t have to call the city three times to fix a school-zone safety issue. Where someone with a disability can use a city service without spending half a day trying to figure out who to talk to. Where people in our most vulnerable neighbourhoods don’t feel forgotten between elections.

That city is possible. I’ve lived here long enough to know our neighbours have the heart for it. What we need is leadership that actually listens, then actually acts.

What I’m asking from you

I can’t do this alone. Campaigns aren’t won by candidates — they’re won by neighbours showing up for each other. So here’s the ask:

  • If you’ve got 30 seconds: share this post with one person who’s stopped paying attention to local politics. They’re exactly who I’m running for.
  • If you’ve got 10 minutes: tell me what’s broken in your neighbourhood. The first 200 conversations are going to shape this entire campaign.
  • If you’ve got more to give: sign up to volunteer — door-knock, host a coffee meet-up, share online, or just lend your name. Every hour matters between now and October 26.

A final word

I don’t think Brampton needs another politician. I think Brampton needs a neighbour who’ll do the work, tell the truth, and stay accountable long after the lawn signs come down.

I’m not asking you to believe me yet. I’m asking you to watch me. Hold me to every word in this post. If, by election day, I haven’t done what I said I’d do — vote for someone else.

But I have a feeling we’re going to do something good together.

See you on the doorstep,
Janice Gordon-Daniels
Candidate for Brampton City Council, 2026

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