In 2011 she left her legal career to focus on raising her two daughters and participating in various community organizing and charitable activities aimed at promoting and preserving Toronto's public parks.
[3] She was nominated as the Liberal Party candidate in Toronto—Danforth for the 2015 federal election, running primarily on concerns about income inequality and government neglect of Canada's urban areas.
Toronto—Danforth was previously held by NDP leader Jack Layton and was considered to be a safe seat; it has long been one of the more left-leaning ridings in Toronto.
[6] She was raised in Montréal and pursued an undergraduate degree in Near and Middle Eastern Studies at McGill University.
Following her legal education, she practised litigation, including serving as commission counsel for the Toronto External Contracts Inquiry, which examined municipal government procurement processes.