- K. Ross Stevenson
Kenneth Ross Stevenson (born
October 1 ,1942 ) is a former politician inOntario ,Canada . He served in theLegislative Assembly of Ontario from1981 to1987 , and was briefly acabinet minister in the government of Frank Miller. He later served in theCanadian House of Commons from1988 to1993 . Stevenson was a member of the Progressive Conservative Party.Stevenson was born in Lindsay, Ontario. He was educated at the
University of Guelph andIowa State University , earning aPh.D. . He worked as a farmer, and was a professor at the University of Guelph before entering provincial politics.He was first elected to the Ontario legislature in the 1981 provincial election, winning an easy victory in
Durham—York . For the next four years, he served as a backbench supporter of the provincial Progressive Conservative administrations led byBill Davis and Frank Miller. He was re-elected in the 1985 election, in which the PCs under Miller were reduced to an unstableminority government . Stevenson was named Minister of Agriculture and Food onMay 17 ,1985 , but accomplished little in this portfolio before Miller's government was defeated in the legislature. He formally resigned from cabinet onJune 26 .In opposition, Stevenson served as his party's critic for Agriculture and Food. He was defeated in the 1987 election, losing to Liberal Party candidate
Bill Ballinger by 482 votes.He then turned to federal politics, and was elected to the Canadian House of Commons for Durham in the 1988 federal election. He served as a backbench supporter of the
Brian Mulroney andKim Campbell administrations over the next five years. The Progressive Conservatives were badly defeated in the 1993 federal election, and Stevenson finished third in his bid for re-election behind Liberal candidateAlex Shepherd .Stevenson later became director of strategic programs at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology. In
2003 , he supported the federal Progressive Conservative Party's merger with theCanadian Alliance to create theConservative Party of Canada .
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