- Barry Campbell
Barry R. Campbell (born
June 15 ,1950 ) is a Canadian politician and lawyer. He served in theCanadian House of Commons from 1993 to 1997 as a member of theLiberal Party of Canada .Campbell was born in
Montreal ,Quebec . He received aBachelor of Arts degree fromMcGill University in 1971, aBachelor of Laws from McGill Law School in 1975, and aMaster of Laws fromHarvard Law School in 1977. He was an articling student and Associate with McCarthy & McCarthy from 1971 to 1981, a legal counselor for theInternational Monetary Fund inWashington, D.C. in 1981-82, foreign consultant withArnold & Porter in 1982-83, and associate and partner with McCarthy & McCarthy from 1983 to 1987. He served as president of Tricaster Management Inc. from 1987 to 1990, and was a special partner with Tory, Tory, DesLauriers & Binnington from 1990 to 1993. He is a member of theLaw Society of Upper Canada , and has done work for theCanadian Jewish Congress . Campbell has also been active in supportingAIDS research and non-profit housing inToronto ("Financial Post",27 October 1992 ).Campbell was involved with the Liberal Party for many years before running for office himself, and volunteered for
Pierre Elliott Trudeau 's campaign in his youth ("Financial Post",1 January 1993 ). He was recruited by the party leadership in 1992, and won the Liberal nomination for St. Paul's late in the year ("Financial Post",31 December 1992 ). Many regarded him as a "future star" for the party ("Financial Post",23 June 1992 ), and there was some speculation even before the 1993 election that he could be given a cabinet position ("Toronto Star",23 October 1993 ).Campbell defeated star Progressive Conservative candidate
Isabel Bassett by a significant margin in the election, as the Liberals won amajority government nationally. He was not appointed to cabinet by Prime MinisterJean Chrétien , and served as a governmentbackbench er. He was named as vice-chairman of the House of Commons Finance Committee ("Financial Post",3 May 1994 ), co-chaired the party's 1994 national convention ("Globe and Mail",26 March 1994 ), and was chosen as chair of the Metro-Toronto Liberal caucus ("Globe and Mail",26 September 1994 ). OnFebruary 23 ,1996 , he was promoted toparliamentary secretary to Finance MinisterPaul Martin .In early 1997, he announced that he would not seek re-election in the next federal election ("Toronto Star",
2 March 1997 ). There was subsequently media speculation that he would be chosen as the next president of the Liberal Party, but nothing came of this ("Globe and Mail",13 December 1997 ).Campbell became a professional lobbyist after leaving political life. His clients in 1998 included the
Bank of Nova Scotia ,Newcourt Capital andJ.P. Morgan ("Toronto Star",30 May 1998 ). He also served as chair ofAPCO Worldwide 's Canadian office and later became a senior counsellor for APCO Worldwide, as well as running his own Barry R. Campbell Strategies Inc. ("Canada NewsWire",14 March 2002 ).He supported
John Tory 's bid to becomeMayor of Toronto in 2003, and was one of 29 co-chairs in the Tory campaign ("Canada NewsWire",23 March 2003 ). Campbell also worked as a Toronto fundraiser in Paul Martin's bid to lead the Liberal Party in 2003 ("Toronto Star",14 November 2003 ).External links
*cite news | url=http://walrusmagazine.com/articles/2008.03-politics-canada-election-barry-campbell | date=March 2008 | title=Politics as Unusual I: A Legend is Born | publisher=
The Walrus
*cite news | url=http://www.walrusmagazine.com/articles/2008.04-politics-canada-election-ottawa-backbench-mp-barry-campbell/ | date=April 2008 | title=Politics as Unusual II: Darkness Visible | publisher=The Walrus
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