- Walter Baker
Walter David Baker, PC (
August 22 1930 –November 13 1983 ) was a Canadian parliamentarian and lawyer.Baker is best known for having been
Government House Leader during the short-livedminority government ofJoe Clark . He received much of the popular blame for the defeat of the government in aMotion of no confidence onDecember 13 1979 with the claim that the government fell because "Walter Baker couldn't count". However, observers pointed out that targeting Baker as the scapegoat was unfair as he was House Leader, not Party Whip. The defeat was the result of the Clark government's decision to alienate the six Social Credit Members of Parliament by refusing to accord them official party status as well as Clark's view that he could "govern as if" he had amajority government .ref|OttSunBaker was first elected to the
Canadian House of Commons in the 1972 election as the Progressive ConservativeMember of Parliament forGrenville—Carleton (later renamedNepean—Carleton ) and was re-elected in the 1974, 1979 and 1980 elections. He served as both Government House Leader and Minister of National Revenue during the Clark government. He served as Opposition House Leader from 1976 to 1979 and again from 1980 to 1981.In government, Baker introduced the first ever
Access to Information Bill which died on the order paper with the Tory government. However, much of Baker's bill became part of the eventual Access to Information Act that was introduced by Liberal Solicitor-GeneralFrancis Fox in 1983 and passed by parliament into law. [http://www.infocom.gc.ca/about/default-e.asp]References
[http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/Columnists/Ottawa/Pat_MacAdam/2005/05/21/pf-1050779.html There goes another one] by Pat MacAdam, "
Ottawa Sun ", May 22, 2005s-ttl|title=
Member of Parliament forGrenville—Carleton
years=1972–1979s-ttl|title=Member of Parliament forNepean—Carleton
years=1979–1983
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