- Elizabeth Witmer
Elizabeth Witmer (born
October 16 ,1946 inSchiedam ,The Netherlands ) is a politician inOntario ,Canada . She has been a member of theLegislative Assembly of Ontario since1990 , originally representing Waterloo North and laterKitchener—Waterloo for the Progressive Conservative Party.Witmer moved with her family to Ontario at a young age. She received a
Bachelor of Arts degree from theUniversity of Western Ontario , and later attended theAlthouse College of Education . She did postgraduate work at theUniversity of Waterloo . Witmer worked as a secondary school teacher from1968 to1980 , in West Lorne, London and Guelph. She was named the "Kitchener-Waterloo Woman of the Year" in 1968.Witmer began her political career as a school trustee, serving on the Waterloo County Board of Education from 1980 to
1990 ; she became its Chair in1984 . She first ran for the Ontario legislature in the 1987 election, but was defeated by incumbentOntario Liberal Party Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP)Herb Epp in Waterloo North.Epp retired before the 1990 provincial election, and Witmer again won the Progressive Conservative nomination in the riding. She was successful this time, defeating New Democrat
Hugh Miller and LiberalAndrew Telegdi (later a federalMember of Parliament ). The NDP scored an upset victory in this election while the Progressive Conservatives won only 20 of 130 seats for third-party status.There was a significant swing to the Progressive Conservatives in the 1995 provincial election, and Witmer was re-elected by more than 17000 votes over her nearest opponent. On
June 26 ,1995 , she was appointed Minister of Labour in the government ofMike Harris . In October1997 , she was promoted to the key portfolio of Minister of Health, replacing the more confrontational Jim Wilson.Harris's government was initially regarded by many as uniformly right-wing, although moderate
Red Tory figures such as Witmer andIsabel Bassett eventually emerged in key portfolios. Witmer's appointment as Minister of Health was generally interpreted as signalling that the government desired a more moderate approach to negotiations with the health sector. Despite this, she presided over a controversial restructuring process which included a number of government cutbacks.Witmer was re-elected in the 1999 election, defeating Liberal
Sean Strickland by just under 10,000 votes. OnJuly 17 ,1999 her portfolio was renamed the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, and she focused her ministry's attention on community services and long-term care. Following a cabinet shuffle onFebruary 8 ,2001 , she became Minister of the Environment.She ran in the 2002 PC leadership election to succeed Harris as Tory leader and Premier, but placed fourth on the first ballot and threw her support to the eventual winner,
Ernie Eves . In April 2002, she was appointed Deputy Premier and Minister of Education.The 2003 election saw a significant backlash against the Conservative government. Witmer was re-elected in Kitchener—Waterloo (again defeating Strickland, this time by 1501 votes), but was one of only 24 Progressive Conservatives returned. Moreover, she is considered to be one of the few moderates in a caucus dominated by the right-wing of the party. She was named as deputy leader of the opposition, and serves as her party's critic on long-term care and women's issues.
Witmer considered running to succeed Eves in the 2004 PC leadership election, but ultimately supported
John Tory 's successful candidacy instead. Tory re-appointed Witmer as deputy leader, and also named her as his chief policy developer for the 2007 Ontario election. Her appointment was considered a notable victory for the centrist wing of the party. Witmer won re-election by 4,917 votes, an even wider margin of victory than in 2003 despite the Liberal victory provincewide. [http://www3.elections.on.ca/internetapp/RealTimeED.aspx?channel_id={923146e7-4d81-42a8-99f0-e61f5ab50387}&EDID=39&lang=en-ca]Most recently Witmer won the "Ontario's Greatest Female Premier" contest conducted by
Equal Voice [http://www.equalvoice.ca/mmp] while upcoming politicianGeorgina Bencsik and current MPOlivia Chow were runners-up.
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