- David James Ramsay
David James Ramsay (born
April 23 ,1948 in Sydney,Australia ) is a politician inOntario ,Canada . He has lived in Canada since1949 , having been adopted by parents inMontreal at age one.Ramsay was raised in
Oakville, Ontario . He attendedConcordia University inMontreal , and after graduation worked as a farmer in New Liskeard and a clerk-treasurer in Casey Township, in northern Ontario. In1977 , he briefly joined theProgressive Conservative Party of Ontario to support a friend's bid for the party's nomination. He later served as President of the Timiskaming Federation of Agriculture in1984 -85, was a founding member of the Timiskaming Grain Growers Board, and served as Chair of the Timiskaming Hospital Board for a time.Ramsay was first elected to the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1985 provincial election. He served asMember of Provincial Parliament (MPP) as part of theOntario New Democratic Party caucus, representing the riding ofTimiskaming . He defeated incumbent Progressive ConservativeEd Havrot by almost 3000 votes, as the once-powerful Tory machine in northern Ontario began to lose its support base. OnOctober 6 ,1986 , hecrossed the floor to join the governing Liberals, claiming that Northern Ontario needed greater representation in government. (Ramsay also seems to have disliked the Toronto leadership of the NDP, describing it as of touch with his rural/populist base.)Despite an intense effort by the NDP to defeat Ramsay in the 1987 election, he won re-election by over 4,000 votes and was appointed to Liberal Premier
David Peterson 'scabinet . OnSeptember 29 ,1987 , Ramsay became Ontario Minister of Correctional Services. Following a cabinet shuffle onAugust 2 ,1989 , he was namedOntario Minister of Agriculture and Food . Ramsay kept his seat in the 1990 election that defeated the Liberal government and brought Ramsay's former party, the NDP, to power underBob Rae .He ran for the leadership of the Liberal Party in the
1992 Ontario Liberal leadership convention, but placed last in a field of six candidates. Like fellow candidateGreg Sorbara , his campaign included both right-wing and left-wing elements. He supported tax reduction (including lower gasoline taxes, a reduction in theProvincial Sales Tax and a one-year moratorium on the federalGoods and Services Tax ), and favoured open Sunday shopping and allowing corner stores to sell beer and wine. He also supported pay equity measures, and described himself as pro-choice onabortion .In the provincial elections of 1995 and 1999, Ramsay's primary opposition came not from the New Democrats but the Progressive Conservatives, whose leader
Mike Harris represented a neighbouring riding. He won by a clear margin on both occasions. In1996 , he endorsedDwight Duncan 's bid to lead the Ontario Liberal Party. ("Windsor Star", 26 June 1996)Ramsay served as Chair of the Caucus from
1993 to1994 and again from1999 to2003 .With the victory of the Liberals under the leadership of
Dalton McGuinty in the 2003 election, Ramsay returned to cabinet asOntario Minister of Natural Resources onOctober 23 ,2003 . He was also given responsibility for Aboriginal Affairs onJune 29 ,2005 . In June, 2007, Ramsay was appointed Ontario's first Minister of Aboriginal Affairs. Ramsay is regarded by many as the most powerful spokesman forNorthern Ontario in the provincial cabinet.However, in the 2007 provincial election, Ramsay won by an uncharacteristically narrow margin of just 634 votes over New Democrat candidate John Vanthof.
After the Ontario General Election, Ramsay was appointed as Premier Dalton McGuinty's Parliamentary Assistant with responsibility for special projects.
External links
* [http://www.ontla.on.ca/web/members/members_detail.do?locale=en&ID=83 Legislative Assembly of Ontario biography]
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