- Kevin Flynn (politician)
Kevin Daniel Flynn is a
politician inOakville, Ontario ,Canada . Re-elected on October 10, 2007, he is currently a member of theLegislative Assembly of Ontario , representing the riding of Oakville for theOntario Liberal Party .Flynn initially ran for the Ontario legislature in the provincial election of 1985, as a New Democrat. He finished a distant third in Oakville, where the NDP has a limited base of support. Later in the year, he was elected as an Oakville Town Councillor and a Halton Regional Councillor, and would remain in these positions for 18 years until his election to the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario in 2003.He developed a reputation for both fiscal conservatism and social responsibility while in municipal government where he served for 18 years as a Town and Regional Councillor.Flynn has also served as Chair of the Financial Department for the Royal Botanical Gardens, and owned and operated several small businesses.
He ran for election to the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario again, this time as a Liberal, in the provincial election of 1999, this time finishing second to incumbent Progressive ConservativeGary Carr .Carr retired in 2003, and later joined the federal Liberal Party. In 2003, Flynn ran for the seat again and this time defeated Progressive Conservative (and fellow Town and Regional Councillor)
Kurt Franklin by about 3500 votes. OnFebruary 4 ,2004 , he was namedParliamentary Assistant toChris Bentley , then theOntario Minister of Labour . On September 20, 2006 he was namedParliamentary Assistant to the Ontario Minister of Energy, Dwight Duncan.In the 2007 election, Flynn ran for re-election and increased his margin of victory to 7096 votes over the Progressive Conservative challenger,
Rick Byers . Ironically, the NDP finished fourth for the first time that election, eclipsed by theOntario Green Party candidate,Marion Schaffer .Flynn has worked to ensure the protection of environmentally-sensitive land in his riding and his Town, which is larger than his riding. In November 2004, he was applauded by the local media for his work in reserving 1286 acres (5 km²) of land in North Oakville as public greenspace.
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