- William Chornopyski
William Chornopyski (
May 27 ,1922 -September 11 ,2002 ) was apolitician inManitoba ,Canada . He was associated with theNew Democratic Party of Manitoba for many years, but was elected to the provincial legislature in 1988 as a member of theManitoba Liberal Party .Chornopyski was born in Sundown, Manitoba, and served in the
Canadian Forces duringWorld War II . He was employed by theCanadian Pacific Railway from 1944 to 1966, and worked as a sales executive at General Motors from 1966 to 1971. From 1971 to 1973, he was the owner and operator of the Arlington Athletic Club. He also served as president of the Burrows Constituency NDP (provincial), and as secretary of theWinnipeg North federal NDP organization.In 1974, Chornopyski was elected as a
councillor in the city of Winnipeg. He served in this capacity until 1986, and also became deputymayor of the city in 1982. He was a founder of Winnipeg's "Block Parent Program" in this period and served on several community boards, as well as being on the executive of the Ukrainian Legion Branch #141.In the 1980s, Chornopyski was an opponent of NDP
Premier Howard Pawley 's plans to legally entrench French-language services in the province. He appears to have left the NDP over this issue around 1984, at roughly the same time as longtime party MLA andEdward Schreyer -era cabinet ministerRussell Doern . In the provincial election of 1986, Chornopyski contested the riding of Burrows as an independent candidate, and lost to incumbent New DemocratConrad Santos by 2110 votes. Later in the year, he lost his seat on city council toTerry Wachniak by 46 votes.In the provincial election of 1988, Chornopyski ran as a Liberal in Burrows and defeated NDP candidate
Doug Martindale by 109 votes.The Liberals increased their parliamentary representation from one seat to twenty in the 1988 election, and Chornopyski sat with the official opposition in parliament. His time in the provincial legislature proved to be short-lived, however — in the provincial election of 1990, he lost to Martindale by over 2000 votes amid a general decline in Liberal fortunes. He did not seek a return to public office, and died in 2002.
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