- Bob Wood (Ontario provincial politician)
:"This article refers to a Progressive Conservative
Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) fromLondon, Ontario . For the Liberal federalMember of Parliament fromNorth Bay, Ontario in the same era, seeBob Wood (Liberal) ."Robert "Bob" Wood, QC is a
politician inOntario ,Canada . He served as a Progressive Conservative member of theLegislative Assembly of Ontario from 1995 to 2003.Wood was educated at the
University of Western Ontario , receiving a law degree in 1970. He practiced law inLondon, Ontario after his graduation, and was the proprietor of the firm Walker and Wood. He also served on the Board of Managers for St. Paul's Cathedral in London, and was the Board Chairman for the Western Ontario Therapeutic Community Hostel. He was appointed aQueen's Counsel in 1984.Wood first ran for the Ontario legislature in the provincial election of 1990, placing third in
London South against incumbent Liberal Joan Smith and the winner, New DemocratDavid Winninger . He ran in the same riding in the 1995 provincial election, and easily defeated Winninger and Smith to become the riding's MPP. In the provincial election of 1999, he was re-elected over Liberal candidateDarrel Skidmore by only 294 votes in the redistributed riding ofLondon West .Wood was regarded as a maverick right-winger in the Progressive Conservative caucus. He supported the
Reform Party of Canada at the federal level, and holds socially conservative opinions on several issues, includingabortion . During his first term in the legislature, he introduced a private-member's bill which would have mandated a 45-day waiting period for couples wishing to marry, unless they agreed to eight hours of counselling. He also criticized a government grant toAnti-Racist Action in 1999, describing the group as a leftist organization given to violence. It was probably for these reasons that Wood was never appointed tocabinet byMike Harris orErnie Eves . Wood also criticized his government's plan to reform the provincial system of legal billing.Wood lost his seat to Liberal
Christopher Bentley by over 10,000 votes in the 2003 provincial election. He remains politically active in the London region, and in November 2004 criticized the Liberal government ofDalton McGuinty for its handling of London's hospital system.Wood supported
Frank Klees for the leadership of the Ontario PC Party in 2004.
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