Conservative Party of Canada candidates, 2008 Canadian federal election

Conservative Party of Canada candidates, 2008 Canadian federal election

This is a list of nominated candidates for the Conservative Party of Canada in the 40th Canadian federal election.[1] The party nominated 307 out of a possible 308 candidates, Portneuf—Jacques-Cartier was the only riding not to field a Conservative candidate.

Contents

Newfoundland and Labrador - 7 seats

Riding
Candidate's Name Notes Gender Residence Occupation Votes % Rank
Avalon Fabian Manning incumbent MP M St. Bride's Parliamentarian 11,542 35.2% 2nd
Bonavista—Gander—Grand Falls—Windsor Andrew House M Gander Lawyer 4,354 15.2% 2nd
Humber—St. Barbe—Baie Verte Lorne Robinson M Pasadena Financial Planner 2,799 10.6% 3rd
Labrador Lacey Lewis F Ottawa Office Assistant 615 8.0% 3rd
Random—Burin—St. George's Herb Davis M Gatineau Policy Advisor 4,791 20.5% 3rd
St. John's East Craig Westcott M Conception Bay South Journalist 3,836 9.3% 3rd
St. John's South—Mount Pearl Merv Wiseman M North Harbour Maritime Search & Rescue Coordinator 4,324 12.6% 3rd

Prince Edward Island - 4 seats

Riding Candidate Notes Gender Residence Occupation Votes  % Rank
Cardigan Sid McMullin M Georgetown Human Resource Officer 5,661 29.6% 2nd
Charlottetown Thomas L. DeBlois M Charlottetown Business Manager 5,704 32.1% 2nd
Egmont Gail Shea Former Provincial MLA F Tignish Former Civil Servant 8,110 43.9% 1st
Malpeque Mary Crane F Kensington Educator 7,388 39.3% 2nd

Nova Scotia - 11 seats

Cape Breton—Canso

Allan R. Murphy

Central Nova

Peter MacKay, incumbent MP and Minister of National Defence

Cumberland—Colchester—Musquodoboit Valley

Joel Bernard

Dartmouth—Cole Harbour

Wanda Webber

Halifax

Ted Larsen

Halifax West

Rakesh Khosla

Kings—Hants

Rosemary Segado

Sackville—Eastern Shore

David K. Montgomery

South Shore—St. Margaret's

Gerald Keddy, incumbent MP

Sydney—Victoria

Kristen Rudderham

West Nova

Greg Kerr

New Brunswick - 10 seats

Acadie—Bathurst

Jean-Guy Dubé

Beauséjour

Omer Léger, former provincial cabinet minister under Richard Hatfield

Fredericton

Keith Ashfield, former provincial cabinet minister under Bernard Lord

Fundy Royal

Rob Moore - Incumbent MP

Madawaska—Restigouche

Jean-Pierre Ouellet former provincial cabinet minister under Richard Hatfield

Miramichi

Tilly Gordon

Moncton—Riverview—Dieppe

Daniel Allain, CEO of Downtown Moncton Centre-Ville.

New Brunswick Southwest

Greg Thompson - Incumbent MP and Minister of Veteran Affairs

Saint John

Rodney Weston, former provincial cabinet minister under Bernard Lord

Tobique—Mactaquac

Mike Allen - Incumbent MP

Quebec - 75 seats

Abitibi—Baie-James—Nunavik—Eeyou

Jean-Maurice Matte Abitibi

Abitibi—Témiscamingue

Pierre Grandmaitre

Ahuntsic

Jean Précourt

Alfred-Pellan

Alexandre Salameh

Argenteuil—Papineau—Mirabel

Scott Pearce

Bas-Richelieu—Nicolet—Bécancour

Réjean Bériault was born in March 1961 in Lachine. He holds a diploma in public administration from HEC Montréal, a certificate in law from the University of Montreal and a Bachelor's Degree in legal sciences at the University of Quebec in Montreal. He became general manager of the Galeries de Sorel shortly before the election.[2] He received 8,904 votes (18.15%), finishing second against Bloc Québécois incumbent Louis Plamondon.

Beauce

Maxime Bernier, incumbent MP.

Beauharnois—Salaberry

Dominique Bellemare

Beauport—Limoilou

Sylvie Boucher

Berthier—Maskinongé

Marie-Claude Godue

Bourassa

Michelle Allaire

Brome—Missisquoi: Mark Quinlan

Mark Quinlan was born in Cowansville, Quebec and raise in Bromont. He has Bachelor's Degrees in civil law and finance and a graduate diploma from Université de Sherbrooke in notarial law.[3] He started his political career in the youth wings of the Quebec Liberal Party and the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada.[4] In 2000, he wrote an editorial defending Jean Charest's record.[5] He joined the newly formed Canadian Alliance in 2000; during that party's first leadership contest, he asked Preston Manning to apologize for the running anti-Quebec advertisements in the previous federal election.[6] Stockwell Day defeated Manning for the party leadership, and Quinlan ran as an Alliance candidate in the 2000 federal election. He was later employed by the party as a press secretary and sided with Day through the party's internal divisions of 2001–02. He was dismissed from office when Stephen Harper succeeded Day as party leader in March 2002.[7]

The Canadian Alliance merged with the more centrist Progressive Conservatives to form the Conservative Party of Canada in 2003. Quinlan joined the new party and worked as an organizer for candidate Peter Stastny in the 2004 federal election.[8] After the Conservatives formed a minority government in 2006, he was hired as a press secretary for Justice Minister Vic Toews.[9] Quinlan followed Toews to a new posting at the Treasury Board of Canada in early 2007.[10] He became the press secretary for Christian Paradis later in the same year and continued to serve with Paradis after the 2008 election.[11] Quinlan ran as a Conservative candidate in 2008, finishing third in Brome—Missisquoi.[12]

His mother, Pauline Quinlan, is the mayor of Bromont.[13]

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes  % Place Winner
2000 federal Sherbrooke Canadian Alliance 2,284 4.51 3/8 Serge Cardin, Bloc Québécois
2008 federal Brome—Missisquoi Conservative 9,309 18.66 3/6 Christian Ouellet, Bloc Québécois

Brossard—La Prairie

Maurice Brossard

Chambly—Borduas

Suzanne Chartand

Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles

Daniel Petit, incumbent MP.

Châteauguay—Saint-Constant

Pierre-Paul Routhier

Chicoutimi—Le Fjord

Jean-Guy Maltais

Compton—Stanstead

Michel Gagné

Drummond

André Komlosy

Gaspésie—Îles-de-la-Madeleine

Darryl Gray

Gatineau

Denis Tassé

Haute-Gaspésie—La Mitis—Matane—Matapédia

Jérôme Landry

Hochelaga

Luc Labbé

Honoré-Mercier

Rodrigo Alfaro

Hull—Aylmer

Paul Fréchette

Jeanne-Le Ber

Joliette

Sylvie Lavallée

Jonquière—Alma

Jean-Pierre Blackburn, incumbent MP and Minister of Labour

La Pointe-de-l'Île

Hubert Pichet

Lac-Saint-Louis

Andrea Paine

LaSalle—Émard

Béatrice Guay-Pepper

Laurentides—Labelle

Guy Joncas

Laurier—Sainte-Marie

Laval

Jean-Pierre Bélisle

Laval—Les Îles

Agop Evereklian

Lévis—Bellechasse

Steven Blaney

Longueuil—Pierre-Boucher

Jacques Bouchard

Lotbinière—Chutes-de-la-Chaudière

Jacques Gourde

Louis-Hébert

Luc Harvey

Louis-Saint-Laurent

Josée Verner

Manicouagan

Pierre Breton

Marc-Aurèle-Fortin

Claude Moreau

Mégantic—L'Érable

Christian Paradis

Montcalm

Claude Marc Boudreau

Montmagny—L'Islet—Kamouraska—Rivière-du-Loup

Denis Laflamme

Montmorency—Charlevoix—Haute-Côte-Nord

Guy-Léonard Tremblay

Mount Royal

Rafael Tzoubari

Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Lachine

Carmine Pontillo

Outremont

Lulzim Laloshi

Papineau

Mustague Sarker

Pierrefonds—Dollard

Pierre-Olivier Brunelle

Pontiac

Lawrence Cannon, incumbent MP.

Portneuf-Jacques-Cartier

No Candidate

Québec

Myriam Taschereau

Repentigny

Bruno Royer

Richmond—Arthabaska

Éric Lefebvre

Rimouski-Neigette—Témiscouata—Les Basques

Gaston Noël

Rivière-des-Mille-Îles

Claude Carignan

Rivière-du-Nord

Gilles Duguay

Roberval—Lac-Saint-Jean

Denis Lebel

Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie

Sylvie Boulianne

Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert

Nicole Charbonneau Barron

Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot

René Vincelette

Saint-Jean

Marie-Josée Mercier

Saint-Lambert

Patrick Clune

Saint-Laurent—Cartierville

Dennis Galiatsatos

Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel

Lucie Le Tourneau

Saint-Maurice—Champlain

Stéphane Roof

Shefford

Jean Lambert

Sherbrooke

André Bachand

Terrebonne—Blainville

Daniel Lebel

Trois-Rivières

Claude Durand

Vaudreuil—Soulanges

Michael Fortier, Minister of Public Works

Verchères—Les Patriotes

Benoît Dussault

Westmount—Ville-Marie

Guy Dufort

Ontario - 106 seats

Ajax—Pickering

Rick Johnson

Algoma—Manitoulin—Kapuskasing

Dianne Musgrove

Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale

David Sweet

Barrie

Patrick Brown

Beaches—East York

Caroline Alleslev

Bramalea—Gore—Malton

Stella Ambler

Brampton—Springdale: Parm Gill

Parm Gill was born in India and moved to Canada at age fourteen. He has a diploma in Private Investigation and was the senior vice-president of Paramount Manufacturing during his first run for public office in 2006.[14] In 2008, he ran a family-owned business in the hospitality sector. He has volunteered with the Malaysian Singapore Cultural Association and the Peel Regional Police.[15]

Despite his defeat in the 2008 election, Gill accompanied Immigration Minister Jason Kenney on a post-election trip to India. While in Punjab, he told reporters that the Conservatives would reduce the immigration rejection rate for Punjabi youths. Some speculated that this announcement had more to do with political concerns in Canada than with economic recruitment.[16] It is believed that Gill plans to run again in the next federal election.[17]

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes  % Place Winner
2006 federal York West Conservative 6,244 18.59 2/5 Judy Sgro, Liberal
2008 federal Brampton—Springdale Conservative 17,804 39.33 2/5 Ruby Dhalla, Liberal

Brampton West

Kyle Seeback

Brant

Phil McColeman

Bruce—Grey—Owen Sound

Larry Miller

Burlington

Mike Wallace

Cambridge

Gary Goodyear

Carleton—Mississippi Mills

Gordon O'Connor, incumbent MP and Minister of National Revenue.

Chatham-Kent—Essex

Dave Van Kesteren

Davenport

Theresa Rodriguez

Don Valley East

Eugene McDermott

Don Valley West

John Carmichael

Dufferin—Caledon

David Tilson

Durham

Bev Oda, incumbent MP.

Eglinton—Lawrence

Joe Oliver

Elgin—Middlesex—London

Joe Preston

Essex

Jeff Watson

Etobicoke Centre

Axel Kuhn

Etobicoke—Lakeshore

Patrick Boyer

Etobicoke North

Bob Saroya

Glengarry—Prescott—Russell

Pierre Lemieux

Guelph

Gloria Kovach

Haldimand—Norfolk

Diane Finley, incumbent MP and Minister of Citizenship and Immigration.

Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock

Barry Devolin

Halton

Lisa Raitt is the president and chief executive officer of the Toronto Port Authority (TPA), a Canadian federal corporation that manages commerce, transportation (including the Toronto City Centre Airport) and recreation in the Toronto harbour. She has also served as the TPA’s corporate secretary and general counsel,[18] and harbourmaster. She is believed to have been the first female harbourmaster of a Canadian port.[19] She is currently on unpaid leave from the TPA for the duration of the election. Lisa Raitt's OFFICIAL Campaign Website Lisa Raitt's Campaign Blog

Hamilton Centre

Leon O'Connor

Hamilton East—Stoney Creek

Frank Rukavina

Hamilton Mountain

Terry Anderson

Huron—Bruce

Ben Lobb

Kenora

Greg Rickford

Kingston and the Islands

Brian Abrams

Kitchener Centre

Stephen Woodworth

Kitchener—Conestoga

Harold Albrecht

Kitchener—Waterloo

Peter Braid

Lambton—Kent—Middlesex

Bev Shipley

Lanark—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington

Scott Reid

Leeds—Grenville

Gord Brown

London—Fanshawe

Mary Lou Ambrogio

London North Centre

Paul Van Meerbergen

London West

Ed Holder

Markham—Unionville

Duncan Fletcher

Mississauga—Brampton South

Salma Ataullahjan is a current Canadian Senator appointed on July 9, 2010.

Mississauga East—Cooksville

Melissa Bhagat

Mississauga—Erindale

Bob Dechert

Mississauga South

Hugh Arrison

Mississauga—Streetsville

Wajid Khan, incumbent MP.

Nepean—Carleton

Pierre Poilievre

Newmarket—Aurora

Lois Brown

Niagara Falls

Rob Nicholson, incumbent MP and Minister of Justice.

Niagara West—Glanbrook

Dean Allison, incumbent MP.

Nickel Belt

Ian McCracken

Nipissing—Timiskaming

Joe Sinicrope

Northumberland—Quinte West

Rick Norlock

Oak Ridges—Markham

Paul Calandra

Oakville

Terence Young

Oshawa

Colin Carrie

Ottawa Centre

Brian McGarry

Ottawa—Orléans

Royal Galipeau

Ottawa South

Elie Salibi

Ottawa—Vanier

Patrick Glémaud (born August 13, 1968 in Port-Salut, Haiti) is a lawyer, businessman and community activist. He was born in Haiti and moved to Canada when he was 10 years old.

Glémaud attended the University of Ottawa and earned an undergraduate degree in political science and a degree in common law. During his studies he was involved in many activities on campus including being Vice President of the inter-university Black Law Students Association.

After graduating with a law degree from the University of Ottawa, Glémaud went on to own several local businesses. Today he serves as a senior legal advisor for the federal government, specializing in environmental and energy policy.

Ottawa West—Nepean

John Baird, incumbent MP and Minister of the Environment.

Oxford

Dave MacKenzie

Parkdale—High Park

Jilian Saweczko

Parry Sound—Muskoka

Tony Clement, incumbent MP and Minister of Health.

Perth—Wellington

Gary Schellenberger, incumbent MP

Peterborough

Dean Del Mastro, incumbent MP

Pickering—Scarborough East

George Khouri

Prince Edward—Hastings

Daryl Kramp, incumbent MP

Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke

Cheryl Gallant, incumbent MP.

Richmond Hill

Chungsen Leung

St. Catharines

Rick Dykstra, incumbent MP

St. Paul's

Heather Jewell

Sarnia—Lambton

Pat Davidson, incumbent MP

Sault Ste. Marie

Cameron Ross

Scarborough—Agincourt

Benson Lau

Scarborough Centre

Roxanne James

Scarborough—Guildwood

Chuck Konkel

Scarborough—Rouge River

Jerry Bance

Scarborough Southwest

Greg Crompton

Simcoe—Grey

Helena Guergis, incumbent MP

Simcoe North

Bruce Stanton, incumbent MP

Stormont—Dundas—South Glengarry

Guy Lauzon

Sudbury: Gerry Labelle

Gerry Labelle was born in Mattawa and raised in Sudbury. He is a businessperson and community activist in Sudbury, where he operates a consulting firm.[20] Labelle is a founding member of Music and Film in Motion and has served on the board of several non-profit organizations. At the time of the election, he was a member of the Make Poverty History committee on the city's Social Planning Council.[21]

Labelle became involved in a minor controversy during the 2008 campaign when he made statements in a French-language interview that seemed critical of the Conservative government. According to a press release from Liberal incumbent Diane Marleau, Labelle criticized Finance Minister Jim Flaherty for describing Ontario as "the last place" to invest, took issue with the government's decision to abolish the Court Challenges Program of Canada, and said that he was not impressed with the Conservative Party's environmental record. He later issued a retraction, saying that he had not expressed himself clearly and was fully supportive of the Harper government. [22] Labelle also spoke in support of the arts community and rejected arguments that his party was hostile to the arts.[23] Late in the campaign, the Sudbury Star newspaper noted that he "did not come across as a Harper Conservative".[24]

Labelle received 11,073 votes (25.79%), finishing third against New Democratic Party candidate Glenn Thibeault. He has said that he will probably run for Conservatives again.[25]

Thornhill

Peter Kent

Thunder Bay—Rainy River

Richard Neumann

Thunder Bay—Superior North

Bev Sarafin

Timmins—James Bay

Bill Greenberg

Toronto Centre

David Gentili holds a B.A. in psychology from Queen's University and a Masters in Public Administration from Dalhousie University. Previously, he worked as a staffer for Larry Miller, MP for Bruce-Gray-Owen Sound and as a special assistant to the Chief of Staff at the Prime Minister's Office. After Chris Reid withdrew from the race, Gentili stepped in as candidate for the riding. He is married to Devon Stocks-Gentili.

Toronto—Danforth

Christina Perreault

Trinity—Spadina

Christine McGirr

Vaughan

Richard Lorello

Welland

Alf Kiers

Wellington—Halton Hills

Michael Chong, incumbent MP.

Whitby—Oshawa

Jim Flaherty, incumbent MP and Minister of Finance.

Willowdale

Jake Karns

Windsor—Tecumseh

Denise Ghanam

Windsor West

Lisa Lumley

York Centre

Rochelle Wilner

York—Simcoe

Peter Van Loan, incumbent MP.

York South—Weston

Aydin Cocelli

York West

Kevin Nguyen

Manitoba - 14 seats

Brandon—Souris

Merv Tweed, incumbent MP.

Charleswood—St. James—Assiniboia

Steven Fletcher, incumbent MP.

Churchill

Wally Daudrich

Dauphin—Swan River—Marquette

Inky Mark, incumbent MP.

Elmwood—Transcona

Thomas Steen

Kildonan—St. Paul

Joy Smith, incumbent MP.

Portage—Lisgar

Candice Hoeppner

Provencher

Vic Toews, incumbent MP.

Saint Boniface

Shelly Glover

Selkirk—Interlake

James Bezan, incumbent MP.

Winnipeg Centre

Kenny Daodu

Winnipeg North

Ray Larkin

Winnipeg South

Rod Bruinooge, incumbent MP.

Winnipeg South Centre

Trevor Kennerd

Saskatchewan - 14 seats

Battlefords—Lloydminster

Gerry Ritz, incumbent MP and Minister of Agriculture.

Blackstrap

Lynne Yelich, incumbent MP.

Cypress Hills—Grasslands

David L. Anderson, incumbent MP.

Desnethé—Missinippi—Churchill River

Rob Clarke, incumbent MP.

Palliser

Ray Boughen

Prince Albert

Randy Hoback

Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre

Tom Lukiwski, incumbent MP.

Regina—Qu'Appelle

Andrew Scheer, incumbent MP.

Saskatoon—Humboldt

Brad Trost, incumbent MP.

Saskatoon—Rosetown—Biggar

Kelly Block

Saskatoon—Wanuskewin

Maurice Vellacott, incumbent MP.

Souris—Moose Mountain

Ed Komarnicki, incumbent MP.

Wascana

Michelle Hunter

Yorkton—Melville

Garry Breitkreuz, incumbent MP.

Alberta - 28 seats

Calgary Centre

Lee Richardson, incumbent MP.

Calgary Centre-North

Jim Prentice, incumbent MP.

Calgary East

Deepak Obhrai, incumbent MP.

Calgary Northeast

Devinder Shory

Calgary—Nose Hill

Diane Ablonczy, incumbent MP.

Calgary Southeast

Jason Kenney, incumbent MP.

Calgary Southwest

Stephen Harper, incumbent MP and Prime Minister of Canada.

Calgary West

Rob Anders, incumbent MP.

Crowfoot

Kevin Sorenson, incumbent MP.

Edmonton Centre

Laurie Hawn, incumbent MP.

Edmonton East

Peter Goldring, incumbent MP.

Edmonton—Leduc

James Rajotte, incumbent MP.

Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont

Mike Lake, incumbent MP.

Edmonton—St. Albert

Brent Rathgeber, former MLA for Edmonton-Calder.

Edmonton—Sherwood Park

Tim Uppal

Edmonton—Spruce Grove

Rona Ambrose, incumbent MP.

Edmonton—Strathcona

Rahim Jaffer, incumbent MP.

Fort McMurray—Athabasca

Brian Jean, incumbent MP.

Lethbridge

Rick Casson, incumbent MP.

Macleod

Ted Menzies, incumbent MP.

Medicine Hat

LaVar Payne

Peace River

Chris Warkentin, incumbent MP.

Red Deer

Earl Dreeshen

Vegreville—Wainwright

Leon Benoit, incumbent MP.

Westlock—St. Paul

Brian Storseth, incumbent MP.

Wetaskiwin

Blaine Calkins, incumbent MP.

Wild Rose

Blake Richards

Yellowhead

Rob Merrifield, incumbent MP.

British Columbia - 36 seats

Abbotsford

Ed Fast, incumbent MP since 2006.

British Columbia Southern Interior

Rob Zandee

Burnaby—Douglas

Ronald Leung

Burnaby—New Westminster

Sam Rakhra

Cariboo—Prince George

Dick Harris, incumbent MP.

Chilliwack—Fraser Canyon

Chuck Strahl, incumbent MP and Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development.

Delta—Richmond East

John Cummins, incumbent MP.

Esquimalt—Juan de Fuca

Troy DeSouza

Fleetwood—Port Kells

Nina Grewal, incumbent MP.

Kamloops—Thompson—Cariboo

Cathy McLeod

Kelowna—Lake Country

Ron Cannan, incumbent MP.

Kootenay—Columbia

Jim Abbott, incumbent MP.

Langley

Mark Warawa, incumbent MP since 2004 and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of the Environment.

Nanaimo—Alberni

James Lunney

Nanaimo—Cowichan

Reed Elley

Newton—North Delta

Sandeep Pandher

New Westminster—Coquitlam

Yonah Martin

North Vancouver

Andrew Saxton

Okanagan—Coquihalla

Stockwell Day, incumbent MP and Minister for Public Safety.

Okanagan—Shuswap

Colin Mayes, incumbent MP.

Pitt Meadows—Maple Ridge—Mission

Randy Kamp, incumbent MP.

Port Moody—Westwood—Port Coquitlam

James Moore, incumbent MP.

Prince George—Peace River

Jay Hill, incumbent MP.

Richmond

Alice Wong

Saanich—Gulf Islands

Gary Lunn, incumbent MP and Minister of Natural Resources.

Skeena—Bulkley Valley

Sharon Smith

South Surrey—White Rock—Cloverdale

Russ Hiebert, incumbent MP.

Surrey North

Dona Cadman

Vancouver Centre

Lorne Mayencourt

Vancouver East

Ryan Warawa

Vancouver Island North

John Duncan

Vancouver Kingsway

Salomon Rayek

Vancouver Quadra

Deborah Meredith

Vancouver South

Wai Young

Victoria

Jack McClintock

West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country

John Weston

Yukon - 1 seat

Yukon

Darrell Pasloski

Northwest Territories - 1 seat

Western Arctic

Brendan Bell

Nunavut - 1 seat

Nunavut

Leona Aglukkaq, MLA for Nattilik and Health Minister for the Government of Nunavut

See also

  • Results of the Canadian federal election, 2008
  • Results by riding for the Canadian federal election, 2008

References

  1. ^ Elections Canada
  2. ^ Canada Votes 2008: Bas-Richelieu—Nicolet—Bécancour, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, accessed 9 August 2009.
  3. ^ Canada Votes 2008: Brome—Missisquoi, Candidate Profiles, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, accessed 22 November 2010. One of Quinlan's degrees is a Bachelor of Commerce from Concordia University. See Shawn Berry, "Canadian Alliance fields candidate in Sherbrooke," Sherbrooke Record, 25 October 2000, p. 5.
  4. ^ Shawn Berry, "Canadian Alliance fields candidate in Sherbrooke," Sherbrooke Record, 25 October 2000, p. 5.
  5. ^ Mark Quinlan, "Federalists should stand by Charest," Montreal Gazette, 11 April 2000, B2.
  6. ^ Graham Fraser, "Race for the right," Toronto Star, 13 June 2000, p. 1.
  7. ^ Sheldon Alberts, "Day aides threaten to sue Strahl," National Post, 17 May 2001, A1; Brian Laghi, "Harper fires four former Day staff," Globe and Mail, 23 March 2002, A8.
  8. ^ Tu Thanh Ha, "Eastern Townships offer Tories hope," Globe and Mail, 18 June 2004, A9.
  9. ^ Randy Boswell, "U.S. murder case to test Tories on extradition," National Post, 28 June 2006, A6.
  10. ^ "Media Advisory - President of the Treasury Board in Greater Toronto Area" [press release], Canada NewsWire, 16 January 2007, 8:24.
  11. ^ "Minister of Finance to Address the Conseil du patronat du Québec and to Visit Varennes, Quebec" [press release], Canada NewsWire, 27 March 2007, 15:16.
  12. ^ Quinlan defeated Perle Bouchard for the nomination. See "Tory time in Brome-Missisquoi," Sherbrooke Record, 18 March 2008, p. 5.
  13. ^ Sarah Rogers, "Quinlan promises anglo attention; B-M Tory," Sherbrooke Record, 9 April 2008, p. 4.
  14. ^ 2006 Election: Riding-by-riding: Parm Gill, CTV, online edition, accessed 22 May 2009.
  15. ^ "About Parm", Parminder Gill [official website, accessed 22 May 2009.
  16. ^ Don Martin, "Kenney loves spotlight", Windsor Star, 1 April 2009, A6.
  17. ^ Daniel Dale, "Brampton constituents won't judge their MP yet", Toronto Star, 9 May 2009, A19.
  18. ^ "Port CEO rips Martin for bridge comments" The Globe and Mail, Online Edition. 28 November 2003.
  19. ^ "Covering the waterfront; Toronto's first female harbourmaster takes helm of complex port job" Toronto Star, page B1. 5 April 2001.
  20. ^ Harold Carmichael, "Labelle wants to carry Tory banner", Sudbury Star, 20 July 2007, A4; "Tories prepare for nomination meeting", Sudbury Star, 2 November 2007, A4; Rachel Punch, "Parties ready for fall vote", Sudbury Star, 29 August 2008, A1.
  21. ^ Lara Bradley, "An unlikely Tory among Liberals", Sudbury Star, 4 October 2008, A3.
  22. ^ "Labelle retracts radio interview statements", Sudbury Star, 22 September 2008, A3; "Voters still wary of Harper" [editorial], Sudbury Star, 27 September 2008, A10.
  23. ^ Angela Scappatura, "'Gerry Labelle supports arts'", Sudbury Star, 11 October 2008, A3.
  24. ^ "Thibeault in Sudbury" [editorial], Sudbury Star, 11 October 2008, A10.
  25. ^ Lara Bradley, "Labelle jubilant in defeat", Sudbury Star, 15 October 2008, A3.

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