- Audrey McLaughlin
Infobox CanadianMP | name= Hon. Audrey Marlene McLaughlin
| cabinet=
term_start=By-election, July 20, 1987
term_end=1997 election
predecessor=Erik Nielsen
successor=Louise Hardy
birth_date=birth date and age |1936|11|07
birth_place=Dutton, Ontario
death_date=
death_place=
profession=Author, business consultant, researcher, social worker, teacher
party=NDP
party colour=NDP
residence=
riding=Yukon
portfolio=
footnotes=
term_start2=
term_end2=
predecessor2=
successor2=
spouse= Don McLaughlin (1954-1972, div.)
website=CanParlbio|ID=ddd3eb58-0d95-4736-a906-21e84c0692f6| Audrey McLaughlin, PC, OC (bornNovember 7 1936 ) was leader ofCanada 'sNew Democratic Party from 1989 to 1995. She was the first female leader of a political party with representation in the Canadian House of Commons, as well as the first (and, to date, only) federal political party leader to represent an electoral district in a Canadian territory.Born as Audrey Marlene Brown in
Dutton, Ontario , she worked as a social worker inToronto, Ontario and inGhana . In 1955, she graduated from theUniversity of Guelph with a Diploma in Home Science from the MacDonald Institute. In 1979, McLaughlin moved to theYukon and set up a consultancy business. In 1987, she ran in a by-election and won, the first federal NDP candidate to win in Yukon. In 1988, she was appointed caucus chair, and in 1989, she won the NDP leadership convention, replacing the retiringEd Broadbent .McLaughlin had taken over the NDP at its height. However, the party began a steady decline in the polls for several reasons. One was the NDP's provincial affiliates in British Columbia and Ontario, whose unpopularity reflected badly on the federal party. The rise of the Reform Party also sapped much NDP support in Western Canada. In the 1993 election, the NDP lost badly, and was left with only nine seats in Parliament. McLaughlin won her seat in the Yukon, but resigned as leader in 1995, and was succeeded by
Alexa McDonough . McLaughlin did not run for re-election in the 1997 election.In 1991, she was sworn in as a member of the
Queen's Privy Council for Canada so that she could access classified documents during theGulf War . In August 2003 she was made an Officer of theOrder of Canada .She published an autobiography, "A Woman's Place: My Life and Politics", in 1992.
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