Elizabeth Shaughnessy Cohen , nÃÆ' à © e Murray (February 11, 1948 - December 9, 1998) is a Canadian politician representing the Windsor - St. Clair for the Canadian Liberal Party from 1993 until his death in 1998.
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She was born in London, Ontario, and grew up in Thamesville. He studied English literature and sociology at Windsor University, and taught at St. Clair College before returning to law school. He was married to Jerry Cohen, a professor of psychology, in 1971. He originally intended to defend his own family name, but chose to take his husband's name when he realized it would make him Irish and Jewish.
He was summoned to the Bar of Ontario in 1979, and worked as a lawyer until his election to Parliament.
Maps Shaughnessy Cohen
Political career
Cohen stands as a Liberal candidate in Windsor - St. Clair in the 1988 election, but lost to New Democratic Party petahana Howard McCurdy. However, in the 1993 election, Cohen beat McCurdy for a seat. After the election, she briefly became the subject of controversy when she and her husband were sued for $ 200,000 in unpaid debts, but Cohen blamed the situation on the cost of conducting a political campaign and the controversy soon subsided after he approved a debt consolidation plan.
His first political action after being sworn in as a Member of Parliament was a letter requesting that the federal government building in Windsor be named after former MP Paul Martin, Sr., a request received by the government. After first sitting in the new parliament in January 1994, Cohen was the first newly elected parliamentarian to be the target of a critical profile at Frank , although both Cohen and Windsor Star criticized the profile's accuracy.
In February 1994, Cohen was appointed the Standing Committee of the Human Resources and Development Commissioner. In June, he was one of several Liberal MPs, with Jean Augustine, Barry Campbell, Bill Graham, and Hedy Fry, who personally intervened with Ontario Liberal Party leader Lyn McLeod to encourage him not to withdraw the party's support from the Law. Law of the Amendment of the Equality Statute (Bill 167). In August, he was appointed chairman along with Herb Gray of the parliamentary subcommittee to investigate allegations against the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, including the role of Grant Bristow as an informant.
On the last day of the 1995 provincial election campaign of Ontario, Cohen was one of several members of parliament, along with Jane Stewart, Paddy Torsney, BenoÃÆ'ît Serrà © à © and Stan Dromisky, who made a speech at the Federal House of Commons campaigning on behalf of McLeod's Ontario Party Liberal and against the Conservative Ontario Progressive Party of Mike Harris.
In September 1995, he was one of only a few MPs to vote in favor of the private member movement RÃÆ' à © al MÃÆ' à © nard who asked the government to recognize same-sex marriage.
In January 1996, he traveled to the Middle East as an election monitor for the election of the Palestinian Authority. In March, he was appointed and appointed as chairman of the Standing Committee of the House of Representatives. In this capacity, he undertook a review of the federal Initiative Act, which led to reforms announced by Justice Minister Anne McLellan in 1998.
He was re-elected in the 1997 election with a smaller margin, due to a significant revival in support for the New Democratic Party. Her NDP challenger is Joe Comartin. In his second term, he identified one of his primary goals as advocacy for cross-country environmental projects to clean up pollution on the Detroit River.
On December 9, 1998, he collapsed in the House of Commons, just seconds after he stood up to take care of the House. He suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and was declared dead shortly thereafter. He is the fifth member of parliament in the history of Canada who died at Parliament Hill, and the first suffered a fatal health incident in the Chamber of Deputies rather than in his office or in the wider Parliament Hill field.
At Home the next day, MPs from all sides spoke in honor of Cohen. Reform Member of Parliament Randy White praised his personality as "a seemingly impossible combination of strong alignments and open friendships," while New Democratic Party leader Alexa McDonough rewarded Cohen's enthusiastic belief in "the pursuit of justice for their rights that are not entirely respected. "The historian Charlotte Gray, a personal friend of Cohen, reveals that Cohen once filled a glass on House of Commons table Paul Martin with a gin just before the budget speech, while Liberal Party strategist Jerry Yanover described him as" a person in advance, in your Face, The ancient Liberals, the kind who have principles and do not compromise with them. "After the speech, MPs unanimously agreed to immediately postpone the House for the Christmas holidays, a few days earlier than planned.
After his death, Jerry, his widower, ran for Liberal nominations in an intermission, but lost to city council Rick Limoges. Limoges won an intermission, beating Comartin, though Comartin beat Limoges in the 2000 election.
Legacy
In 2000, the Writers' Trust of Canada instituted literary awards, Shaughnessy Cohen Award for Political Writing, in his memory. Journalist Susan Delacourt published a biography of Cohen, Shaughnessy: The Passionate Politics of Shaughnessy Cohen , the same year.
Selection record
References
External links
- Shaughnessy Cohen - Canadian Parliamentary biography
Source of the article : Wikipedia