Daniel Clark is a Canadian politician and actor who has pursued a successful career in pharmaceuticals, working for both Pharmacia and Hoffmann-La Roche.
She campaigned on increasing health and defence spending, eliminating the capital gains tax and toughening the Young Offenders Act.
[5] Brulotte (born in Kingston, Ontario) was an officer in the Canadian military, serving as a peacekeeper and an aide-de-camp for Governor General Ray Hnatyshyn.
He received the PC nomination in May 2000 (Ottawa Citizen, 24 October 2000), and campaigned on a platform of expanding Kanata's high-tech services to rural parts of the riding.
In 2001, he was part of a six-member panel encouraging unity between the Canadian Alliance and Progressive Conservatives (National Post, 15 May 2001).
Woollcombe was raised in the Sandy Hill and New Edinburgh areas of Ottawa, and attended Ashbury College (founded by his grandfather).
He holds a Master of Arts degree,[3] taught English and Geography in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India from 1961 to 1963,[4] and was a Canadian diplomat from 1965 to 1995 (Ottawa Citizen, 18 November 2000).
[6] Darrin Langen is a graduate of the Royal Military College of Canada and served with Special Services at CFB Petawawa from 1979 to 1988.
Thirty-eight years old in 2000, Langen was nominated as his party's candidate when the anticipated nominee unexpectedly dropped out of the contest.
During the 2000 election, he called for increased spending in health and education as well as tax cuts and the elimination of the Canadian gun registry.
McGregor did not express any bitterness toward Marleau after the campaign, but lamented that many Progressive Conservative supporters had crossed over to the more right-wing Canadian Alliance.
[17] Chopowick was 37 years old at the time of the election, and worked as a research manager at Toronto Dominion Evergreen (Reuters News, 6 April 2000).
[18] He had previously written a series of op-ed letters to Toronto-area newspapers, criticizing both the Liberal and Reform parties.
Murray owned a mineral exploration company in Flin Flon at the time of the election (Broadcast News, 1 November 2000).
In 1984, McDonald unsuccessfully challenged Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Charlie Mayer for the party's nomination in Portage—Neepawa.
He focused on bilingualism as his primary issue, and accused the federal party of allowing the Manitoba Progressive Conservatives to be portrayed as bigots and racists for opposing the provincial entrenchment of French-language rights (The Globe and Mail, 28 June 1984).
Dyck was a veteran organizer for the Progressive Conservatives, and had previously been president of the Provencher riding association (WFP, 28 November 1996).
He was 35 years old at the time of the 2002 by-election, and worked as a project manager with the Manitoba Telephone System (Winnipeg Free Press, 5 April 2002).
He was forced to withdraw shortly before election day for health reasons, although his name remained on the ballot (Canadian Press, 14 November 2000, 21:36 report).
In 2002, he criticized party leader Stuart Murray for hiring discredited strategist Taras Sokolyk as an adviser (Broadcast News, 16 December 2002).
[20] He won the Progressive Conservative nomination by acclamation,[21] and received 2,133 votes (6.51%) in the general election for a fourth-place finish against New Democratic Party incumbent Bill Blaikie.