thumb
David Kilgour
, PC (born February 18, 1941 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is a former Canadian politician.
Kilgour graduated from the University of Manitoba in economics in 1962 and the University of Toronto law school in 1966. From crown attorney in northern Alberta to Canadian Cabinet minister, Kilgour ended his 27 year tenure in the Canadian House of Commons as an Independent MP. Upon retirement, he was one of the longest current serving Members of Parliament and one of the very few who had been elected as both under the Progressive Conservative and Liberal banner.
|
DAVID KILGOUR TICKETS
|
Member of Parliament
Kilgour was originally elected as a member of the
Progressive Conservative Party in 1979. However, his first attempt at election, in the
1968 federal election in the
riding of
Vancouver Centre as a Progressive Conservative was unsuccessful. He ran again as a Tory in the
1979 election in
Edmonton, and was a Member of Parliament for about 27 years. In October 1990, he, along with
Pat Nowlan of
Nova Scotia and
Alex Kindy of
Calgary, were expelled from the Tory national caucus in protest over their vote against the
Goods and Services Tax. He sat as an independent for several months before joining the Liberals.
In the Liberal government, he served as the Deputy Speaker and Chairman of Committees of the Whole of the House of Commons, Secretary of State Latin America and Africa (1997-2002), and Secretary of State, Asia-Pacific (2002-2003). In the Conservative governments of Joe Clark and Brian Mulroney he served as Parliamentary Secretary to the President of the Privy Council, the Minister for CIDA, the Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs, and the Minister of Transport.
In April 2005, he received media attention when he speculated about quitting the Liberal Party because of his disgust with the
sponsorship scandal, saying that the issue made Canada look like "a northern
banana republic". On
April 12,
2005, he announced that he was
crossing the floor to sit as an independent MP. He also cited the Canada's lack of action on the
crisis in Darfur,
Sudan, as reasons for quitting. He asserted that he has no plans to move back to the Conservatives, and stated that he had no plans to run for re-election.
From
1979 to
1988, he represented the riding of
Edmonton—Strathcona, but with shifting constituency lines moved to the
Edmonton Southeast in
1988, and then again to
Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont in
2004 which he represented until he retired from politics at the
2006 election.
Because of the unusual structure of the
38th House of Commons, in May 2005, David Kilgour's lone vote had the power to bring down or support the government. He used this influence to urge the Martin government to send peacekeepers to Darfur. He is an endorser of the
Genocide Intervention Network. Then-Prime Minister
Paul Martin agreed to send humanitarian support but in the end, no peacekeepers were sent.
[vague]
Involvement with the Falun Gong
In July 2006 with co-investigator lawyer
David Matas he released an independent report, done as volunteers, entitled "Report into Allegations of Organ Harvesting of
Falun Gong Practitioners in China."
[1] The report alleged that the Chinese authorities were executing a "large but unknown number of Falun Gong prisoners of conscience" and removing their internal organs including corneas, hearts, kidneys and livers for sale to foreign nationals in need of healthy organs for transplant.
Recognition
In May 2006, he received an honorary
Doctor of Divinity (D.D.(Hon)) degree, from
Knox College, University of Toronto.
Kilgour, a
Presbyterian was
recognized for his commitment to human rights in Canada and abroad and particularly his challenge to the international community to respond to the plight of Darfur, as well as in Burma, and Zimbabwe.
On March 31, 2006, the
Globe and Mail's
Neil Reynolds wrote a column titled "
Morality, not economics, is what matters
" basing the piece on Kilgour's continual commitment towards the issues affecting the world's poor. Kilgour is again quoted saying Canada must support military intervention in
Darfur. Reynolds concludes that "in the past 25 years, no Canadian could take this kind of moral time-test and pass with such flying colours as David Kilgour, the MP who changed parties twice but who walked away without changing principles once."
Notable
He is the brother of
Geills Turner, who is married to former Canadian
Prime Minister John Turner. Kilgour and his sister are the great nephew and niece of
John McCrae, the soldier and poet who wrote
In Flanders Fields
and also the great nephew and niece of
John Wentworth Russell who painted the portrait of Sir
Wilfrid Laurier which hangs in the House of Commons.
References
- http://www.organharvestinvestigation.net