Dianne Haskett
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Dianne Louise Haskett (born March 4, 1955) was mayor of London, Ontario, Canada, from 1994 to 2000. The focus of Mayor Haskett's two (three-year) mayoral terms was downtown revitalization, heritage preservation, economic development, neighbourhood protection, protecting the environment, international relations, trade corridors' infrastructure, family values, and anti-poverty initiatives.
From 1991-1994, Haskett was a member of London's elected board of control on city council.
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[edit] Pioneer roots in London
Haskett was born and raised in London's Kensal Park district north of Springbank Drive, a descendant of the pioneer Haskett family, one of the early Irish Protestant settlers in London and area, dating back to 1818. For a period of time she was a member of the Metropolitan United Church in downtown London. [1]
[edit] Education
Haskett earned her B.A. from the University of Waterloo in 1974, her LL.B. from the University of Western Ontario in 1977, and her LL.M. from the London School of Economics in 1979. She has also studied law at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and the Institute for Advanced Legal Studies at Cambridge University, England.
She later founded her own law firm, Haskett Menear & Associates, which grew to include six lawyers.
[edit] Elected mayor in 1994
Once Haskett was elected mayor in November of 1994, beating Deputy-Mayor Jack Burghardt by slightly more than 1,000 votes, she stepped aside from her duties as a lawyer and as a partner in her law firm.
[edit] Proclamation controversy
A devout Christian (though ironically a member of a church which supports same-sex marriage), in 1995 she refused to issue a Gay Pride Proclamation on the basis that she'd previously formulated a policy for proclamations which excluded controversial, sexuality-related events such as Gay Pride. London City Council also declined to issue the Gay Pride Proclamation by a vote of 14-5.
Richard Hudler, president of the Homophile Association of London, Ontario (HALO), filed an official complaint with the Ontario Human Rights Commission in 1995, a tribunal of which ultimately determined in 1997 after a three-day public hearing that the City of London and Mayor Haskett had discriminated against HALO in the provision of a municipal service. Both the City of London and Haskett were fined $5,000.
Haskett placed a paid advertisement in The London Free Press on October 22, 1997, in which she stated that she believed the human rights case was unfairly decided and wrong in fact and law, and that the Tribunal's decision undermined the freedoms guaranteed in the Canadian Constitution, notably freedom of expression and freedom of religion.
She withdrew from her duties as mayor for three weeks (without pay) by staying in her Port Stanley, Ontario, townhouse and did not campaign during the last three weeks of the 1997 election, although she was re-elected to a second term as mayor by a 2-1 landslide over Deputy-Mayor Grant Hopcroft. Haskett used no campaign signs during the 1997 civic election, instead using green-and-gold ribbons.
In 1996, Haskett participated in an evangelical Christian rally in London called the "March of Jesus". One of the speakers was Rev. Miguel Sanchez of the London Gospel Temple, who prayed for deliverance "from the darkness and deception of the spirit of Islam". Haskett bowed her heard during the prayer, and later said, "From what I know of him, I believed Rev. Sanchez and all other participants have a great love for all people".[1] She later described Sanchez's comments as unfortunate. Haskett's role in this event was strongly criticized by members of London's Muslim community.[2]
[edit] Moves to Washington, D.C.
After Haskett's second, three-year term as mayor ended in December of 2000 (her deputy mayor and protégé Anne Marie DeCicco succeeded her as mayor in December of 2000), she, her husband and daughter moved to Fairfax, Virginia, working with two D.C. area law firms in planning and implementing strategic business development and providing assistance in their immigration and estate planning work.
Haskett completed her second Master's Law Degree in the Spring of 2005 from The George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C.. She also passed the Washington D.C. Bar exam and was sworn in as an attorney and member of the DC Bar in December, 2005.
Haskett has also been involved in a number of other projects in the Washington, D.C. area, including speechwriting, research and marketing and acting in an advisory capacity in Senate and Congressional campaigns. She worked as a communications adviser and researcher for Republican Senator Elizabeth Dole.[3] She is a member of the Board of Trustees for the International Center for Religion and Diplomacy in Washington, D.C. and of Trinity Christian School of Fairfax, Virginia.
[edit] Loses in 2006 federal by-election
On October 17, 2006, 1290-CJBK-AM, a London, Ontario radio station, and the A-Channel reported that Dianne Haskett had returned to London to seek the Conservative Party of Canada nomination in the London North Centre federal riding recently vacated by former Liberal MP Joe Fontana, who was a candidate for mayor of London in civic election 2006. This information was confirmed by Haskett on October 18, 2006.
On October 24, Haskett defeated Tom Weihmayr for the Conservative nomination in the federal riding of London North-Centre. Haskett was widely considered to be the choice of the party hierarchy. The local riding association was ordered to hold the nomination meeting on October 24, 2006, a decision Haskett was informed of before the riding association was.[4]
Key members of Haskett's campaign team were campaign manager Ryan Sparrow (previously the communications director for Environment Minister Rona Ambrose[5]), former law firm partner Michael Menear, former member of London city council Ted Wernham, London businessperson Randy Collins, and Dale Mackness.
Voting day for the federal by-election was November 27, 2006. With 253 of 253 polls reporting, the official by-election results from Elections Canada are as follows:
- 38,123 of 89,139 registered electors voted (42.8 per-cent turnout)
By-election, November 27, 2006 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
Liberal | Glen Pearson | 13,287 | 34.85% | -5.27% | |
Green | Elizabeth May | 9,864 | 25.87% | +20.38% | |
Conservative | Dianne Haskett | 9,309 | 24.42% | -5.48% | |
New Democrat | Megan Walker | 5,388 | 14.13% | -9.62% | |
Progressive Canadian | Steven Hunter | 145 | 0.38% | -0.09% | |
Independent | Robert Ede | 77 | 0.20% | - | |
Canadian Action | Will Arlow | 53 | 0.14% | - | |
Total | 38,123 | 100.00% |
See also List of mayors of London, Ontario
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ T. Sher Singh, "Let's minimize our bigotry and maximize our humanity" [opinion piece], Toronto Star, 1 July 1996, A13.
- ^ Chip Martin, "Troops marshalling", London Free Press, 19 October 2006, accessed 22 October 2006.
- ^ Gloria Galloway, "Controversial ex-mayor seeking Tory nomination", Globe and Mail, 19 October 2006, A6.
- ^ Chip Martin, "Byelection Race Taking Shape". London Free Press, 24 October 2006.
- ^ Gloria Galloway, "Opponent says PM is muzzling by-election candidate, The Globe & Mail, 11 November 2006.
[edit] External link
Categories: 1955 births | Candidates for the Canadian House of Commons | Mayors of London, Ontario | University of Western Ontario alumni | George Washington University alumni | Canadian lawyers | Alumni of the London School of Economics | University of Waterloo alumni | Living people | London, Ontario | People from Middlesex County, Ontario