John Alexander Frances MacDougall
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- For the 1950s MP from British Columbia, see John Lorne MacDougall.
John Alexander Frances MacDougall (born April 20, 1947 in Port Hood, Nova Scotia) is a former Canadian politician. He represented the riding of Timiskaming in the Canadian House of Commons from 1982 to 1993, as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party.
He first entered Parliament in 1982, in a byelection following the death of the riding's prior MP, Bruce Lonsdale.
On April 23, 1993, MacDougall became the centre of controversy when he made comments in the House of Commons attacking Sunera Thobani, the new head of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women: Earlier today I learned that [Thobani] first is not a Canadian, and second does not have a work permit for this country. Does the Deputy Prime Minister believe that the taxpayers of Canada should be funding such an organization with an illegal immigrant as its head? Thobani, in fact, had just received her landed immigrant status, and MacDougall's comments were widely criticized as racist.
MacDougall did not run for reelection in the 1993 election.
Preceded by Bruce Lonsdale |
Member of Parliament for Timiskaming 1982-1993 |
Succeeded by Benoît Serré |