Murray Elston
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Murray John Elston (born October 8, 1949 in Wingham, Ontario) is an executive and former Canadian politician. He was a Liberal member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1981 to 1994, and was a prominent cabinet minister in the government of David Peterson. He briefly served as interim leader of the Liberal Party in 1991.
Elston was educated at the University of Western Ontario, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree and a law degree. Before entering political life, he practiced law with the firm of Crawford, Mill Davies & Elston.
Elston was first elected to the Ontario legislature in the 1981 provincial election, defeating Progressive Conservative Gary Harron by 224 votes in the rural, southwestern constituency of Huron—Bruce. The Progressive Conservatives won a majority government under Bill Davis in this election, and Elston sat on the opposition benches for the next four years.
The Liberals under Peterson formed a minority government following the 1985 election, and Elston was appointed to the high-profile position of Minister of Health. In this role, he was at the centre of the government's fight against extra-billing by doctors, an issue the government won after withstanding the province's first doctors' strike. Elston also announced subsidies for residents of Northern Ontario who needed to travel south for medical care.
The Liberals were re-elected with a landslide majority in the 1987 provincial election, and Elston was returned by a significant majority in the redistributed riding of Bruce. In the cabinet shuffle that followed on September 29, 1987, Elston was appointed Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet. He was also appointed Minister of Financial Institutions on August 16, 1988.
In the 1990 Ontario election, the Liberals were unexpectedly defeated by the New Democratic Party under Bob Rae. Many high-profile Liberals lost their seats, though Elston was returned in Bruce by a comfortable if reduced margin. Peterson, who had lost his own seat on election night, resigned immediately as party leader.
The Liberals initially chose Robert Nixon as their interim leader, but he resigned on July 31, 1991 to accept a federal appointment. Elston was then chosen as interim leader in Nixon's place, though his time in this position was brief. He declared himself a candidate in the race to become the party's permanent leader, and accordingly resigned as interim leader on November 19, 1991. Jim Bradley took his place until the leadership convention.
Elston quickly became the favourite to win the 1992 Liberal leadership convention, gaining endorsements from such high-profile figures as Peterson and Sheila Copps. He placed first on the convention's first two ballots, but was overtaken on the third by Lyn McLeod, and lost to McLeod on the fifth and final ballot by only nine votes. (Interestingly, the number of spoiled ballots from supporters of third-place candidate Greg Sorbara was greater than McLeod's margin of victory). Some political observers speculated that Elston appeared too much like a holdover from the Peterson era, as a time when the Liberal Party wanted to present a new image to voters.
Elston remained in the legislature for two more years, and served as Opposition House Leader before resigning as an MPP on October 31, 1994 to enter the private sector. He was touted as McLeod's likely replacement when she resigned as Liberal leader following a poor performance in the 1995 provincial election but he declined to enter the race preferring to remain out of politics. In 1996, he was the most prominent supporter of Dalton McGuinty's ultimately successful bid to win the party's leadership.
From November 1994 until 1997, Murray Elston was president of the Ontario Interlink Industrial Park. From January to October 1998, he worked for Engergreen Solutions Group. In November 1998, Elston was appointed president of Canada's Research-Based Pharmaceutical Companies (Rx&D), a lobby group representing 60 pharmaceutical companies in Canada. Since January 5, 2004, he has served as president and CEO of the Canadian Nuclear Association. He has not sought a return to politics since 1994.
Preceded by: Robert Nixon |
Ontario Liberal leaders 1991 |
Succeeded by: Jim Bradley |
Preceded by: Robert Nixon |
Leader of the Opposition in the Ontario Legislature 1991 |
Succeeded by: Jim Bradley |
Preceded by: |
Liberal MPP Huron-Bruce (1981-1994) |
Succeeded by: |
Leaders of the Ontario Liberal Party | |||
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Brown | McKellar | Blake | Mowat | Hardy | Ross | Graham | MacKay | Rowell | Proudfoot | Dewart | Hay | Sinclair | Hepburn | Conant | H. Nixon | Hepburn | Oliver | Thomson | Oliver | Wintermeyer | Thompson | R. Nixon | Smith | Peterson | R. Nixon | Elston | Bradley | McLeod | McGuinty |