Doug Young
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Meredith Douglas "Doug" Young, PC (born September 20, 1940) is a Canadian politician.
He was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in 1978 as a Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA). He was elected leader of the New Brunswick Liberal Party in 1982, but resigned within a year of his rising to that post due to a poor showing in the 1982 provincial election. When the Liberals formed a government under Frank McKenna in 1987, Young served as Minister of Fisheries.
He left provincial politics to run in the 1988 federal election for the Liberal Party of Canada, and was elected to the Canadian House of Commons as a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP).
With the election of a Liberal government in the 1993 election, the new Prime Minister, Jean Chrétien, appointed Young to the Canadian cabinet as Minister of Transport. In that position, Young eliminated the Crow Rate which regulated the cost western farmers had to pay to transport their goods via rail, and privatized the Canadian National Railway.
In January 1996, he became Minister of Employment and Immigration (subsequently retitled Minister of Human Resources Development) and Minister of Labour. In October 1996, he was appointed Minister of National Defence and Minister of Veterans Affairs.
As Defence Minister, Young generated much criticism when, in 1997, he suspended the formal inquiry into the Somalia Affair in which Canadian troops had been accused of mistreating prisoners in Somalia in 1993.
Young was an outspoken and even bombastic politician, once calling Reform Party MP Deborah Grey "a slab of bacon" in the House.
In one of the chief upsets of the 1997 election, Young was defeated in his riding by Yvon Godin of the New Democratic Party. The Liberal government's changes to Unemployment Insurance were a key factor in his defeat because of the large number of seasonal workers in Young's riding. This was also a factor in the defeat of Young's Cabinet colleague and fellow Maritimer David Dingwall.
Since his defeat, Young has worked in Ottawa as a lobbyist. Despite his Liberal affiliations, Young supported the candidacy of Tom Long to lead the right-wing Canadian Alliance in that party's leadership election in 2000.
He supported Stéphane Dion for the leadership of the Liberal Party.[1]
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26th Ministry - Government of Jean Chrétien | ||
Cabinet Posts (5) | ||
---|---|---|
Predecessor | Office | Successor |
David Collenette | Minister of National Defence (1996–1997) |
Art Eggleton |
David Collenette | Minister of Veterans Affairs (1996–1997) |
Fred Mifflin |
legislation enacted | Minister of Human Resources Development (1996) |
Pierre Pettigrew |
Lloyd Axworthy | Minister of Employment and Immigration (1996) styled as Minister of Human Resources Development |
legislation enacted |
Jean Corbeil | Minister of Transport (1993–1996) |
David Anderson |
Parliament of Canada | ||
Preceded by Roger Clinch, PC |
Member of Parliament from Acadie—Bathurst | Succeeded by Yvon Godin, NDP |