Family Coalition Party candidates, 1995 Ontario provincial election

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The Family Coalition Party ran a number of candidates in the 1995 provincial election, all of whom were defeated. Information about these candidates may be found here.

Contents

[edit] Paul Vandervet (Brantford)

Vandervet is a lawyer, and has been active for several years in Canadian social and religious debates. In 1984, he criticized Anglican Archbishop Lewis Gainsworthy for speaking against funding for Ontario's Catholic school system, as well as for opposing Roman Catholic teaching on birth control and abortion (Globe and Mail, 4 July 1984). Vandervet described himself as an Anglican at the time, but later identified as a Catholic.[1]

He was identified as president of the anti-abortion group Brant Right To Life in the 1980s and 1990s (Globe and Mail, 20 May 1985), and tried to dissuade Marie Osmond from performing at a benefit concert for the Brantford General Hospital in 1992 on the grounds that the hospital performed abortions (Hamilton Spectator, 4 September 1992). In 1999, he represented anti-abortion protesters Linda Gibbons, Ken Campbell and Anneliese Steden at their trial for obstructing a peace officer.[2] He subsequently participated in an anti-abortion protest in Mexico City in 2000, following efforts by the city government to liberalize its abortion laws (Edmonton Journal, 19 August 2000).

Vandervet received 762 votes (2.27%) in 1995, finishing fourth against Progressive Conservative candidate Ron Johnson.

[edit] Tom Wigglesworth (Hamilton Centre)

Wigglesworth trained as a millwright, and was studying automated engineering at Mohawk College at the time of the election. He was thirty-three years old (Hamilton Spectator, 27 May 1995). He argued that the province should make abortion more difficult to access, and called for the elimination of the Ontario Human Rights Commission (Hamilton Spectator, 19 May 1995). He received 376 votes (1.73%), finishing fourth against New Democratic Party incumbent David Christopherson.

Shortly after the election, he wrote against the concept of "sexual orientation" and claimed that homosexuals were undermining the fabric of society (Spectator, 28 July 1995). He campaigned for a seat on Hamilton's separate school board in 2003, and was defeated in Ward 8.

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
1995 provincial Hamilton Centre FCP 376 1.73 4/5 David Christopherson, New Democratic Party
2003 municipal Separate School trustee, Hamilton Ward 8 n.a. 1,605 30.99 2/2 Sergio Manchia

[edit] Jon Siemens (St. Catharines)

No information. Siemens received 245 votes (0.83%), finishing fourth against Liberal incumbent Jim Bradley.

[edit] Bert Pynenburg (St. Catharines—Brock)

Pynenburg works for Business Network International in Niagara-on-the-Lake.[3] He is a Catholic, and a member of the Diocese of St. Catharines Holy Name Society.[4]

He first campaigned for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1990 provincial election, and received 1,331 votes (4.46%) to finish fifth in St. Catharines against Liberal incumbent Jim Bradley. His vote total fell to 598 in the 1995 election, and he finished fourth against Tom Froese of the Progressive Conservative Party.

[edit] Donna Halliday (Windsor—Walkerville)

Halliday was 32 years old at the time of the election. She had four children, and described herself as a full-time mother. Previously, she was a supply teacher in Windsor's separate school board. Halliday claimed that her main purpose in campaigning was to support tax benefits for parents sending their children to independent schools. She also favoured government subsidies for stay-at-home parents raising children, and endorsed "workfare" for those receiving mother's allowance (Windsor Star, 3 June 1995).

Halliday received 957 votes (3.84%), finishing fourth against Liberal candidate Dwight Duncan.