Jean-Luc Pépin
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Jean-Luc Pépin, PC, CC (November 1, 1924 - September 30, 1995) was a Canadian academic, politician and Cabinet minister.
Pepin was a political science professor at the University of Ottawa when he was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the 1963 election as a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) from Quebec.
From 1965 to 1972, he served in the cabinets of Prime Ministers Lester Pearson and Pierre Trudeau in various capacities, including Minister of Mines and Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce overseeing the decision to have Canada adopt the metric system.
He lost his seat in the 1972 election, and retired from public life until 1975 when Trudeau appointed him to chair the Anti-Inflation Board.
In 1977, he and former Premier of Ontario John Robarts were appointed to head the "Task Force on Canadian Unity". This task force was created by the federal government as a response to the election of the Parti Québécois, which seeks political independence for Quebec in the 1976 provincial election.
The task force issued a report in 1979 that recommended against entrenching language rights in the Canadian Constitution, and for the reduction of federal powers in all areas but economic management. The Task Force also recommended the replacement of the Canadian Senate with a "Council of the Federation" whose members would be appointed by provincial governments, and to grant the provinces a say in appointments to the Supreme Court of Canada. Most of these recommendations were rejected by the federal government, and did not make their way into the new Constitution that was enacted in 1982.
After a seven year absence, Pepin returned to the House of Commons in the 1979 election. When the Liberals returned to power after the 1980 election, he became Minister of Transport until 1983, and a Minister of State to the Department of External Affairs and Minister responsible for La Francophonie.
Following heart surgery, he retired from politics in 1984, and returned to academia as a fellow at the University of Ottawa's Institute on Public Policy.
In 1977, he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada.
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Preceded by Don Mazankowski |
Minister of Transport 1980 - 1983 |
Succeeded by Lloyd Axworthy |
Preceded by Jean Pigott, PC |
Member of Parliament for Ottawa—Carleton 1979–1984 |
Succeeded by Barry Turner, PC |
Categories: 1924 births | 1995 deaths | Canadian legal academics | Canadian Ministers of Transport | Canadian political scientists | Liberal Party of Canada MPs | Members of the 19th Ministry in Canada | Members of the 20th Ministry in Canada | Members of the 22nd Ministry in Canada | Members of the Canadian House of Commons from Ontario | Companions of the Order of Canada | Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada | People from Ottawa