John Roberts (Canadian politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Moody Roberts, PC, BA, B.Phil, D.Phil (Born November 28, 1933 in Hamilton, Ontario - Died March 30, 2007) was a Canadian politician.

Roberts was born in Hamilton, Ontario and grew up in Toronto. He was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in 1968 as a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) for the riding of York-Simcoe. He was defeated in the 1972 federal election but returned in 1974. From 1974 to 1984 (defeated in 1979 and re-elected in 1980) he was MP for the riding of St. Paul's in Toronto.

His was junior cabinet minister in his role as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Regional Economic Expansion from 1971 to 1972. In 1976, he was appointed Secretary of State of Canada in Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's cabinet. Roberts lost his seat again in the 1979 election in which the Trudeau government was defeated.

He was returned to the House yet again as a result of the 1980 election, and joined Trudeau's final cabinet, first as Minister of the Environment, Minister of State for Science and Technology and then as Minister of Employment and Immigration. As Canadian environment minister in the early 1980s he faced off with the US government over the cross-border issue of acid rain at a time when the Reagan Administration was denying its existence. Roberts led a strong public information campaign on both sides of the border that, at one point, resulted in the US justice department officially branding a National Film Board documentary Acid from Heaven as "foreign country propaganda". The campaign is credited with ultimately leading to a bilateral accord on acid rain being signed later in the decade.[1]

Roberts ran to succeed Trudeau at the 1984 Liberal leadership convention, coming in fourth behind John Turner. Turner kept Roberts in his cabinet as Minister of Employment and Immigration. Roberts and Turner's government were defeated in the 1984 election. An attempt to return to parliament in 1988, this time from Ontario riding (Pickering), was unsuccessful.

He taught Political Science at Concordia University in Montreal and Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario. He was also a visiting fellow at Oxford University in the UK.

After retiring from academic life he returned to Toronto, living near the area of Yorkville. He died of a heart attack in 2007.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ex-cabinet minister led acid rain fight (obituary: John Roberts) by Matthew Chung, Toronto Star, April 1, 2007

[edit] External links

Parliament of Canada
Preceded by
(federal riding created in 1966)
Member of Parliament for York—Simcoe
1968–1972
Succeeded by
Sinclair Stevens, PC
Preceded by
Ron Atkey, PC
Member of Parliament for St. Paul's
1974–1979
Succeeded by
Ron Atkey, PC
Preceded by
Ron Atkey, PC
Member of Parliament for St. Paul's
1980–1984
Succeeded by
Barbara McDougall, PC