Ray Martin (politician)

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Ray Martin is a politician in Alberta, Canada and former member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.

Martin attended the University of Alberta in Edmonton. He was a member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity. He later attended the University of Calgary in order to earn his Master's degree.

Martin, a teacher by profession, was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the 1982 provincial election as one member of a two-member Alberta New Democratic Party caucus.

He became leader of the Alberta New Democratic Party in 1984, succeeding Grant Notley who had died in a plane crash. Martin led the party to a highwater mark winning 16 seats in the 1986 provincial election, making him leader of the opposition in the legislature. The NDP matched this performance in the 1989 election. In 1993, the party was wiped out, and Martin was defeated in his riding, Edmonton Norwood, by Liberal Andrew Beniuk. He quit the party's leadership in 1994.

Martin was defeated when he later ran as an NDP candidate in the 1997 and 2000 federal elections in the Edmonton North and Edmonton Centre-East ridings.

From 2001 to 2004, Martin was a Trustee on the Edmonton Public School Board. Martin also dabbled as a political columnist for the Edmonton Sun, and as a financial planner and consultant.

In 2003, he supported Bill Blaikie's unsuccessful campaign to become leader of the federal New Democratic Party.

Martin returned to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta as the NDP Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) for Edmonton Beverly Clareview after an absence of eleven years by winning a seat in the 2004 general election. However, he was defeated in his 2008 campaign for re-election by Progressive Conservative Tony Vandermeer.

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Legislative Assembly of Alberta
Preceded by
Catherine Chichak
MLA Edmonton Norwood
1982-1993
Succeeded by
Andrew Beniuk
Preceded by
Grant Notley
Leader of the Official Opposition in Alberta
1985-1993
Succeeded by
Laurence Decore
Preceded by
Julius Yankowsky
MLA Edmonton Beverly-Clareview
2004-2008
Succeeded by
Tony Vandermeer