Sarmite Bulte
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Sarmite D. "Sam" Bulte, PC, born September 27, 1953) is a Latvian-Canadian lawyer, advocate and politician. A member of the Liberal Party, she represented the Toronto riding of Parkdale-High Park in the Canadian House of Commons through three successive parliaments from June 2, 1997 to January 22, 2006 until her defeat. Bulte was the first Canadian from the Baltics to take a seat in Parliament.
Born in Hamilton, Ontario, Bulte received an Honours Bachelor of Arts from University College, University of Toronto, Specialist Certificate in English in 1975. In 1978, she received an Bachelor of Laws from the University of Windsor. In 1980 she was called to the Law Society of Upper Canada. In July 2004, she was appointed to the Privy Council.
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[edit] Political career
Bulte was considered as one of the more left-wing members of the Liberal Party of Canada on social issues. She was known in Parliament for her special report of women's entrepreneurship. She was also a member of the Prime Minister's Task Force on Youth Entrepreneurs as well as the member of the Liberal Caucus Task Force on Financial Institutions and the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration. She served as the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Canadian Heritage and Minister responsible for the Status of Women and the Minister of Industry with special emphasis on Women Entrepreneurs.
Bulte chaired the Ontario caucus, traveled extensively to advocate for Canada's seat on the UN Security Council and was frequently called upon to deal directly with foreign parliaments in her capacity as Canadian head of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association.
Since leaving politics Bulte worked as a consultant to the Ontario government on women entrepreneurship issues, and has worked in Kosovo for the National Democratic Institute as Senior Legislative Consultant to the Assembly of Kosovo. She helped Kosavar parliamentarians understand how their party caucuses could fulfill their roles as forums for debate and coordination of party strategies, advised the all-party women's caucus on how they could become a more active, better organized body wihtin the assembly, and to assist in standardizing legislative oversight and expand oversight of new committees. She sits on the Board of the Runnymede Heathcare Centre, the St. Joseph's Hospital Foundation Board, the Artscape Foundation Board, and the Toronto Museum Project.
Bulte took the position that downloading music, films, novels and other works of art without permission robbed the creators of their right to profit from their creativity. Her critics argued that protecting those rights should not result in individuals being prosecuted.
During the 2006 federal election, Bulte was criticized by law professor Michael Geist, [1] historian Jack Granatstein[2] and blogger Cory Doctorow[3] among others. The criticism centred around the perception of a conflict of interest relating to her position as "one of the leading people on copyright policy, possibly even the future Canadian heritage minister"[4] and her stance in favour of stricter digital copyright laws in the face of campaign contributions to her riding association from Canadian and American entertainment industries, artists, musicians and others with interests in copyright ownership. All of the contributions were well within the legal limits set by Elections Canada and Bulte stated the total donations by companies, trade unions and individuals with interest in stricter digital domain copyright rules represented approximately 10% of donations to her riding association. Adding to the controversy, in Jan 2006 a $250-a-plate fund raiser was hosted for her by lobbyists from the film, music and video game industries [5].
In the January 23, 2006 election, she was defeated by New Democratic Party candidate Peggy Nash.
[edit] Attempted return
- See also Election to replace John Godfrey
In December 2007, Bulte announced her intention to seek the federal Liberal nomination of Don Valley West to replace John Godfrey who had earlier announced that he would be resigning his seat in the House of Commons in July in order to accept a position as headmaster of Toronto French School.[6] Constitutional lawyer Deborah Coyne also sought the nomination[7] along with United Church Minister Rob Oliphant, local businessman Mohammad Ijaz, former NDP candidate Ian Cameron, and Jonathan Mousley, a former legislative assistant to former Liberal Cabinet minister David Collenette.[8] The March 2, 2008 nomination meeting was won by Oliphant on the fourth round of voting.[9]
[edit] Family
She is married with three children, David, Lara and Alex.
[edit] References
- ^ Michael Geist report about her fundraisers with the entertainment industry
- ^ Historian calls Liberal MP's fundraiser a worry, CTV.ca, Jan 5, 2006
- ^ Bulte (Canadian MP) gets big entertainment bucks, promises new copyrights
- ^ Fundraiser a rare glimpse into party power politics, Toronto Star by Jim Rankin, January 6, 2006
- ^ [1]
- ^ "Former MP seeks Liberal nomination in riding being vacated by Godfrey: Bulte first to enter race in Don Valley West", by Susan Delacourt, Toronto Star, January 7, 2008
- ^ "Orchard knew Liberals wanted an aboriginal woman in Sask. byelection: Goodale", Canadian Press, June 9, 2008
- ^ "Don Valley West Liberal nomination getting crowded, Bulte and Mousley interested", Hill Times, January 14, 2008
- ^ Queen, Lisa, "Oliphant wins tough federal Liberal race", The (East York-Rivedale) Mirror, March 3, 2008, accessed March 4, 2008
[edit] External links
- Official site, accessed through the internet archive
- How'd They Vote?: Sarmite Bulte's voting history and quotes
- Boing Boing: How Hollywood's MP in Canada financed her campaign
- Parkdale--High Park section of the Digital Copyright Canada forum.
- Make Internet an election issue, letter to the editor in the Toronto Star by Sarmite Bulte, December 14, 2005
Parliament of Canada | ||
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Preceded by Jesse Flis, Liberal |
Member of Parliament for Parkdale—High Park 1997-2006 |
Succeeded by Peggy Nash, NDP |