Michael Forrestall

John Michael William Curphey Forrestall (September 23, 1932 – June 8, 2006) was a Canadian Senator and Member of Parliament.

A Nova Scotia journalist and businessman, Forrestall was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the 1965 federal election as the Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Halifax, Nova Scotia. He was elected the MP for Dartmouth—Halifax East in the 1968 election, and remained in the House for a total of twenty-three years.

During the Brian Mulroney government, Forrestall served as a parliamentary secretary to a succession of ministers until he was defeated in what was by then the riding of Dartmouth in the 1988 federal election Many Conservative MPs in the Maritime provinces were defeated because of the unpopularity of the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement in Atlantic Canada. In November 1990, Prime Minister Mulroney appointed Forrestall to the Canadian Senate, where he sat as a Progressive Conservative until February 2004, when he and most of the Tory caucus joined the new Conservative Party of Canada. Forrestall was active on a number of causes, including benefits for Canadian Merchant Navy veterans and he protection of lighthouses. In 2000, he introduced a Private Members Bill in the Senate Heritage Lighthouse Protection Act, a bill which was also supported by Senator Pat Carney who championed it after Forrestall's death and which is close to passing in the House of Commons in the fall of 2007.[1] Michael Forrestall's brother is the renowned Canadian realist painter, Tom Forrestall.

Forrestall died on June 8, 2006;[2] he had been admitted to a Halifax-area hospital with serious breathing problems on June 3.[3]

References

  1. ^ 'Lighthouse Bill Protecting Our Lighthouses - The Icons of Canada's Maritime Heritage' Canadian Heritage Foundation Featured Heritage Buildings by Douglas Franklin http://www.heritagecanada.org/eng/featured/current.html
  2. ^ Michael Forrestall - Parliament of Canada biography
  3. ^ "Senator in hospital". Montreal Gazette. http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=3b7bd40e-9d7a-4e7d-b263-1cd164a1b0b8. Retrieved 2006-06-09.