Richard John Joseph Durante | |
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Member of Parliament for Comox—Alberni |
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In office June 1968 – February 1969 |
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Personal details | |
Born | August 17, 1930 New Westminster, British Columbia |
Political party | Liberal |
Profession | supervising principal |
Richard John Joseph Durante (born 17 August 1930 at New Westminster, British Columbia) was a Liberal Party member of the Canadian House of Commons. He was a supervising principal by career.
In the 1968 general election, Tom Barnett was initially declared the winner of the Comox—Alberni riding over Durante by a three-vote margin. But the Liberals demanded a recount whose result gave Durante a nine-vote lead, therefore giving Durante the seat in Parliament. However, Barnett and his party's riding association filed a court challenge that concluded on 3 February 1969 when two British Columbia Supreme Court court judges ruled that twelve Canadian Forces members had voted despite being ineligible. The result was therefore invalidated.[1] Durante was allowed to remain a member of the House of Commons for one additional week, to allow time for a possible appeal.[2] The Liberals ultimately decided not to challenge the ruling, and Durante's seat was declared vacant.
This led to a by-election on 8 April 1969 which Barnett won against Durante, therefore cutting short the Liberal candidate's career in federal politics.