The Ontario Liberal Party, ran a full slate of candidates in the 1977 provincial election, and elected thirty-four candidates to emerge as the Official Opposition in the provincial legislature. Many of the party's candidates have their own biography pages; information about others may be found here.
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Arne J. Zabell (March 9, 1929–July 17, 2009) was a businessman in Brantford. He moved to Canada from Denmark in the 1960s, operated the Brantford Rental Centre until 1979, and later founded Zabell Hearing Centres. He was also an active freemason, joining in 1967.[1] His son, also named Arne Zabell, has run for office in British Columbia.
Zabell sought election to Brantford City Council and the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1970s.
Election | Division | Party | Votes | % | Place | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1972 Brantford municipal | Council, Ward Five | n/a | 489 | 6.30 | 5/6 | James Kent and Charles Ward |
1977 provincial | Brantford | Liberal | 6,130 | 21.44 | 3/3 | Mac Makarchuk, New Democratic Party |
Bugelli was born in Zabbar, Malta on July 20, 1947, and moved to Canada with his family in 1963. He was educated at Durham College, George Brown College and the University of Waterloo. He finished third against Progressive Conservative candidate George Ashe in the 1977 election. Bugelli was elected to the Whitby Town Council in 1978, and was re-elected in 1980, 1982, 1985 and 1988. He also served for five years on the Board of Directors of the Association of Municipalities of Ontario.
During the early 1980s, Bugelli attempted to prevent body-rub parlours from opening in the city.[2] He later worked to restrict strip clubs from the community in 1987,[3] and tried to quash a bar-laundromat combination from opening in the city two years later.[4] Bugelli also attempted to shut down home-operated businesses in 1984, describing them as disruptive to the community.[5]
Bugelli served as chair of the Central Lake Ontario Conservation Authority for eleven years.[6] He brought forward a plan in 1989 to subdivide the authority's surplus land, and sell individual lots for profit. He argued that the land in question was "high and dry and of no environmental concern", and accused the city of Oshawa of trying to stall the plan for selfish purposes.[7]
In 1990, Bugelli brought forward a successful motion to abolish parking fees in municipal lots. This followed passage of a provincial law which required Whitby to pay more in taxes for charging fees than it anticipated to receive collecting them.[8]
Bugelli left town council in 1991 to campaign for a seat on the Durham Regional Separate School Board. He was elected as a Whitby representative, and chaired the board's finance committee. He avoided imposing major layoffs in 1994, at a time when 132 positions were cut in the public system.[9] In 1992, he opposed a motion to remove the oath of allegiance to the Queen from the swearing-in ceremony.[10] He did not seek re-election in 1994.
Bugelli was the president and chief executive officer of Computer Composition of Canada Inc. during the 1980s, and remained a prominent with the company after it was bought by MDI Corporation of Toronto in 1989.[11] He was subsequently appointed president and chief executive officer of Pro-Image Corporation in York, Pennsylvania.[12]
Election | Division | Party | Votes | % | Place | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1977 provincial | Durham West | Liberal | 5,075 | 3/4 | George Ashe, Progressive Conservative | |
1978 municipal | Whitby council, Ward Two | n/a | not listed | not listed | himself | |
1980 municipal | Whitby council, Ward Two | n/a | not listed | not listed | himself | |
1982 municipal | Whitby council, Ward Two | n/a | accl. | 1/1 | himself | |
1985 municipal | Whitby council, Ward Two | n/a | accl. | 1/1 | himself | |
1988 municipal | Whitby council, Ward Two | n/a | 2,708 | 1/2 | himself | |
1991 municipal | Durham Separate School Board Whitby Representative, English Language |
n/a | not listed | not listed | himself |
Meagher is a Toronto lawyer. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from St. Francis Xavier University (1966) and a Bachelor of Laws degree from Dalhousie University, and was called to the Ontario Bar in 1971.[13]
He first campaigned for the Ontario legislature in 1975 at age thirty-one, after winning the Oakwood Liberal nomination over Norman Kert and Marvin Gordon.[14] He argued for an increase in workers compensation rates, and opposed extension of the Spadina Expressway.[15]
He represented Conrad Black during a property dispute in 1978.[16] In 2005, he became a partner with the firm Lang Michener LLP.[17]
Election | Division | Party | Votes | % | Place | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1975 provincial | Oakwood | Liberal | 5,970 | 31.71 | 2/5 | Tony Grande, New Democratic Party |
1977 provincial | Oakwood | Liberal | 5,046 | 23.81 | 3/6 | Tony Grande, New Democratic Party |