Reed Elley

Reed Elley (born 1945) is a retired Baptist minister who was elected to the Canadian Parliament in 1997 as a member of the Reform Party. He was reelected in 2000 and retired in 2004. Elley was born in Simcoe, Ontario and was educated at McMaster University in Hamilton, where he obtained a BA in History and an MDiv in theology. He pastored several churches in the Baptist denomination in three provinces, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia. In 1967, he married Louise Plester from Chemainus, British Columbia and they raised eight children—four children of their own as well as four foster children,three of which are first nations. He is a social conservative who has landed in controversy over his views on same-sex marriage, particularly when he suggested homosexuality should not have been decriminalized.

Elley joined the Reform Party of Canada, then led by Preston Manning, in 1988. His first political activity was in 1992, when he ran a Vote No campaign in the federal riding of Calgary Centre during the Charlottetown Accord constitutional referendum. He then became an area manager for the Reform candidate Jim Silye. During that time he and his family moved to Vancouver Island, where he became involved in the winning campaign of Bob Ringma in 1993. After the election, he was asked to become president of the Nanaimo-Cowichan constituency association for the Reform Party.

He was nominated as the Reform candidate in Nanaimo-Cowichan in 1997 and won in that year's federal election. He was re-elected in 2000 in what the local press described as a land slide win as a member of the Canadian Alliance party, and ended his career as a member of the Conservative Party of Canada. As MP, he served as critic for Indian Affairs and Northern Development, and Labour. He held the positions of deputy chair of the health committee for several years, and also served on the Fisheries and Oceans committee and the Persons With Disabilities committee.

Elley was a social conservative whose staunch opposition to same-sex marriage became a source for controversy when he was in Parliament. In 2000, as Parliament debated extending rights to same-sex couple, Elley suggested homosexuality should never have been legalized. Elley blamed former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's decision to decriminalize homosexuality in 1969 for what he said was an assault on the traditional family. Elley said: "He and his cohorts passed omnibus legislation which legitimized behaviour which up until then had been considered outside the realm of normal." Elley stood by those remarks, later telling a Vancouver Sun reporter: "I presented my views on the breakdown of society as I saw it. … I had deep concerns about the erosion of traditional values and I ... still continue to stand up for traditional family values." [1]

He ran in the 2008 general election but was not successful, finishing second to New Democratic Party candidate Jean Crowder by more than 4,000 votes.[2]

In 2011 he was elected president of the fledgling BC Conservative Party and held the position for a year. He is now retired from politics and living in Chemainus,BC.


References

  1. "Cummins summons Reform ghosts". canada.com. 2011. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  2. "The candidates in Nanaimo-Cowichan". http://www.nanaimobulletin.com. 2011. Retrieved July 1, 2012.

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