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Elmer MacKay

Canadian politician


Summary

Canadian politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
nameElmer MacKay
honorific-suffix
office44th Minister of Public Works
primeministerBrian Mulroney
term_startJanuary 30, 1989
term_endJune 25, 1993
predecessorOtto Jelinek (acting)
successorPaul Wyatt Dick
office12nd Minister for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency
primeminister1Brian Mulroney
term_start1January 30, 1989
term_end1April 21, 1991
predecessor1Gerald Merrithew
successor1John Crosbie
office227th Minister of National Revenue
primeminister2Brian Mulroney
term_start2August 20, 1985
term_end2January 30, 1989
predecessor2Perrin Beatty
successor2Otto Jelinek
office331st Solicitor General of Canada
primeminister3Brian Mulroney
term_start3September 17, 1984
term_end3August 20, 1985
predecessor3Robert Phillip Kaplan
successor3Perrin Beatty
office44th Minister of Regional Economic Expansion
primeminister4Joe Clark
term_start4June 4, 1979
term_end4March 3, 1980
predecessor4Marcel Lessard
successor4Pierre de Bané
parliament9Canadian
riding9Central Nova
term_start9September 4, 1984
term_end9October 25, 1993
predecessor9Brian Mulroney
successor9Roseanne Skoke
term_start10May 31, 1971
term_end10June 15, 1983
predecessor10Russell MacEwan
successor10Brian Mulroney
birth_nameElmer MacIntosh MacKay
birth_date
birth_placeHopewell, Nova Scotia, Canada
partyConservative
otherpartyProgressive Conservative (until 2003)
spouse
children4, including Peter MacKay
occupationPolitician

| honorific-prefix = The Honourable | honorific-suffix =

Elmer MacIntosh MacKay (born August 5, 1936) is a former Canadian politician.

Life and career

MacKay was born in Hopewell, Nova Scotia, the son of Laura Louise (Macintosh) and Gordon Barclay MacKay. He was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada as the Progressive Conservative (PC) Member of Parliament (MP) for Central Nova through a 1971 by-election. He was re-elected in subsequent elections, and served as Minister of Regional Economic Expansion in the short-lived (1979–1980) government of Prime Minister Joe Clark.

MacKay resigned his parliamentary seat in 1983 to allow newly elected PC leader Brian Mulroney to enter Parliament through a by-election in MacKay's Nova Scotia riding. In the subsequent 1984 election, Mulroney ran in his home riding of Manicouagan, Quebec, and MacKay was again returned to the House as Central Nova's MP.

Following the election, Mulroney became prime minister, and appointed MacKay to the Cabinet of Canada where he served as Solicitor General of Canada for a year before becoming Minister of National Revenue. In 1989, MacKay became Minister of Public Works. From 1989 to 1991, he was also responsible for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency Act. The opposition Liberals and New Democratic Party often accused MacKay of giving patronage appointments. While no wrongdoing was ever proven, MacKay was removed from the ACOA portfolio in 1991. From 1991 to 1993, he remained Public Works minister and was given responsibility for the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.

MacKay retired from Cabinet when Mulroney's tenure as party leader ended in 1993, and did not run in the 1993 election.

Elmer MacKay's son, Peter, was a PC and Conservative MP from 1997 to 2015; initially he represented Pictou—Antigonish—Guysborough, which was formed from Elmer's former Central Nova riding, and from 2004 the re-formed Central Nova. Like Elmer, Peter served as minister responsible for ACOA, and for Prince Edward Island. Peter also served as the final leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada before it merged with the Canadian Alliance into the present-day Conservative Party.

Controversy

MacKay is a longtime associate of then Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and German businessman Karlheinz Schreiber, who were negotiating the purchase of Airbus aircraft for Air Canada in 1988. As a result of subsequent Royal Canadian Mounted Police charges against Mulroney for accepting kickbacks on this transaction, a federal inquiry was launched, which found that Mulroney had accepted at least $300,000 in cash from Schreiber after the transaction. Mulroney's defence stated these payments were in return for consulting services. Documents show that MacKay drafted a letter that was eventually released by Schreiber as evidence that Scheiber's and Mulroney's business dealings were legitimate.{{cite news | title = Mulroney-era cabinet minister may have helped draft Schreiber letter: report | publisher = national Post

Evidence tabled at the Airbus inquiry included entries in Schreiber’s diary that indicated Schreiber had made phone calls to MacKay on the same dates during which the first two Airbus meetings were held between Mulroney and Schreiber. MacKay has confirmed he had lunch with Mulroney and Schreiber the day of the third meeting. In addition, Schreiber’s diary shows he made phone calls to MacKay on two days in July 1993 when he made banking transactions in Switzerland to obtain money to pay Mulroney.{{cite news | title = Peter MacKay's Father and Airbus Scandal

Although MacKay was closely involved with Mulroney and Schreiber during the time of the Airbus purchases, he has never been formally charged for wrongdoing in the scandal.

Electoral history

References

References

  1. (1985). "Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage". Debrett's Peerage Limited.
  2. "Archived copy".
  3. [https://web.archive.org/web/20180420073929/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G2-3448600167.html "MacKay, Hon. Elmer, P.C., Q.C., B.A., LL.B.", ''Canadian Parliamentary Guide 2005'']
  4. Hill, Tony L.. (2002). "Canadian politics, riding by riding: an in-depth analysis of Canada's 301 federal electoral districts". Prospect Park Press.
  5. (2014). "Full Circle: Death and Resurrection In Canadian Conservative Politics". eBookIt.com.
  6. Maloney, Ryan. (August 8, 2018). "Jagmeet Singh Follows Path Of Other Leaders By Seeking Seat Far From Home". HuffPost Canada.
  7. Clancy, Peter. (2004). "Micropolitics and Canadian business: paper, steel, and the airlines". University of Toronto Press.
  8. "Twenty-Fourth Ministry". Government of Canada.
  9. "ACOA Ministers since 1987". Government of Canada.
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