Browse "Politics & Law"
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Macleans
Homolka's Testimony
This article was originally published in Maclean’s magazine on July 1, 1995. Partner content is not updated. The revelations - startling, sensational and occasionally sickening - flowed from the slender, blond witness with an icy detachment.
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Honoré Mercier
Honoré Mercier, lawyer, politician, premier of Québec (b at St-Athanase, Qué 15 Oct 1840; d at Montréal 30 Oct 1894).
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Macleans
How the control freak lost control
As a five-alarm gong show threatens to swallow Stephen Harper’s Conservatives whole, party faithful wonder if he’ll ever regain his gripThis article was originally published in Maclean's Magazine on July 8, 2013
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Howard Charles Green
Howard Charles Green, lawyer, politician (b at Kaslo, BC 5 Nov 1895; d at Vancouver 26 July 1989). Appointed minister of public works in the first DIEFENBAKER government, Green assumed the Dept of External Affairs portfolio in 1959 after Sidney SMITH's sudden death.
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Howard Ferguson
George Howard Ferguson, lawyer, Conservative politician, premier of Ontario 1923-30 (b at Kemptville, Ont 18 June 1870; d at Toronto 21 Feb 1946). He personified Ontario in the 1920s: a mix of 19th-century values and 20th-century ambitions.
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Howard Graham
Howard Douglas Graham, lawyer, army officer (b at Buffalo, NY 15 July 1898; d at Oakville, Ont 28 Sept 1986). A WWI veteran, having enlisted at age 17, Graham rose to become chief of the general staff 1955-58. He practised law in Trenton, Ont, 1922-39, and was mayor in 1933.
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Howard Pawley
Pawley led his party to victory in the Nov 1981 and March 1986 elections. The most controversial action by the Pawley government during its first term was the introduction of a resolution entrenching French language rights.
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Hugh Burnett
Hugh Burnett, civil rights activist, carpenter (born 14 July 1918 in Dresden, ON; died 29 September 1991 in London, ON). Burnett was a key figure in the fight for anti-discrimination legislation in Ontario. Through the 1940s and early 1950s, he organized tirelessly against racial discrimination in public service in his hometown of Dresden, Ontario, rising to prominence as a leader and organizer of the National Unity Association (NUA), a coalition of Black community members pushing for equal rights in Dresden and the surrounding area. He was instrumental to in bringing about legislative and legal victories for civil rights at the provincial level related to the 1954 Fair Accommodation Practices Act, an early anti-discrimination law in Ontario.
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Hugh John Flemming
Hugh John Flemming, lumberman, politician, premier of NB (b at Peel, NB 5 Jan 1899; d at Fredericton 16 Oct 1982). Elected in 1921 as a municipal councillor for Carleton, Flemming became Conservative Member of Legislative Assembly for Carleton in 1944.
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Hugh Llewellyn Keenleyside
Hugh Llewellyn Keenleyside, academic, public servant, diplomat (b at Toronto 7 July 1898; d 27 Sept 1992). Only 7 months after joining the Dept. of External Affairs in September 1928, Keenleyside was posted to Tokyo 1929-36, where he assisted in opening Canada's first legation in Japan.
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Hugh Richardson
Hugh Richardson, lawyer, judge, chief justice of NWT (b at London, Eng 31 July 1826; d at Ottawa 15 July 1913).
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Hugh Segal
Hugh Segal OC, OOnt, senator, political strategist, academic, administrator, author, pundit (born 13 October 1950 in Montreal, QC; died 9 August 2023 in Kingston, ON). Hugh Segal was a prominent figure in Canadian politics for more than five decades. He served as chief of staff to Ontario premier Bill Davis and Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Segal ran for the leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party in 1998, coming in second to Joe Clark. Well-liked and respected across party lines, Segal was appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Paul Martin in 2005. Segal served in the Senate until 2014, when he became head of Massey College at the University of Toronto. He was also a professor at Queen’s University and president of the Institute for Research on Public Policy (IRPP).
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Macleans
Human Smugglers
"Eightball" pulls back his long black hair, adjusts his balaclava and peers across the St. Lawrence River through his night-vision binoculars.This article was originally published in Maclean's Magazine on November 22, 1999
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Humphrey Hume Wrong
Humphrey Hume Wrong, diplomat (b at Toronto 10 Sept 1894; d at Ottawa 24 Jan 1954). Grandson of Edward BLAKE and son of historian George WRONG, Hume Wrong was raised in privileged circumstances.
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Humphrey Mitchell
Humphrey Mitchell, electrician, trade unionist, politician (b at Old Shoreham, Eng 9 Sept 1894; d at Ottawa 1 Aug 1950). After serving in the Royal Navy in WWI, Mitchell settled in Hamilton, Ontario, to work as an electrician.
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