Margaret Campbell (politician)
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Margaret Campbell (December 15, 1912 – April 19, 1999) was a politician in
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, Canada. She was a
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member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario who represented the downtown
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riding of St. George. Prior to her provincial role she served as a municipal councillor in Toronto from 1958 to 1962 and then as a member of the Board of Control from 1964 to 1969. She ran for mayor of Toronto in 1969 but came in second to William Dennison.


Background

Born Margaret Elizabeth Fasken Baird, she was raised in Rosedale and attend
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,
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and then
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and was called to the bar in 1937. She married filmmaker and aviator Sterling Campbell in 1942. During the Second World War she worked in counter-intelligence for the
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(RCMP). Her son Sterling Campbell served a term as a Liberal MPP from Sudbury. Campbell had two daughters, Penelope (Bartok) and Susan (Makela).


Municipal politics

Her husband ran for city council in the 1956 election, but was unsuccessful. In the next city elections she ran herself, and was victorious in Ward 2. In the 1960 election she finished first in the ward, entitling her a position on Metro Council in addition to the Toronto seat. In 1966 she became the second womanThe first was Jean Newman in 1956. to win a seat on the four member Board of Control and became the city's budget chief. In the 1969 election she ran for mayor, attempting to become the first female mayor of the city. Her opponents were the NDP-linked incumbent William Dennison and the official Liberal candidate Stephen Clarkson. Campbell had been a member of the Progressive Conservative party for many years. Her mayoral campaign was run on an explicitly reform platform, calling for an end to
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s and the adoption of
Jane Jacobs Jane Jacobs (''née'' Butzner; 4 May 1916 – 25 April 2006) was an American-Canadian journalist, author, theorist, and activist who influenced urban studies, sociology, and economics. Her book '' The Death and Life of Great American Cities ...
styled urbanism as advocated by
David Crombie David Edward Crombie (born April 24, 1936) is a Canadian former academic and politician who served as the 56th mayor of Toronto from 1972 to 1978. Crombie was elected to Parliament following his tenure as mayor. A member of the Progressive Cons ...
. She finished second to Dennison, losing by some 13,000 votes.


Provincial politics

She briefly left politics to serve as a provincial court judge. When Allan Lawrence retired from the legislature and opened the provincial seat of St. George she resigned her judgeship and ran for the
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, leaving the Tory party. St. George had been a staunchly Tory seat for decades, and Campbell faced a prominent opponent in Roy McMurtry, but she was victorious becoming the first woman elected as an Ontario Liberal Party MPP. She was re-elected in 1975 and 1977. She represented the riding until 1981, advocating on issues related to poverty, and in favour of women's and gay rights. She resigned her seat prior to the 1981 election so that she could spend more time with her ailing husband. In 1984, the Ontario Liberal Party established the ''Margaret Campbell Fund'' which supports female candidates who run for the party.


References


Notes


Citations


Other references

* ''Obituary Margaret Campbell city councillor, MPP.'' Alan Barnes. Toronto Star. Toronto, Ont.: Apr 21, 1999. pg. 1


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Campbell, Margaret 1912 births 1999 deaths Ontario Liberal Party MPPs Toronto city councillors Women MPPs in Ontario Women municipal councillors in Canada Lawyers in Ontario Judges in Ontario Canadian women's rights activists Canadian LGBT rights activists Canadian women lawyers 20th-century Canadian lawyers 20th-century Canadian women politicians 20th-century women lawyers Women civil rights activists