Biography
Lists
Also Viewed
Quick Facts
Intro | Canadian politician | |
Places | Canada | |
was | Physician Surgeon Neuroscientist Neurosurgeon Politician | |
Work field | Healthcare Science Politics | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 22 January 1929, Toronto | |
Death | 3 April 2013 (aged 84 years) | |
Politics: | Progressive Conservative Party Of Ontario |
Biography
Robert Goldwin "Bob" Elgie CM (January 22, 1929 – April 3, 2013) was a politician in Ontario, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1977 to 1985, and was a cabinet minister in the Progressive Conservative governments of Bill Davis and Frank Miller. His father, Goldwin Elgie, was also a Conservative Ontario MPP in the 1930s and 1940s. He was a member of the Ontario Press Council from 2001, serving as char from 2006 until his death.
Background
Robert Elgie was born in Toronto, Ontario. He received his B.A. from the University of Western Ontario in 1950, his LL.B. from Osgoode Hall Law School and his medical degree from the University of Ottawa. He trained as both a lawyer and neurosurgeon, and worked in the medical field. Elgie taught at the medical schools of Queen’s University and the University of Toronto and was chief of medical staff at Scarborough General Hospital.
Politics
Elgie was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1977 provincial election, winning an easy victory in the Toronto-area seat of York East. After a brief period in the government backbenches, he was appointed to Bill Davis's cabinet on August 18, 1978 as Minister of Labour. A Red Tory by ideology, Elgie was easily the most left-wing figure in the Davis cabinet. He was supported by the province's unions, and passed amendments to Ontario's Human Rights Code and Occupational Health and Safety regulations which were favourable to labour interests. Some campus Progressive Conservative groups opposed his efforts to grant human rights officers the right to investigate and arbitrate reports of workplace discrimination.
Elgie was easily re-elected in the 1981 election, and was named Minister of Consumer and Commercial Relations on February 13, 1982. He supported Roy McMurtry's bid to succeed Davis as party leader in 1985. When Frank Miller replaced Davis as Premier of Ontario on February 8, 1985, he named Elgie as his Minister of Community and Social Services. He was re-elected with a reduced majority in the 1985 election, as the Progressive Conservatives won a narrow minority government under Miller's leadership. Elgie was again appointed as Minister of Labour on May 17, 1985.
Following the election, Elgie favoured an alliance with the New Democratic Party to keep the Progressive Conservatives in power. These plans came to nothing, and the opposition Liberal Party was able to form a minority government with NDP support on June 26, 1985. Elgie had little interest in serving on the opposition benches, and soon accepted an appointment by new Liberal Premier David Peterson as chair of the Workers' Compensation Board of Ontario. He formally resigned from the legislature on September 26, 1985, and served as chair of the Ontario Worker's Compensation Board until 1991.
Cabinet posts
Provincial Government of Frank Miller | ||
Cabinet Posts (2) | ||
---|---|---|
Predecessor | Office | Successor |
Russ Ramsay | Minister of Labour 1985 (May–June) | Bill Wrye |
Frank Drea | Minister of Community and Social Services 1985 (February–May) | Ernie Eves |
Provincial Government of Bill Davis | ||
Cabinet Posts (2) | ||
Predecessor | Office | Successor |
Bob Mitchell | Minister of Consumer and Commercial Relations 1982–1985 | Gordon Walker |
Bette Stephenson | Minister of Labour 1978–1982 | Russ Ramsay |
Later life
After leaving the WCB, he moved to Nova Scotia, and served as the founder first director of Dalhousie University's Health Law Institute from 1991 until 1996. He was appointed part-time chair of Nova Scotia's Workers' Compensation Board in the same period, and is credited with making significant improvements to this board's activities. Returning to Ontario, Elgie then served as chair of the Patent Medicine Prices Review Board from 1995 to 2005, and was appointed chair of the Ontario Greenbelt Council by the provincial Minister of Municipal Affairs in the summer of 2005 with a salary of $1 a year. On Jan. 1, 2006, he became the 6th Chair of the Ontario Press Council, of which he had been a member since 2001. He served as chair until his death in 2013. In his later life he lived in the town of Georgina, Ontario in York Region.
Despite serving and supporting the Tories for much of his life, Elgie's left leaning ideologies led him away from the conservative party later in his life. During the Mike Harris government of the 1990s, Elgie complained that the Ontario Progressive Conservatives had become too right-wing.
Elgie was named to the Order of Canada in 2003. He died on April 4, 2013 from congestive heart failure.
Family
Elgie's widow, Nancy, is a school trustee (and vice chair 2011-13 and 2015) with the York Region District School Board. Their son, Peter, is a teacher and has run for the Green Party of Canada and has been deputy leader of the Green Party of Ontario.