Megan Leslie

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Megan Leslie
File:Megan Leslie at Progress Summit.jpg
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Halifax
In office
October 14, 2008 – October 19, 2015
Preceded by Alexa McDonough
Succeeded by Andy Fillmore
Deputy Leader of the New Democratic Party
In office
April 19, 2012 – October 19, 2015
Serving with Libby Davies and David Christopherson
Leader Thomas Mulcair
Personal details
Born (1973-09-29) September 29, 1973 (age 50)
Toronto, Ontario
Political party New Democratic Party
Profession community legal worker

Megan Anissa Leslie (born September 29, 1973) is a Canadian politician and was the federal Member of Parliament for the electoral district of Halifax since the 2008 Canadian federal election until 2015. She is a member of the New Democratic Party and served as the party's critic for the environment. In 2012, Leslie was named as one of the deputy leaders of the Official Opposition – one of the youngest MPs ever to be selected for the post.[1]

Early life and career

Leslie was raised in Kirkland Lake, Ontario.[2] She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Social & Political Thought and History and a Certificate in Refugee and Migration Studies, both from York University.[3] She has a law degree from Dalhousie University.[1][2][3]

Leslie is the daughter of Finnish immigrants, and grew up in a Finnish community in Kirkland Lake.[4][5] She has attended Finnish events such as the Annual Suurjuhlat (Grand Fest).[citation needed] In 2010, Megan Leslie gave the first Varpu Lindström lecture, an annual event created in honour of Professor Varpu Lindström, a history researcher at York University (Toronto).[citation needed] Leslie also spent a year studying at the University of Tampere in Finland.[5]

After her law degree, she worked for the Dalhousie Legal Aid Service in a community in Halifax.[2][6] She has a background in social justice advocacy on poverty issues.[citation needed] She is a founding member of the Affordable Energy Coalition, and advocated cheaper energy rates to help low-income earners.[1][2] She was part of a successful settlement agreement with Nova Scotia Power Inc. regarding energy efficiency programs.[citation needed] She has advocated at Residential Tenancies, Small Claims, Income Assistance Appeal Board, CPP Disability Tribunal, and Utility and Review Board hearings.[citation needed] Leslie has coordinated mobile legal info clinics in the Halifax area.[1] These include Direction 180, Stepping Stone, Metropolitan Immigrant Settlement Association (now Immigrant Services Association of Nova Scotia), Metro Turning Point, Bayers Westwood Parent Resource Centre, Single parent Centre and Adsum House.[citation needed] Leslie also developed the "Tenant Rights Project" that worked directly with low-income earners to reduce rates of homelessness.[6]

In 2005, Leslie attended the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Montreal to present on the issue of energy poverty.[7] She has also made presentations to the Canadian Public Health Association national conference, the Atlantic Regional Association of Immigrant Settlement Associations and the national conference of the Public Legal Education Association of Canada.[8]

She has been with her partner Brendan Haley since at least 2007. [9] During the 2011 election, she said, "Brendan has taken on the domestic role completely, from shopping to cooking to cleaning the tub."[10] He has been a Ph.D. candidate at Carleton University. [11]

Member of Parliament

Leslie was nominated as the NDP's candidate in Halifax after former party leader Alexa McDonough announced her retirement from politics as of the 2008 election.[7] She won with 6,800 more votes than her nearest opponent. .

Health critic

Leslie launched an initiative as the NDP's Health critic to propose a national pharmacare plan to pay for expensive prescription drugs.[12]

She also introduced a private members bill to create a national strategy for suicide prevention, which has garnered the support of some municipal councils.[13]

She was also noted for being "well-briefed on the controversy surrounding Assisted Human Reproduction Canada last spring, when several board members resigned amid allegations of lack of transparency over spending."[14]

Environment Critic

Leslie was re-elected with an increased majority in 2011.

Leslie re-introduced the NDP's Climate Change Accountability Act in the House of Commons in June 2011[15] after it was defeated by the unelected and appointed Senate in 2010.[16]

In 2012, Leslie was the target of hate mail after The Hill Times misattributed a quotation critical of ATV drivers from Green Party leader Elizabeth May to the NDP MP.[17]

In 2013, Leslie criticized Conservative Cabinet Minister Keith Ashfield in the House of Commons for comments he had previously made, stating.[18]

In March 2015, her Opposition Day Motion to ban microbeads in Canada was passed unanimously by Parliament, ensuring that microbeads would be added to the list of toxic substances managed by the government under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999.

Leslie worked collaboratively with other parties to create Sable Island National Park,[19] has led the fight for federal monies owed to HRM for Citadel Hill in Halifax, and successfully passed Second Reading of her Private Members Bill to save Sambro Island Lighthouse.[20]

Out of politics

Leslie lost her Halifax seat to Andy Fillmore in the October 2015 federal election as the Liberals swept all the Atlantic Canada seats.[21] In December 2015, Leslie was hired by World Wildlife Fund Canada as a senior consultant on ocean governance as part of a five-year plan to cooperate with the federal and provincial governments.[22] However, the World Wildlife Fund Canada temporary role ends in June, when she expects to work back home in Halifax, where her partner recently won a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Dalhousie University.[23]

After Tom Mulcair was ousted as NDP leader, Leslie was considered a candidate for the New Democratic Party leadership election to replace him, she declined, saying that she was tired and out of energy and that she could not see herself running again before 2019.[21]

LGBT advocacy

Leslie has called herself a queer activist.[24]

Leslie did an undergraduate thesis on Supreme Court of Canada case law relating to gay and lesbian issues.[7]

She also presented an educational workshop for the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission on gender identity, and was involved in the campaign to get sex reassignment surgery covered by Nova Scotia's provincial health care plan.[citation needed]

Leslie was the main seconder of Bill C-389, An Act to Amend the Canadian Human Rights Act and Criminal Code (gender identity and gender expression), known as the trans rights bill. At third reading, noting the absence of any openly trans members of Parliament, Leslie used her time to read letters from people who had contacted her office.[25]

Awards and accolades

In 2011, Leslie was chosen as one of the "five best Canadian members of Parliament" by The Mark News.[26]

In May 2009, Leslie was chosen as "Best Rookie" by Maclean's in their third annual Parliamentarians of the Year awards.[2]

In February 2010, an essay by Leslie was featured in an Americas Quarterly issue titled "Voices from the New Generation", which featured 29 young business, political, and civic leaders from across the Americas.[27] In her essay Leslie expressed her belief in her generation's recognition of the complexity of social change, and her style of politics that recognizes the need for robust community participation as well as representation in parliament.

In December 2010, she was voted as the favourite "Up and Comer" on Parliament Hill[28] and was picked as one of the year's top MPs by columnist David Akin.[29]

Readers of The Coast weekly newspaper in Halifax voted her as "Best Halifax Member of Parliament" in 2009 [30] and 2010[31] and 2011[32] and 2012[33] and 2013[34] and 2014.[35] In 2008, she was Voted "Best Activist".[36]

In 2013, Megan received the Paul Harris Fellow recognition by the Rotary Club of Halifax Northwest.[37]

In 2015, Megan Leslie was named a Top 10 Environmental Leader in Canada by Power & Influence magazine. In the same year, she was also named one of the most influential people in government and politics by The Hill Times.[38]

Before entering politics she received: Muriel Duckworth award for raising consciousness of women's issues and feminism in the legal community; Holly House Heroes award (Elizabeth Fry) for work in housing and homelessness; Weldon Community Commitment Award; Dalhousie Governor's Award for exceptional leadership in the University and community; MacIntosh Bursary for outstanding public service; CBA Law Day Award for encouraging and promoting access to justice.[8]

References

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  8. 8.0 8.1 http://meganleslie.ndp.ca/biography
  9. https://business.highbeam.com/4341/article-1G1-192485284/ottawa-love-story
  10. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/ottawa-notebook/women-weigh-in-family-friends-and-butter-chicken-fuel-final-push-on-hustings/article613699/
  11. https://www.linkedin.com/in/brendan-haley-3b6b0721
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  14. "Ottawa's Up-and-Comers: Who to watch on Parliament Hill", January 1, 2011.
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  23. http://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/the-ndp-has-a-dream-leader-picked-out-one-problem-shes-not-running/
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  29. [1][dead link]
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External links