Jane Stewart
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Jane Stewart, PC (born April 25, 1955 in Brantford, Ontario) is a former Canadian politician who was the Minister of Human Resources Development from 1999 to 2003
Stewart was first elected to Parliament in the 1993 election. She was a close friend of Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, and was soon appointed to the important position of Minister of Indian Affairs. In 1999, she was moved to the Department of Human Resources Development (HRDC), the government department that has the largest budget. Stewart was widely viewed to have leadership ambitions, and was closely supported by Chretien.
These ambitions were put to an end by the so called "billion-dollar boondoggle" where poor accounting practices at HRDC left millions of dollars unaccounted for. While the problems at HRDC mostly date from the time of her predecessor, Pierre Pettigrew, Stewart took the brunt of the attack, and was considered to have handled the scandal poorly. Despite this, she did not resign, and Chrétien stood by her throughout the ordeal.
She remained minister in charge of HRDC until Paul Martin became Prime Minister on December 12, 2003. She was moved to the backbenches both because of the continued taint of scandal and her position as a loyalist to the ousted Chretien. She retired from politics on February 13, 2004 to become a United Nations International Labour Organization member.
Stewart is from a long line of politicians. Her father Robert Nixon was leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, while her grandfather was Ontario premier Harry Nixon.
External link
- CBC News: Jane Stewart leaving politics (http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/02/13/stewart_leaving040213)
26th Ministry - Government of Jean Chrétien | ||
Cabinet Posts (3) | ||
Preceded by: Pierre Pettigrew | Minister of Human Resources Development (1999-2003) | Succeeded by: Position abolished |
Preceded by: Ron Irwin | Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development (1997-1999) | Succeeded by: Bob Nault |
Preceded by: David Anderson | Minister of National Revenue (1996-1997) | Succeeded by: Herb Dhaliwal |