Gilbert Parent
{{Short description|Canadian politician}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2024}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| honorific-prefix = The Honourable
| name = Gilbert Parent
| honorific-suffix = {{post-nominals|country=CAN|PC|size=100%}}
| image = Gilbert Parent.jpg
| caption = Parent in December 2000
| office = 33rd Speaker of the House of Commons
| term_start = January 17, 1994
| term_end = January 29, 2001
| monarch = Elizabeth II
| governor_general = Ray Hnatyshyn
Roméo LeBlanc
Adrienne Clarkson
| primeminister = Jean Chrétien
| predecessor = John Allen Fraser
| successor = Peter Milliken
| riding2 = Niagara Centre
{{small|(Welland—St. Catharines—Thorold; 1988–1997)}}
{{small|(Welland; 1979–1984)}}
{{small|(St. Catharines; 1974–1979)}}
| parliament2 = Canadian
| term_start2 = November 21, 1988
| term_end2 = November 27, 2000
| predecessor2 = Allan Pietz
| successor2 = Tony Tirabassi
| term_start3 = July 8, 1974
| term_end3 = September 4, 1984
| predecessor3 = Trevor Morgan
| successor3 = Allan Pietz
| birth_date = {{birth date|1935|07|25}}
| birth_place = Mattawa, Ontario, Canada
| death_date = {{death date and age|2009|03|03|1935|07|25}}
| death_place = Toronto, Ontario, Canada
| party = Liberal
| spouse = Joan Parent (partner)
Sandra Page
| profession = Teacher
| signature =
}}
Gilbert "Gib" Parent {{post-nominals|country=CAN|PC}} (July 25, 1935 – March 3, 2009) was a Canadian member of Parliament. He is best known in his role as speaker of the House of Commons between 1994 and 2001.
Parent was born on July 25, 1935, in Mattawa, Ontario, and his janitor father, a Mattawa-born Metis, moved the young family to Welland, Ontario. He went to St. Joseph's College on a football scholarship, and earned a teaching certificate from the Ontario College of Education.[https://web.archive.org/web/20120224063557/http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1461863 Former MP Gib Parent 'loved his country']. St. Catharines Standard, March 4, 2009.
Prior to his election to the House of Commons, he worked as a teacher and was vice-principal at Thorold Secondary School.
Political career
Parent was elected to Parliament six times as a member of the Liberal Party of Canada. He was first elected in the 1974 election representing the riding of St. Catharines. He was re-elected in the 1979, 1980. Parent was defeated in the 1984 election as Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservative Party swept to power, but regained his seat four years later in 1988, and was re-elected in the 1993 and 1997 elections.
His riding's name was subsequently changed to Welland, then Welland—St. Catharines—Thorold and finally Niagara Centre. Under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, Parent served, at different times between 1977 and 1981, as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Veterans Affairs, to the Minister of Labour and to the Minister of State (Sports).
Parent was first elected Speaker in January 1994. In the House, Parent was forced into the challenge of presiding over a five-party Parliament that resulted from the emergence of the Bloc Québécois and the Reform Party. Upon being re-elected to the position in September 1997, he told the Montreal Gazette that he expected the different voices in Parliament, informed by strong opinions on all sides, would make the House the lively place it should be.
Parent died at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto at the age of 73 of pneumonia while recovering from colon cancer surgery.
{{cite web
|url=https://montrealgazette.com/Health/Former+House+Speaker+Parent+dead/1349292/story.html
|title=Former House Speaker Gib Parent dead at 73
|work=Montreal Gazette
|date=March 3, 2009
|access-date = 2009-03-04}} {{Dead link|date=September 2010|bot=H3llBot}} He is survived by his brothers, Gerald Parent and Romeo Parent, wife of 39 years, Joan Parent (née Davis), their 4 daughters, Michele (Dave) Hundertmark, Monique (John) Finley, Madeleine (Mark) Thomas, and Terri (Sandro) Perruzza and 13 grandchildren, and partner Sandra Page, 2 daughters and 1 grandchild.
Electoral record
{{Canadian election result/top|CA|1997}}
{{CANelec|CA|Liberal|PARENT, Gib| 24,115}}
{{CANelec|CA|Reform|JOHNSTONE, Don| 12,053}}
{{CANelec|CA|PC|ATKINSON, Joe|5,827}}
{{CANelec|CA|NDP|WILSON, James| 5,510}}
{{CANelec|CA|Christian Heritage|BYLSMA, David|515}}
{{CANelec|CA|Natural Law|LARRASS, Anne| 363}}
{{CANelec|CA|Marxist-Leninist|WALKER, Ron|143}}
{{end}}
{{Election box begin | title=1993 Canadian federal election}}
|-
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}
|PARENT, Gilbert
|align="right"|25,534
|53.97%
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Reform|row}}
|JOHNSTONE, Don
|align="right"| 11,901
|25.15%
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Progressive Conservatives|row}}
|ST. AMAND, Terry
|align="right"| 5,472
|11.56%
{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}
|DOBRUCKI, Rob
|align="right"|3,737
|7.89%
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Natural Law|row}}
|AMOS, Laureen
|align="right"|311
|0.66%
{{CANelec|CA |Green |FANNON, Jim |304 |0.64%}}
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Abolitionist|row}}
|DOUCET, Leonard
|align="right"|64
|0.14%
{{end}}
{{Election box begin | title=1988 Canadian federal election}}
|-
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}
|PARENT, Gilbert
|align="right"|17,878
|
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Progressive Conservatives|row}}
|PIETZ, Allan
|align="right"|16,287
|
{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}
|LEE, Ken
|align="right"|12,646
|
{{CANelec|CA |Green |THOMSON, Rachel |273}}
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independents|row}}
|No affiliation
|WALKER, Ron
|align="right"|71
|
{{Canadian party colour|CA|Communist|row}}
|WALLIS, David
|align="right"|57
|
{{end}}
{{Canadian election result/top|CA|1984}}
{{CANelec|CA|PC|Allan Pietz|18,418}}
{{CANelec|CA|Liberal|Gilbert Parent|14,481}}
{{CANelec|CA|NDP|Rob Dobrucki|10,508}}
{{CANelec|CA|Green|Andrew Rivett|284}}
{{CANelec|CA|Communist|John MacLennan|145}}
{{end}}
{{Canadian election result/top|CA|1980}}
{{CANelec|CA|Liberal|Gilbert Parent|18,112}}
{{CANelec|CA|NDP|Robert Wright|11,729}}
{{CANelec|CA|PC|George Krusell|11,292}}
{{CANelec|CA|Communist|John Severinsky|95}}
{{CANelec|CA|Marxist-Leninist|Ron Walker|78}}
{{end}}
{{1984 Canadian federal election/Welland}}
{{1980 Canadian federal election/Welland}}
{{1979 Canadian federal election/Welland}}
Archives
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{Canadian Parliament links|ID=14352}}
{{Speakers of the Canadian House of Commons}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Parent, Gilbert}}
Category:Speakers of the House of Commons of Canada
Category:Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Ontario
Category:Members of the King's Privy Council for Canada
Category:Franco-Ontarian people
Category:Deaths from pneumonia in Ontario
Category:People from Mattawa, Ontario
Category:20th-century members of the House of Commons of Canada
Category:21st-century members of the House of Commons of Canada