Doug Horner

Douglas Alan "Doug" Horner[1] (born January 17, 1961) is a former Canadian politician, who represented the electoral district of Spruce Grove-St. Albert in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta from 2001 until January 31, 2015.[2] He was the President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Finance until Jim Prentice's cabinet was sworn in on September 15, 2014.[3] He was a candidate for the leadership of the Alberta Progressive Conservative Party in its 2011 leadership election, placing third.

Doug Horner
President of Treasury Board & Minister of Finance in the Alberta government
In office
May 8, 2012  September 15, 2014
Preceded byRon Liepert
Succeeded byRobin Campbell
7th Deputy Premier of Alberta
In office
October 12, 2011  May 8, 2012
Preceded byVacancy
Succeeded byThomas Lukaszuk
In office
January 15, 2010  February 2011
Preceded byVacant (Last held by Ron Stevens)
Succeeded byVacancy
MLA for Spruce Grove-Sturgeon-St. Albert
In office
2001–2012
Preceded byColleen Soetaert
Succeeded byriding dissolved
MLA for Spruce Grove-St. Albert
In office
2012  January 31, 2015
Preceded byfirst member
Succeeded byTrevor Horne
Personal details
Born (1961-01-17) January 17, 1961
Barrhead, Alberta
Political partyProgressive Conservative
OccupationBusinessman

In 2006, when Ed Stelmach became premier, Horner was appointed Minister of Advanced Education and Technology.[4] He retained the position in cabinet shuffle on January 13, 2010, and was also appointed to the position of Deputy Premier.[5] He was first elected in the 2001 provincial election. He became the province's Minister of Agriculture in 2004 under Premier Ralph Klein. On January 22, 2015, he announced that he would be retiring as an MLA effective January 31, 2015.

Early life

Born in Barrhead, Alberta, to Jean and Dr. Hugh Horner, Doug Horner has lived in Calgary, Consort, Slave Lake, Morinville and Spruce Grove.

Horner comes from a politically active family; his grandfather, Ralph Horner, was a Senator for Saskatchewan, his father, Dr. Hugh Horner was a federal Member of Parliament under John Diefenbaker and then Alberta's agriculture minister[6] and deputy premier in the 1970s while his uncles Jack Horner, Albert Horner and Norval Horner were also federal MPs.

Education

Horner received his post-secondary education in Alberta. He graduated from SAIT Polytechnic (Southern Alberta Institute of Technology) with a diploma in business. After completing further studies, he was accredited by the Institute of Canadian Bankers.[6]

Political career

Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development (2004-2006)

  • Established Rural Alberta Development Fund.
  • Established Biofuels Initiative.
  • Vice-chair of the Alberta Grain Commission.[7]

Minister of Advanced Education and Technology (2006-2011)

  • Created Alberta Innovates, which focuses on research in bio solutions, energy and environment, technology futures and health sciences.
  • Instrumental in creating two new universities: Grant MacEwan University and Mount Royal University.[7]
  • Led the creation of Campus Alberta and the establishment of Apply Alberta in an effort to streamline the application process.
  • Chair of the Alberta government´s Information and Communications Technology Implementation Committee

Deputy Premier of Alberta (2010 - 2011)

Horner became Deputy Premier of Alberta in January 2010. He resigned in February 2011 to become a candidate for PC leadership. He was reappointed to this post again at the conclusion of the PC leadership election.

Minister Liaison to the Canadian Forces

Committee service

  • Member of the Standing Committee on Law and Regulations[6]
  • Special Standing Committee on Members’ Services and the Standing Policy Committee on Justice and Government Services.[6]
  • Member of the Treasury Board and the Cabinet Policy Committee on the Economy.[6]
  • Member of the Standing Committee on Private Bills.[6]
  • Chair of the Alberta government's Information and Communications Technology Implementation Committee

PC leadership candidate, 2011

On February 4, 2011, Horner resigned from cabinet in order to run for the leadership of the PC Party in its 2011 leadership election.[6] After the September 17 vote, he finished in the top three (behind Gary Mar and Alison Redford). Redford won the run-off ballot held on October 1.

President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance (2012-2014)

Horner won the vote of the Spruce Grove-St. Albert-Sturgeon riding in Alberta's provincial elections in 2012.[8] Horner sponsored the controversial Bill 46: Public Service Salary Restraint Act which threatens to take away the right of arbitration from thousands of public sector workers.[3]

Leadership and influence

Horner is a featured speaker for the "Think Big Alberta" Tour. During the summer of 2011, the tour will visit the cities of Edmonton, Red Deer, Grand Prairie, Fort McMurray, Lethbridge, Medicine Hat and Calgary. Other speakers include John Furlong, who provided leadership for the team that organized and delivered the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.[9]

Business career

Before being elected to the Alberta Legislature, Horner worked in the private sector, including banking in southern Alberta and agriculture. He was involved in the start-up and operations of his family's barley and oat processing mill. Later he became responsible for international marketing and sales of specialty grains for ConAgra from its Nebraska office. After three years he moved back to Canada and established a trading company for agrifoods and agrifeeds for domestic and international markets.[6]

Military service

Horner has served in the Canadian Forces Reserve,[10] and as the Minister Liaison to the Canadian Forces.[6]

Community involvement

Horner is a member of the Spruce Grove & District Chamber of Commerce, the St. Albert Parkland Rotary Club, the Royal Canadian Legion, the Loyal Edmonton Regiment Association and several other service and community organizations.

gollark: Um. Anyway. Look at the cc.cc wiki pages for http.get and fs.open and stuff.
gollark: ? ? ? ? ?
gollark: ? ?
gollark: Well, this basic way to do it would require that you store the version somewhere, and store the *latest* version on pastebin or something, and you'd need to tweak it a bit since it doesn't really handle handles properly.
gollark: You would probably have to have a pastebin containing the latest version number or something. Please note that this is pseudocode and would not work as-is.

References

  1. Biographies of Members - Legislative Assembly of Alberta, 25th Legislature. Legislative Assembly of Alberta. December 2001.
  2. "Former Alberta finance minister resigning seat | CBC News".
  3. http://horner.mypcmla.ca/admin/contentx/default.cfm?h=10032&PageId=10032%5B%5D
  4. "Stelmach's team will shape province: Alberta's new cabinet", Calgary Herald, December 16, 2006
  5. "New cabinet team will ensure Alberta is stronger than ever", Government of Alberta News Release, January 13, 2010
  6. "Legislative Assembly of Alberta".
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2011-05-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. Bennett, Dean. "Alberta Tories defy polls and win 12th consecutive majority". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-03-25. Retrieved 2011-06-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-08-18. Retrieved 2011-05-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.