John Oliver (Ontario politician)

John Oliver (born 1956) is a politician in Ontario, Canada is a former Liberal member of the House of Commons of Canada who was elected in 2015 in the riding of Oakville. He served one term and chose not to run for re-election.

John Oliver
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Oakville
In office
October 19, 2015  September 11, 2019
Preceded byTerence Young
Succeeded byAnita Anand
Personal details
Born1956 (age 6364)
Guelph, Ontario, Canada
Political partyLiberal
ResidenceOakville, Ontario
Alma materMcMaster University
University of Toronto
ProfessionHealthcare executive
Websitejohnoliver.mp

Early life

Oliver was born in Guelph, Ontario, the son of Ellice and Peter Oliver, who was a local veterinarian. He is the second oldest of 3 siblings.

He attended McMaster University earning a Bachelor of Commerce degree. In 1982 he became a Chartered Accountant. He was later named a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Ontario (FCPA). Oliver also attended the University of Toronto, where he earned a master's degree in health administration, the Canadian College of Health Executives where he became a Certified Health Executive and in 2003 became a Member of the American College of Healthcare Executives.

Career

He served in a variety of jobs in the public and private sectors, including as an Assistant Deputy Minister in the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. He has served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of numerous hospitals including Georgetown and District Memorial Hospital and Oakville-Trafalgar Memorial Hospital. He presided over the amalgamation of the Milton District Hospital, Oakville-Trafalgar Memorial Hospital and later the Georgetown and District Memorial to form Halton Healthcare Services.[1] The amalgamation of Milton District Hospital and Oakville-Trafalgar Memorial Hospital has been noted by the Ministry of Health to be one of the most successful and least problematic amalgamations in Ontario.[2]

Oliver served as President and CEO of Halton Healthcare for more than 16 years before retiring. While at Halton Healthcare he supervised the development of the $2.7 billion New Oakville Hospital.[3] The new hospital opened on time and on budget in 2015, and is one of Canada's single largest infrastructure projects to date.[4][5]

Oliver has served as the Chair of the Cardiac Care Network of Ontario, Chair of the Halton-Peel District Health Council, and as Chair of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Partnerships for Health System Improvement Committee.

Politics

On October 2, 2014, Oliver won the Liberal nomination for the Oakville riding in the next general election, beating local lawyer Jennifer Malabar.[6] In the 2015 Canadian federal election, he defeated Conservative party incumbent Terence Young by 4,480 votes.[7] On July 26, 2018, Oliver was nominated to be the Liberal candidate for the 2019 general election becoming one of the first Liberal candidates to be nominated.

Oliver has been quoted as saying his main reason for entering politics was seeing the deterioration of Canada's healthcare and research systems by the previous government.[8] Oliver is a fierce proponent of National Pharmacare. One of his first actions after taking office was to initiate a study into a National Pharmacare program for Canada at the Standing Committee on Health. The report titled Pharmacare Now: Prescription Medicine Coverage for All Canadians was released in April 2018.[9] It calls for the creation of a national prescription drug formulary, and for the Canada Health Act be amended to include drugs prescribed outside of a hospital to be an insured service. Oliver is quoted as saying after the report's release "For me it’s simple, no Canadian should be denied access to necessary prescription medicines because they can’t afford it".[10]

He currently serves on the Standing Committee on Health and the Standing Joint Committee for the Scrutiny of Regulations.[11]

Oliver is the Chair of the Liberal Automotive Caucus.[12]

Electoral record

2015 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalJohn Oliver31,96749.40+18.67$101,542.36
ConservativeTerence Young27,48742.48-11.75$164,576.53
New DemocraticChe Marville3,8305.92-8.02$12,633.98
GreenDavid Doel1,4202.19-1.49$1,662.12
Total valid votes/Expense limit 64,704100.00   $227,734.51
Total rejected ballots
Turnout
Eligible voters 87,670
Source: Elections Canada[13][14]

Personal life

John lives in Oakville with his wife Joanna. He has three children Rachel, Alex and William.

gollark: In that they can frequently do the sort of thing a human could do in one shot without needing to do much conscious thought or use working memory, but fall down horribly on lots of multi-step things or particularly thinky stuff.
gollark: They're not replicating the actual implementation very much. They do seem to be replicating the rough functionality.
gollark: They also do not actually perfectly remember things (or "form new memories" at all after training) unless you glue some kind of external memory retrieval on.
gollark: They might have something like emotions internally (it would be hard to check) but there's not a strong reason for them to be humanlike given their very different tasks.
gollark: Not as capable, obviously, but the same sort of thing.

References

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