Christian Heritage Party of Canada candidates in the 2004 Canadian federal election

(Redirected from Linda Klassen)

The Christian Heritage Party is a minor political party in Canada. It ran 62 candidates in the 2004 federal election. Information about some of these candidates may be found here. The leader of the party at the time of the election was Ron Gray.

Laurent Filion is a construction contractor and real estate agent based in Duhamel, Quebec.[1] He joined the Christian Heritage Party in 1995 and has run for the party three times; he appeared on the ballot as a non-affiliated candidate in 2000 because the party was not registered with Elections Canada. He was the Christian Heritage Party's only Quebec candidate in 2004.

Filion has also run for municipal council in Duhamel.

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
1997 federal Argenteuil—Papineau Christian Heritage 505 0.97 6/6 Maurice Dumas, Bloc Québécois
2000 federal Argenteuil—Papineau—Mirabel N/A (Christian Heritage) 167 0.33 9/9 Mario Laframboise, Bloc Québécois
2004 federal Argenteuil—Mirabel Christian Heritage 202 0.41 6/7 Mario Laframboise, Bloc Québécois
2009 municipal Duhamel council, Ward One n/a 125 23.32 3/3 Patrick Douglas

Peter J. Ellis (Guelph)

edit

Peter J. Ellis received 634 votes, finishing fifth against Liberal incumbent Brenda Chamberlain.

Stephen Downey (Hamilton Centre)

edit

Downey received 520 votes (1.17%), finishing fifth against New Democratic Party candidate David Christopherson. See his entry here for more information.

See here for full information. Marshall has been a candidate for the Christian Heritage Party of Canada, having campaigned for the party four times.

James is a chemical engineer. He was 43 years old in 2002, and was a Global manager for the Dow Automotive Group in Sarnia (Windsor Star, 11 May 2002). He has campaigned for the CHP on three occasions.

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
1988 federal Kent Christian Heritage 1,942 4/4 Rex Crawford, Liberal
federal by-election, May 13, 2002 Windsor West Christian Heritage 249 0.76 6/6 Brian Masse, New Democratic Party
2004 federal Lambton-Kent-Middlesex Christian Heritage 1,015 5/5 Rose-Marie Ur, Liberal

Linda Klassen (St. Catharines)

edit

Klassen was born Linda Stacey. She moved from her home region of Simcoe County to the Niagara region in 1985, and was a Community Outreach Counsellor with the Niagara Region Sexual Assault Centre, St. Catharines from 1989 to 2001.[1] Before running for the CHP in 2004, she campaigned for the Family Coalition Party of Ontario in the 2003 provincial election.

Klassen has argued that the concept of "sexual orientation" has been fabricated by "deviants who wanted their unnatural sexual preferences dignified and legalized", and has written that Canadian society was better when homosexuality was "in the closet".[2]

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
2003 provincial St. Catharines Family Coalition 714 1.62 5/5 Jim Bradley, Liberal
2004 federal St. Catharines Christian Heritage 741 1.43 5/7 Walt Lastewka, Liberal

Woode was born in 1946, near Woodstock, Ontario. She graduated in Social Work from the Ryerson Polytechnical Institute in 1968, and after a year she had graduated from the institute, she worked at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Toronto from 1969 to 1973. Woode wrote a column on disability issues in the Georgetown Herald from 1983 to 1988, hosted a show on Halton Cable TV for three years, and has been an environmental activist. She is affiliated with the Family Coalition Party of Ontario at the provincial level, and is an opponent of abortion and gay rights.[3] She was 58 years old in 2004.[4][permanent dead link]

She received 826 votes (1.65%), finishing fifth against Conservative candidate Michael Chong.

David C. Andres (Dauphin—Swan River)

edit

Andres was born on May 17, 1959, at Norquay, Saskatchewan, and moved with his family to Ethelbert, Manitoba, as a child. After completing high school, he worked with the Canadian National Railway in northern Manitoba before returning to Ethelbert to work as a mechanic and farmer. In 1979, he began "Andres Insurance Brokers" with his wife, and also started a Sears Canada Catalogue Order Office in the region.

The 2004 election was his first venture into electoral politics. He received 560 votes, or 1.68% of the total cast in the riding.

David J. Reimer (Portage—Lisgar)

edit

David J. Reimer received 1,458 votes (4.19%), finishing fourth against Conservative candidate Brian Pallister.

Jeannine Moquin-Perry (St. Boniface)

edit

Raised in Saskatchewan, Moquin-Perry subsequently moved to Manitoba to practice as a registered nurse. She has a Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing from the University of Manitoba, as well as certificates in Teaching and Administration. During the 2004 election, she was a student of LAMBS Disciplineship Project, a religious institution. Along with her husband, she has also hosted a Home Church Fellowship for several years.

The 2004 election was Moquin-Perry's first as a candidate. She received 378 votes (0.98%), finishing fifth against Liberal incumbent Raymond Simard.

Jane MacDiarmid (Winnipeg South)

edit

MacDiarmid received 206 votes (0.79%), finishing fifth against Liberal incumbent Reg Alcock. Click here for more information.

Geoffrey Capp (Yukon)

edit

See here for more information. He has run for the CHP five times, as well as once in a territorial election.

Other Candidates (detailed entry not prepared)

edit

Colin George Atkins (Brandon—Souris, Manitoba) (also ran 2000, 1997)

Anthony Barendregt (Selkirk—Interlake, Manitoba) (also ran 2000)

Leslie Bartley (Oxford, Ontario)

Timothy J. Bloedow (Glengarry—Prescott—Russell, Ontario)

Durk Bruinsma (Clarington—Scugog—Uxbridge, Ontario) (also ran 2000, 1997, 1993)

David W. Bylsma (Niagara West—Glanbrook, Ontario) (also ran 2000, 1997, 1993)

Gary De Boer (Sarnia—Lambton, Ontario)

Irma DeVries (Perth Wellington, Ontario)

Ken De Vries (Elgin—Middlesex—London, Ontario) (also ran 2000, 1997, 1993)

Steven Elgersma (Haldimand—Norfolk, Ontario)

Frank Ellis (Kitchener—Waterloo, Ontario) (also ran 2000)

Ursula Ellis (Dufferin—Caledon, Ontario)

Barra L. Gots (Brant, Ontario)

John G. Gots (Cambridge (federal electoral district), Ontario) (also ran 2000)

Ron Gray, leader (Chilliwack—Fraser Canyon, B.C.) (also ran 2000, 1997, 1988, and in byelections May 2003, May 2002, Nov 1999, Mar 1996)

Joseph F. Grubb (York West, Ontario)

Vicki Gunn (York—Simcoe, Ontario)

Larry R. Heather (Calgary Southwest, Alberta) (also ran 1997, 1993)

Gerhard Herwig (Surrey North, B.C.) (also ran 2000)

James "Jim" Hnatiuk (Kings—Hants, Nova Scotia)

Jacques "Jack" Hummelman (New Westminster—Coquitlam, B.C.)

Robert Thomas Jacobson (Souris—Moose Mountain, Manitoba)

Dave Joslin (Huron—Bruce, Ontario) (also ran 2000, 1997)

W. Baird Judson (Charlottetown, P.E.I.) (also ran 2000, 1997, 1993, 1988)

Ryan Kidd (Don Valley East, Ontario) (also ran 2000)

Gloria Kieler (Vancouver East, B.C.) (also ran 2000, 1997)

Adrian Kooger (Simcoe North, Ontario) (also ran 2000)

Harold J. Ludwig (Abbotsford, B.C.) (also ran 2000, 1997)

Mary Sylvia Nelson (Regina—Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan)

Joe Pal (Vancouver Centre, B.C.) (also ran 1997)

Katherine Reimer (Kildonan—St. Paul, Manitoba)

Irma Ruiter (Welland, Ontario)

Johannes Scheibler (Thunder Bay—Rainy River, Ontario) Rob Scott (Elmwood—Transcona, Manitoba) (also ran 2000, 1997, 1993)

Edward Spronk (Edmonton East, Alberta)

Diane Stephan (Battlefords—Lloydminster, Saskatchewan)

Harold Stephan (Palliser, Saskatchewan)

Jacob Strydhorst (Yellowhead, Alberta) (also ran 2000)

Clayton A. Sundberg (Blackstrap, Alberta)

Rod Taylor (Skeena—Bulkley Valley, B.C.)

Steven Taylor (Bruce—Grey—Owen Sound, Ontario)

Eric Truijen (Winnipeg North, Manitoba) (also ran in 2000, 1993)

William Ubbens (Etobicoke North, Ontario) (also ran 1988, byelection Dec 1990)

Ken Vanden Broek (Lethbridge, Alberta)

Peter Vander Zaag (Simcoe—Grey, Ontario)

Peter Vogel (Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock, Ontario)

Frank Wagner (Vancouver South, B.C.) (also ran 2000)

Maurice G. Whittle (Oak Ridges—Markham, Ontario)

Sally Wong (Mississauga East—Cooksville, Ontario)

John H. Wubs (Burlington, Ontario)

Previous runs for a candidate were not necessarily in a riding of the same name.

References

edit
  1. ^ CHP Council and Ridings for Québec, Christian Heritage Party of Canada, 14 June 2004, accessed via the Internet Archive on 22 January 2011; History of Federal Ridings since 1867: ARGENTEUIL--MIRABEL (2004/06/28) Archived 2011-01-01 at the Wayback Machine, Parliament of Canada, accessed 22 January 2011; Construction Laurent Filion, Yellow Pages, accessed 22 January 2011.