Paul Zed (born December 31, 1956) is a Canadian lawyer, professor, and politician.

Paul Zed
Member of Parliament
for Fundy—Royal (1993-1997), Saint John (2004-2008)
In office
2004–2008
Preceded byElsie Wayne
Succeeded byRodney Weston
In office
19931997
Preceded byRobert Corbett
Succeeded byJohn Herron
Personal details
Born (1956-12-31) December 31, 1956 (age 67)
Toronto, Ontario
Political partyLiberal
ResidenceRothesay, New Brunswick
Alma materDalhousie University,
University of New Brunswick,
London School of Economics
Professionlawyer/teacher

Early life and education

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Paul Zed was born in Toronto on December 31, 1956,[1] the eldest of seven children born to a Lebanese Canadian family. Zed grew up in Saint John, New Brunswick,[2] where his ancestors had moved from Lebanon in the early 20th century.[3] Zed graduated from St. Malachy's High School with honors and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Dalhousie University (BA 1977), a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of New Brunswick (LL.B. 1980) and a Masters of Laws degree from the London School of Economics (LL.M. 1981). He completed the Directors Education Program of the Institute of Corporate Directors through the Rotman School of Management, Toronto (ICD.D May, 2012).[citation needed]

Career

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As a successful lawyer and businessman, Zed is a member of the New Brunswick, Ontario, Canadian and International Bar Associations.

He was also a lecturer in Contract Law at the Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa from 1982 to 1984. He then became a senior partner at Clark Drummie & Company working in the area of corporate, commercial and securities law, including lead counsel to a large power utility, New Brunswick Power, while also teaching business law at the Business School at the University of New Brunswick from 1984 to 1993. In October 2009 he was appointed Chairman of the Presidents Advisory Board for Cisco Systems Canada. Until January 2013 he was legal counsel to the Canadian law firm Barry Spalding. In September 2015, Zed was appointed as the Chairman of the President's Advisory Board of Rogers Enterprise Business Unit, a division of Rogers Communications Inc. He also served on the advisory boards of T4G Limited and Smart Employee Benefits Inc. In May 2018 he was named Counsel and Strategic Advisor for the International Law firm McCarthy Tetrault and was on the board of Lester B Pearson College of the Pacific and Chairs the board of the London Goodenough Association of Canada

Political career

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In 1993, he was first elected to the House of Commons as the Member of Parliament for the riding of Fundy Royal, New Brunswick. Zed was the first and youngest Liberal ever elected in the riding's history.

During his parliamentary career Zed served as the Chairman of several important committees of the House of Commons including the Standing Committee on Industry, Government Operations and Procedure and House Affairs.

He has authored reports on banking, financing and doing business with governments. He is also considered an expert on ethics and governance as the author of the first major piece of legislation on Lobbying and Ethics.

Zed founded and chaired the all-party Sugar Caucus opposing unfair American trade practices and also founded and chaired the all-party credit card caucus working with Canadian banks and retailers.

In 1996, Prime Minister Jean Chrétien named Zed the Parliamentary Secretary to the Leader of the Government.

Upon his return to the private sector in 1997, Zed co-founded a public policy and business advisory company in Ottawa, Summa Strategies Canada Inc., and served as its President for eight years representing some of the largest American and Canadian companies and their CEO's with offices in Ottawa, Washington and London.

Upon re-election to Parliament in 2004, Zed was named Chair of the Committee on Public Safety and National Security reviewing the Anti-terrorism Act and also served on the Standing Committees on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics, and the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities serving as Official Opposition Critic.

A founding member of the Urban Cities and Communities Caucus hosting dozens of meetings with provincial governments and Canada's big city mayors, publishing a report 'Foundations for a Nation' on Canada's infrastructure deficit.

In 2008, he was appointed National Co-Chair for the Liberal Party of Canada leadership campaign of Michael Ignatieff and subsequently he was named Chief of Staff and Chief Strategist to the Ignatieff while he was Leader of the Opposition.

In September 2009, he was appointed Chairman of the President's Advisory Board for Cisco Systems Canada with head offices in Toronto.

Zed is also very active in Canadian and Atlantic Canada legal and community affairs, including a member of the Board of Directors of Enterprise Saint John, the United Way of Greater Saint John, Finance Chair for Romero House soup kitchen and a founding member of the Lily Lake Pavilion Restoration Committee. He has also served as a Director of the Aitkin Bicentennial Exhibition Centre, Special Olympics Canada, Canadian Cancer Society National Public Relations, the Board of Advisors of the International Association for Students of Economic and Commerce, the National Committee on Lobbyists for the Canadian Bar Association (CBA), Life President and class Valedictorian of Dalhousie University, Friends of the London School of Economics, Chair London Goodenough Association of Canada, Board of Governors and Secretary, Patron of Lester B.Pearson College of the Pacific, Victoria, B.C.

Electoral history

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2008 Canadian federal election: Saint John—Rothesay
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Conservative Rodney Weston 13,782 39.55 +0.25 $73,497.84
Liberal Paul Zed 13,285 38.13 -4.79 $69,234.99
New Democratic Tony Mowery 5,560 15.96 +0.32 $2,720.91
Green Mike Richardson 1,888 5.42 +3.28 $1,008.49
Marijuana Michael Moffat 330 0.95 none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit 34,845 100.0     $79,702
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 187 0.53 ±0
Turnout 35,032 54.01 -7.38
Eligible voters 64,868
Conservative gain from Liberal Swing +2.52
2006 Canadian federal election: Saint John—Rothesay
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Paul Zed 17,202 42.92 -0.36 $55,428.82
Conservative John Wallace 15,753 39.30 +5.68 $65,915.16
New Democratic Terry Albright 6,267 15.64 -3.42 $6,294.91
Green Vern Garnett 858 2.14 -0.08 none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit 40,080 100.0     $74,214
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 214 0.53
Turnout 40,294 61.39 +6.36
Eligible voters 65,639
Liberal hold Swing -3.02
2004 Canadian federal election: Saint John—Rothesay
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Paul Zed 15,725 43.28 +13.12 $60,257.89
Conservative Bob McVicar 12,212 33.62 -25.88 $59,750.72
New Democratic Terry Albright 6,926 19.06 +10.34 $13,450.03
Green Jonathan Cormier 807 2.22 +1.92 $1,401.24
Marijuana Jim Wood 369 1.02 -0.38 none listed
Independent Tom Oland 290 0.80 $235.21
Total valid votes/expense limit 36,329 100.0     $73,296
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 224 0.61
Turnout 36,553 55.03 -5.46
Eligible voters 66,423
Liberal notional gain from Progressive Conservative Swing +19.50
Changes from 2000 are based on redistributed results. Change for the Conservative Party is based on the combined total of the Progressive Conservative Party and the Canadian Alliance.
2000 Canadian federal election: Saint John—Rothesay
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Elsie Wayne 16,751 50.9 -12.2
Liberal Paul Zed 9,535 29.0 +13.1
New Democratic Rod Hill 2,989 9.1 -1.3
Alliance Peter Touchbourne 2,980 9.1 -0.7
Marijuana Jim Wood 461 1.4 +1.4
Green Vern Garnett 131 0.3 +0.3
Natural Law Miville Couture 52 0.2 -0.5
Total valid votes 32,899 100.0
1997 Canadian federal election: Fundy Royal
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative John Herron 16,715 41.52 +13.11
Liberal Paul Zed 10,192 25.32 −21.05
Reform Roger Brown 9,229 22.93 +5.20
New Democratic Larry Washburn 3,790 9.41 +4.61
Natural Law Janice Sharon MacMillan 329 0.82
Total valid votes 40,255 100.00
1993 Canadian federal election: Fundy Royal
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Paul Zed 21,677 46.37 +10.10
Progressive Conservative Robert Corbett 13,282 28.41 −18.29
Reform Dan McKiel 8,288 17.73
New Democratic Mark Connell 2,244 4.80 −6.17
Independent Colby Fraser 1,258 2.69 −3.37
Total valid votes 46,749 100.00

Independent candidate Colby Fraser's change is based on his 1988 result running as a Confederation of Regions candidate.

Personal life

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He is married to P. Wende Cartwright, formerly from Vancouver, and together they have five children. He plays the piano and is an avid snow and water skier.

References

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  1. ^ "Mr. Paul Zed, MP". Parliament of Canada (in Canadian French). Retrieved August 6, 2024.
  2. ^ MacKinnon, Bobbi-Jean (July 12, 2004). "Paul Zed proud to be himself". Telegraph-Journal. Retrieved August 6, 2024.
  3. ^ Kerr, Grant (November 24, 2004). "Family reunited after nearly seven years apart". Telegraph-Journal. Retrieved August 6, 2024.
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