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Encyclopedia > Lynda Haverstock

Dr. Lynda Maureen Haverstock (born September 16, 1948) is the former leader of the Saskatchewan Liberal Party and has been the Lieutenant-Governor of Saskatchewan since 2000.


Born and raised in Swift Current, Haverstock dropped out of high school after grade ten and became a teenage mother. As an adult, she went back to school to finish her education, and ultimately earned Bachelor and Master's degrees in education and a PhD in psychology. Haverstock became leader of the provincial Liberals in 1989, and was the first woman to lead a political party in the province.


Under Haverstock, the party grew significantly: in the 1995 provincial election, the party increased its caucus in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan from one (Haverstock's own seat) to eleven, and became the Official Opposition. The Liberals won over one-third of the popular vote.


Despite a revival of the party under her leadership, and the potential of becoming a contender for power after the Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan collapsed in scandal, Haverstock's leadership was challenged in 1995 by party members who believed that she was too moderate, and that the party under her was too close to the federal Liberal Party of Canada. After a caucus revolt, she was forced out of the leadership in favour of Jim Melenchuk.


After being removed as leader, Haverstock quit the party, and remained in the legislature as an independent MLA until 1999 when she retired from politics.


The Liberal Party continued to be divided by internal fighting, and several Members of the Legislative Assembly left in 1997 to join the Saskatchewan Party. The 1999 provincial election reduced the Liberals to three seats in the legislature.


After leaving politics, Haverstock worked briefly as a radio host before being appointed lieutenant-governor in 2000.

Preceded by:
John E. N. Wiebe
List of Saskatchewan lieutenant-governors Succeeded by:
Incumbent

  Results from FactBites:
 
Haverstock, Dr. Lynda M. (282 words)
Haverstock taught at the university level in both Saskatchewan and New Brunswick.
Haverstock's concern for the quality of life in Saskatchewan led her to enter public life.
Haverstock was sworn into office on February 21, 2000, as Saskatchewan's 19th Lieutenant Governor.
Tom Hengen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (735 words)
Hengen was policy chair for the provincial Liberals in the mid-1990s, and worked with Lynda Haverstock to design the party's platform in 1993.
Haverstock was forced to resign as leader in 1995, after a bitter caucus revolt.
Hengen was considered a Haverstock ally at the time of the controversy, though sources indicate there was a subsequent falling-out (9 September 1996).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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