Lorraine Michael

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded byJack Harris
Succeeded byAlison Coffin
Preceded byEarle McCurdy
Succeeded byGerry Rogers
Lorraine Michael
Member of the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly
for St. John's East-Quidi Vidi
Signal Hill-Quidi Vidi (2006-2015)
In office
November 1, 2006  April 17, 2019
Preceded byJack Harris
Succeeded byAlison Coffin
Leader of the Newfoundland and Labrador New Democratic Party
Interim
In office
September 28, 2017  April 8, 2018
Preceded byEarle McCurdy
Succeeded byGerry Rogers
Leader of the Newfoundland and Labrador New Democratic Party
In office
May 28, 2006  March 7, 2015[1]
Preceded byJack Harris
Succeeded byEarle McCurdy
Personal details
Born (1943-03-27) March 27, 1943 (age 83)
PartyNew Democratic Party
Alma materUniversity of Toronto
Memorial University of Newfoundland
OccupationRoman Catholic Nun, Teacher, School Administrator, Social Activist

Lorraine Michael (born March 27, 1943) is a social-democratic Canadian politician from Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. From May 2006 until March 2015, Michael was the leader of the Newfoundland and Labrador New Democratic Party (NDP). She is a former nun, teacher, and social activist.

On November 1, 2006, she was elected Member of the House of Assembly (MHA) for the district of Signal Hill-Quidi Vidi, and re-elected the following year in the provincial election, and again in 2011. On January 6, 2015, Michael announced her resignation of leader of the NDP following a leadership election which took place on March 7, 2015. Michael successfully contested the 2015 provincial election in the district of St. John's East-Quidi Vidi.[2] Following the resignation of her successor as NDP leader, Earle McCurdy, Michael served as interim leader of the NDP from 2017 until 2018. She did not re-offer at the May 16, 2019 provincial election and retired from the legislature.

Michael was born on March 27, 1943, to a Lebanese-Newfoundland family in St. John's, Newfoundland. Michael was a nun until she left the Roman Catholic Church in 1993 over conflicts with the local Archdiocese, including the Archdiocese's handling of an alleged sexual assault case. She has completed degrees at Memorial University of Newfoundland and the University of Toronto. She started her career as a high school teacher on Bell Island, and was a junior high school principal and teacher in Baie Verte, the Codroy Valley, on the Burin Peninsula, and in St. John's.[3]

Michael has been a social activist and a feminist activist in Canada and Newfoundland and Labrador, as well as internationally. After leaving the teaching profession, she became Director of the Office of Social Action in St. John's where she worked on a number of coalitions for social justice, both regionally and nationally. In later years, while working with the Toronto-based Ecumenical Coalition for Economic Justice (ECEJ), she spoke on the subject of economic globalization in Mexico, Chile, and Zimbabwe. She has also worked with the Women and Work Committee of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women and served for a period as the organization's Interim Executive Director.[4]

Prior to her election as NDP leader, she was Executive Director of the Women in Resource Development Committee, consulting with industry, labour, government, and educators to achieve employment equity in natural resource development sectors in Newfoundland and Labrador. This work was an extension of her earlier work in Labrador as the Innu Nation nominee on the Voisey's Bay environmental assessment panel from 1997 to 1999.[4][5]

In 2016, Michael announced that she had been treated for breast cancer earlier in the year.[6]

Michael is a member of the Newfoundland Symphony Orchestra.

Provincial politics

Electoral history

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI