Margaret-Ann Blaney

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Preceded byLaureen Jarrett
Succeeded byTed Flemming
Preceded bySheldon Lee
Succeeded byPercy Mockler
Margaret-Ann Blaney
Member of the New Brunswick Legislative Assembly
for Rothesay
Saint John-Kings (1999-2006)
In office
June 7, 1999  May 16, 2012
Preceded byLaureen Jarrett
Succeeded byTed Flemming
New Brunswick Transportation Minister
In office
1999–2001
Preceded bySheldon Lee
Succeeded byPercy Mockler
New Brunswick Public Safety Minister
In office
2001–2003
Preceded byMilt Sherwood
Succeeded byWayne Steeves
New Brunswick Training and Employment Development Minister
In office
2003–2006
Preceded byNorm McFarlane
Succeeded byJody Carr
New Brunswick Environment Minister
In office
2010  May 16, 2012
Preceded byRick Miles
Succeeded byCraig Leonard
New Brunswick Minister responsible for the Status of Women
In office
1999–2006
Preceded byMarcelle Mersereau
Succeeded byJoan MacAlpine-Stiles
New Brunswick Minister responsible for the Status of Women
In office
2010  May 16, 2012
Preceded byMary Schryer
New Brunswick Minister responsible for Communications New Brunswick
In office
2010  May 16, 2012
Preceded byVictor Boudreau
Personal details
BornMargaret-Ann O'Rourke
PartyProgressive Conservative
OccupationJournalist, Politician

Margaret-Ann Blaney (née O'Rourke; born 1961 in Corner Brook, Newfoundland)[1] is a Canadian journalist and politician. She was a member of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 1999 until May 2012, representing Rothesay (formerly Saint John-Kings) as member of the Progressive Conservative Party.

An honours graduate with a Bachelor's degree from Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. John's, Newfoundland, Blaney worked as a reporter for both television and radio from 1982 to 1993, when she was encouraged by John Crosbie to become a candidate against Brian Tobin in the 1993 Canadian federal election, finishing a distant second. Shortly thereafter she married and moved to Rothesay, New Brunswick where she managed her husband's veterinary practice. In 1994, Ms. Blaney and her husband started their own small business, the Atlantic Veterinary Hospital in Rothesay, N.B. She was active in the business as co-owner / general manager until June 1999. In 1997, she was a candidate for leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick, losing to Bernard Lord.

Political career

Electoral history

References

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