Ted Staffen

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Preceded byDennis Schneider
Succeeded byDavid Laxton
Preceded byDale Eftoda
Succeeded byScott Kent
Ted Staffen
Speaker of the Yukon Legislative Assembly
In office
February 27, 2003  November 5, 2011
Preceded byDennis Schneider
Succeeded byDavid Laxton
Member of the Yukon Legislative Assembly for Riverdale North
In office
November 4, 2002  October 10, 2011
Preceded byDale Eftoda
Succeeded byScott Kent
Personal details
PartyYukon Party
Alma materSimon Fraser University

Ted Staffen is a Canadian politician, who represented the electoral district of Riverdale North in the Yukon Legislative Assembly as a member of the Yukon Party from 2002 to 2011. He served as the 9th Speaker of the Legislative Assembly from 2003 to 2011.[1]

Staffen holds a bachelor's degree in political science from Simon Fraser University,[2] where he studied the political evolution of the Yukon.[3]

Staffen has worked in the private sector as an entrepreneur, a natural resources consultant, and in risk capital. He also served on the Board of the Whitehorse Chamber of Commerce. Prior to entering politics, Staffen worked in the Yukon, Alaska, and the Northwest Territories. He is a former researcher for the Yukon Legislative Assembly and senior political advisor for the Yukon Government Cabinet Offices.[4]

Political career

Staffen entered territorial politics in the 2002 Yukon election, recapturing the Whitehorse riding of Riverdale North from Yukon Liberal incumbent and Cabinet minister Dale Eftoda. The Liberals had seized the Yukon Party stronghold for the first time in the 2000 election. Staffen was elected as part of a Yukon Party majority government on November 4, 2002. He was re-elected in Riverdale North in the 2006 Yukon general election.

Staffen was sworn in as the Speaker of the 31st Yukon Legislative Assembly on February 27, 2003. He was re-elected Speaker for the 32nd Assembly on November 23, 2006.[5] As Speaker, Staffen was credited with improving some of the decorum in the legislative assembly over his tenure, as well as restoring the dormant youth legislature program.[6]

Staffen announced his plans to retire from politics in June 2011, expressing a desire to return to the private sector.[7]

Personal life

Electoral record

References

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