词条 | Dan D'Autremont | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| image = | | honorific-prefix = | name = Daniel H. D'Autremont | caption = | birth_date ={{birth date and age|1950|12|28}} | birth_place = Redvers, Saskatchewan | death_date = | residence = Alida, Saskatchewan | honorific-suffix = MLA | assembly = Saskatchewan Legislative | constituency_AM = Cannington | term_start1 = October 21, 1991 | term_end1 = | predecessor1 = Eric Berntson | successor1 = | office2 = Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan | term_start2 = December 5, 2011 | term_end2 = May 17, 2016 | premier2 = Brad Wall | lieutenant_governor2=Gordon Barnhart Vaughn Schofield | predecessor2 = Don Toth | successor2 = Corey Tochor | party = Progressive Conservative → Saskatchewan Party | religion = | occupation = }} Daniel H. D'Autremont (born December 28, 1950) is a Canadian provincial politician. He is the Saskatchewan Party member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan for the constituency of Cannington. He served as Speaker of the Legislative Assembly from 2011 to 2016. He was born in Redvers, Saskatchewan, the son of Hugh and Violet D'Autremont, and grew up on the family farm about two miles east of Alida.[1] D'Autremont studied engineering at the University of Calgary. He worked in the oil industry for a number of years before taking up farming in the Redvers area in 1977.[1] D'Autremont was first elected in 1991, and was one of the founding members of the Saskatchewan Party.[1] With the retirement of Don Toth, D'Autremont is the longest serving member in the Saskatchewan Legislative Assembly as of 2018. D'Autremont was elected as Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan on December 5, 2011, as the first order of business following the November 7, 2011 general election. He challenged Don Toth, the Speaker during the Saskatchewan Party's first term. In a secret ballot of the members of the Assembly, D'Autremont defeated Toth.[2] Following the 2016 general election, D'Autremont again stood for election as Speaker, but was defeated on the second ballot by Corey Tochor.[3] D'Autremont announced that he would not run for re-election in 2020, but would remain a MLA until then.[4] Election results{{Election box begin | title=Saskatchewan general election, 2007: Cannington}}|-{{CANelec |SK |Saskatchewan |Dan D'Autremont |5,614 |77.75% |+6.87}} |-{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/NDP/row}} |NDP |Henry Friesen |align="right"|1,198 |align="right"|16.59% |align="right"|-4.98{{CANelec|SK|Liberal|Karen Spelay|409|5.66%|-1.89}} |- bgcolor="white" | Total | 7,221 | 100.00% | {{election box end}}{{Election box begin | title=Saskatchewan general election, 2003: Cannington}} |-{{CANelec |SK |Saskatchewan |Dan D'Autremont |5,156 |70.88% |-4.00}} |-{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/NDP/row}} |NDP |Henry Friesen |align="right"|1,569 |align="right"|21.57% |align="right"|+6.99{{CANelec|SK|Liberal|John Atwell|549|7.55%|-2.99}} |- bgcolor="white" | Total | 7,274 | 100.00% | {{election box end}}{{Election box begin | title=Saskatchewan general election, 1999: Cannington}} |-{{CANelec |SK |Saskatchewan |Dan D'Autremont |5,671 |74.88%}} |-{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/NDP/row}} |NDP |Glen Lawson |align="right"|1,104 |align="right"|14.58% |align="right"|-9.40{{CANelec|SK|Liberal|Joanne Johnston|798|10.54%|-19.85}} |- bgcolor="white" | Total | 7,573 | 100.00% | {{election box end}}{{Election box begin | title=Saskatchewan general election, 1995: Cannington}} |-{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/Progressive Conservatives/row}} | style="width: 130px" |Progressive Conservative |Dan D'Autremont |align="right"|3,542 |align="right"|45.63% |align="right"|+1.20 |-{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/Liberal/row}} |Liberal |Don Lees |align="right"|2,359 |align="right"|30.39% |align="right"|+3.33{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/NDP/row}} |NDP |Gary Lake |align="right"|1,861 |align="right"|23.98% |align="right"|-4.53 |- bgcolor="white" | Total | 7,762 | 100.00% | {{election box end}}References1. ^1 2 {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y746xOWGfcUC&pg=PA56 |title=Saskatchewan Politicians: Lives Past and Present |pages=56–57 |last=Quiring |first=Brett |ISBN=0889771650 |year=2004 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center Press |accessdate=2012-09-06}} 2. ^{{cite news |url=http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2011/12/05/dan-dautremont-saskatchewan-speaker_n_1129574.html |newspaper=Huffington Post |title=Dan D'Autremont: Veteran MLA To Referee Saskatchewan Legislature As Speaker |date=December 5, 2011 |accessdate=2012-09-06}} 3. ^[https://leaderpost.com/news/politics/mlas-elect-new-speaker "MLAs elect new Speaker", Regina Leader-Post, May 17, 2016.] 4. ^{{cite news |url=https://www.ckom.com/syn/648/438495/sask-partys-dan-dautremont-announces-retirement/ |title=Sask. Party’s Dan D’Autremont announces retirement |work=CJME News |publisher=Rawlco Radio |date=2018-11-16 |accessdate=2018-11-16}} External links
7 : 1950 births|Living people|Members of the Executive Council of Saskatchewan|Saskatchewan Party MLAs|Fransaskois people|21st-century Canadian politicians|Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan
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