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Margaret Aitken

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Preceded by
  
new district

Role
  
Tony Abbott's wife

Succeeded by
  
Ralph Cowan

Spouse
  
Tony Abbott (m. 1988)


Occupation
  
Journalist

Siblings
  
Greg Aitken

Name
  
Margaret Aitken

Parents
  
Gail Aitken, Max Aitken

Margaret Aitken Tony Abbott and Margaret Aitken Photos Zimbio

Born
  
July 3, 1908 Newcastle, New Brunswick (
1908-07-03
)

Died
  
November 19, 1980(1980-11-19) (aged 72)

Political party
  
Progressive Conservative

Alma mater
  
Victoria University of Wellington Faculty of Education

Children
  
Bridget Abbott, Frances Abbott, Louise Abbott

Similar People
  
Tony Abbott, Frances Abbott, Peta Credlin

Loch ness monster sighting true account by margaret aitken


Margaret Aitken (July 3, 1908 – November 19, 1980) was a Canadian author, columnist, journalist, and politician.

Contents

Margaret Aitken Tony Abbott and Margaret Aitken Photos Tony Abbott

Background

Margaret Aitken First lady39 a girl from Wainuiomata Stuffconz

Aitken was born in Newcastle, New Brunswick. She attended Branksome Hall in Toronto. She was the daughter of J. Mauns Aitken and her uncle was Max Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook. Her brother, William Aitken and his son Jonathan Aitken (her nephew) were members of the British House of Commons.

Margaret Aitken www4pictureszimbiocomgiMargieAbbottJF2wKUwL

She started with the Toronto Telegram in 1938 and was a foreign correspondent. She was noted for covering the birth of Israel as a nation and she became a strong supporter of the Jewish state. In 1953, she wrote a book Hey Ma! I Did It (Toronto: Clarke, Irwin & Company) about her political campaign in the same year.

Politics

Margaret Aitken Margaret Aitken Pictures Photos amp Images Zimbio

In the 1953 federal election, she was elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the riding of York—Humber as the Progressive Conservative candidate, winning by 67 votes. Along with Sybil Bennett, Ellen Fairclough and Ann Shipley, she was one of four women elected to the House of Commons that year, only the second election in Canadian history in which more than one woman was elected to Parliament.

In 1957 she became the first woman to be appointed chair of a parliamentary committee, the Standing Committee on Standing Orders. The committee discusses rules of the House. She was re-elected in 1957 and 1958. She was defeated in 1962 by 662 votes.

Later life

In 1962, Aitken was appointed as Canada's representative to the UN's Commission on Human Rights. She died at age 72 after a long illness.

Publications

  • Aitken, Margaret; Sanders, Byrne Hope (1953). Hey Ma! I did it. Clarke, Irwin & co. Ltd. pp. xiv, 213. 
  • References

    Margaret Aitken Wikipedia