Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Nancy MacBeth

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Full Name
  
Nancy Elliott

Succeeded by
  
Ken Nicol

Name
  
Nancy MacBeth


Preceded by
  
Grant Mitchell

Role
  
Politician

Succeeded by
  
Ken Nicol

Nancy MacBeth Nancy MacBeth davebertaca Alberta Politics

Born
  
December 29, 1948 (age 75) Edmonton, Alberta (
1948-12-29
)

Other political affiliations
  
Progressive Conservative (1982–1993)

Alma mater
  
University of Alberta Universite Laval

Spouse
  
Hilliard MacBeth (m. 1990)

Education
  
Laval University, University of Alberta

Preceded by
  
Howard Sapers (acting)

Political party
  
Alberta Liberal Party

(2001) AB Liberal Leader Nancy MacBeth Concedes Elxn After Losing Her Own Seat


Nancy MacBeth, née Elliott (born December 29, 1948 in Edmonton, Alberta) is a Canadian politician, who was the leader of the Alberta Liberal Party from 1998 to 2001.

Contents

Early life

MacBeth received a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Alberta, in French and Russian; studying Université Laval, studying French Canadian literature. She subsequently worked as an executive assistant for several Alberta cabinet ministers.

Early political career

She first entered electoral politics as an Alberta Progressive Conservative Party Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) for the riding of Edmonton-Glenora from 1986 to 1993 in the government of Don Getty. She was Minister of Education from 1986 to 1988, and was then appointed Minister of Health, serving in that position until 1992.

She then ran as a candidate in the party's 1992 leadership convention against Ralph Klein. Regarded by the membership as a Red Tory, Betkowski (as she was then known) became the preferred candidate of the party establishment. However, Klein's populist appeal won him the leadership, and Betkowski did not stand as a candidate in the 1993 election.

Liberal leader

She subsequently married portfolio manager and financial writer Hilliard MacBeth.

She then returned to politics in 1998, running for the leadership of the Alberta Liberals after the resignation of Grant Mitchell. Now serving as the MLA for Edmonton-McClung, MacBeth tried to capitalize on discontent with Klein's government in some Alberta communities by reaching out to disaffected Red Tories, but proved unable to connect with voters. In the 2001 provincial election, the Liberals won only seven seats, less than half as many as they had held before the election. Among the losses was MacBeth's own seat of Edmonton McClung. The election left the party a million dollar debt that took about 10 years to pay off.

She subsequently left politics again, and was succeeded by Ken Nicol as party leader.

References

Nancy MacBeth Wikipedia