Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Norman Warner

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Preceded by
  
Ed Lumley

Name
  
Norman Warner

Succeeded by
  
Bob Kilger

Role
  
Baron Warner

Spouse(s)
  
Elizabeth Warner

Party
  
Labour Party

Children
  
Michael Warner


Norman Warner assets3parliamentukextmnisbiopersonwwwdods

Born
  
23 December 1943 Ottawa, Ontario (
1943-12-23
)

Died
  
1 April 2014(2014-04-01) (aged 70) Cornwall, Ontario

Political party
  
Progressive Conservative

Books
  
A Suitable Case for Treatment: The NHS and Reform

Education
  
Nuffield College, Oxford, University of California, Berkeley

Norman Melvin Warner (23 December 1943 – 1 April 2014) was a Progressive Conservative party member of the Canadian House of Commons. He was an insurance broker by career.

Born in Ottawa, Ontario, he was elected in the Stormont—Dundas electoral district during the 1984 federal election, after defeating the incumbent Minister of State for Science and Technology, Ed Lumley. He then served his federal term in the 33rd Canadian Parliament. He left federal politics after completing this term and did not contest the next 1988 federal election.

During his only term in the House of Commons, Warner unsuccessfully attempted to have the House of Commons declare the Akwesasne First Nations reserve near Cornwall, Ontario as an international banking centre. This was proposed when the federal government planned to confer such status on Montreal and Vancouver.

In 1989, Ontario Provincial Police charged Warner and an accountant with fraud, perjury and theft regarding a case of $113,575 in Ontario provincial grants for a small business development. Warner was found not guilty on all charges by an Ontario court in June 1991.

Warner announced his retirement from Parliament, explaining that he wanted to spend more time with wife, Elizabeth, and his son, Michael, and that the strain of political life was a relevant part of his decision. He died of cancer on 2 April 2014, aged 70.

References

Norman Warner Wikipedia