David Chatters

http://dbpedia.org/resource/David_Chatters an entity of type: Thing

David Cameron Chatters (April 15, 1946 – January 25, 2016) was a Canadian politician. He was a member of the House of Commons of Canada from 1993 to 2006, representing the riding of Athabasca until the 2004 election, after which he represented Westlock—St. Paul. rdf:langString
rdf:langString David Chatters
rdf:langString David Chatters
rdf:langString David Chatters
rdf:langString Westlock, Alberta, Canada
xsd:date 2016-01-25
rdf:langString Westlock, Alberta, Canada
xsd:date 1946-04-15
xsd:integer 439257
xsd:integer 1069978561
xsd:date 1946-04-15
xsd:date 2016-01-25
rdf:langString Member of the Canadian Parliament
rdf:langString for Athabasca
rdf:langString for Westlock—St. Paul
rdf:langString Reform
rdf:langString first member
xsd:integer 2004 2006
xsd:integer 1993 2004
rdf:langString David Cameron Chatters (April 15, 1946 – January 25, 2016) was a Canadian politician. He was a member of the House of Commons of Canada from 1993 to 2006, representing the riding of Athabasca until the 2004 election, after which he represented Westlock—St. Paul. Born in Westlock, Alberta, Chatters, formerly a farmer and rancher, was first elected as a member of the Reform Party of Canada (1993–2000), which became the Canadian Alliance in 2000, which became the Conservative Party of Canada in 2003. For over 10 years, he was the Senior Opposition Critic for Natural Resources and was a Deputy Whip of the Official Opposition. He was the Chair of the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy, and Ethics, but health reasons made Chatters retire at the 2006 election. In May 1996, he was suspended from the Reform Party caucus for asserting, in the wake of the Delwin Vriend case on LGBT human rights, that schools should have the right to fire openly gay teachers. Another caucus colleague who had made a similar comment, Bob Ringma, was suspended at the same time; a third caucus colleague, Jan Brown, was also suspended at the same time for publicly criticizing Chatters and Ringma. All three were readmitted to the Reform caucus by September of that year. He died at the age of 69 on January 25, 2016. He had pancreatic cancer.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6048

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