Charmaine Borg
Charmaine Borg | |
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Member of the Canadian Parliament for Terrebonne—Blainville |
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In office May 2, 2011 – October 19, 2015 |
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Preceded by | Diane Bourgeois |
Succeeded by | riding abolished |
Personal details | |
Born | Oakville, Ontario[1] |
November 3, 1990
Political party | New Democratic Party |
Residence | Terrebonne, Quebec |
Profession | Community activist, labour relations officer, student, volunteer worker |
Charmaine Borg was the New Democratic Party Member of Parliament for the riding of Terrebonne—Blainville in Quebec from 2011 to 2015. She was first elected in the 2011 Canadian federal election, defeating incumbent MP Diane Bourgeois of the Bloc Québécois. Contending for the redistricted riding of Terrebonne in the 2015 election, she was defeated by Michel Boudrias of the Bloc Québécois.
Borg was born on 3 November 1990 in Oakville, Ontario as one of seven children, though her family moved to Keswick, Ontario when she was one year old.[2] She is a Franco-Ontarian, and is fully bilingual in French and English,[3] though she preferred to speak French on the floor of the House of Commons. She is of French-Canadian and Maltese descent.
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Early years
After creating a drama program for at-risk youth, she won the Lieutenant Governor's Community Volunteer Award in 2008.[4]
At the time of her election, she was a student studying political science and Latin American studies at McGill University[5] and was also working as the Labour Relations Officer for the Association of McGill University Support Employees.[4] She was also co-president of the student New Democratic Party club at McGill University.[6]
Entrance to politics
She was one of five current McGill students, alongside fellow undergraduates Mylène Freeman, Laurin Liu, and Matthew Dubé, and graduate student Jamie Nicholls, elected to Parliament in the federal 2011 election following the NDP's unexpected mid-campaign surge in Quebec.[7] Not only did Borg win a seat in the 2011 election, but that election was the first time she had ever voted in a federal election.[8] She is the third-youngest member of the current Parliament, after Liu and Pierre-Luc Dusseault, and one of the youngest women ever elected to Parliament.
Borg and Dubé were co-presidents of NDP McGill (the NDP student group at McGill University) at the time that they both won election to Parliament, and both had spent the campaign working to re-elect Thomas Mulcair in the nearby riding of Outremont.[9][10][11] Borg had originally planned to spend the Fall 2011 term as a foreign exchange student in Mexico.[7]
In Parliament
In Parliament, Borg was named to the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights,[12] where she intervened against the Conservative government's omnibus crime bill, C-10, and the closure imposed on its debate,[13][14] as well as Bill C-30, the Conservative bill on warrantless online surveillance.[15] In the Fall of 2012, Borg embarked on a tour across Eastern Canada and the Maritimes to increase pressure on the Conservative government to abandon the bill.[16] After months of public backlash, the Conservative government finally scrapped Bill C-30 in February 2013. Borg called the death of this bill a "great victory and a way forward for politics." [17]
In the leadership race following the death of NDP leader Jack Layton, Borg endorsed Brian Topp.[18]
On November 12, she was profiled by CPAC's Beyond Politics.[2]
Katimavik
In 2012, Borg embarked on a cross-country tour to rally support for a Private Member's Motion she presented, M-352, to reinstate Federal funding to the recently cut Katimavik program.[19][unreliable source?]
Digital Issues
In April 2012, newly elected NDP leader Thomas Mulcair appointed Borg to the Shadow Cabinet of the Official Opposition. She was given the position of Digital Issues Critic,[20] and became the youngest full critic in the history of Canada. Simultaneously, she was transferred from the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights to the Standing Committee on Ethics, Privacy and Access to Information.[21] In one of her first acts as Digital Issues Critic, Borg launched at study at the Ethics, Privacy and Access to Information Committee to investigate the privacy practices of social media companies.[22] During the study's hearings, MPs heard from numerous experts and industry representatives including Facebook, Twitter and Google.[23][24]
Bill C-475
Following through on the study into social media and privacy, Borg presented Bill C-475 to the House of Commons in February 2013. The bill seeks to amend the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) to introduce mandatory data breach reporting and enforcement powers to the Privacy Commissioner.[25][unreliable source?][26] Bill C-475 has received the endorsements of several privacy and internet experts, along with consumer protection and civil liberties groups.[27]
A campaign called "My Privacy Online" was launched to support the progression of Bill C-475 through the House of Commons.[27] The bill saw its first hour of debate at First Reading on May 23, 2013, the same day that the Privacy Commissioner of Canada released a position paper calling for similar reforms to PIPEDA.[28]
Bill C-486
In response to calls from youth in her constituency of Terrebonne-Blainville,[29] Borg collaborated with and seconded MP Paul Dewar's Bill C-486 in March 2013.[30] Bill C-486 seeks to end the use of conflict minerals in Canada, particularly those originating in the Great Lakes region of Central Africa.
Electoral record
Canadian federal election, 2011 | ||||||||
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ∆% | Expenditures | |||
New Democratic | Charmaine Borg | 28,236 | 49.4 | +35.9% | 0.00 | |||
Bloc Québécois | Diane Bourgeois | 17,634 | 30.8 | -21.5% | 60,548.03 | |||
Conservative | Jean-Philippe Payment | 5,222 | 9.1 | -4.9% | 21,165.08 | |||
Liberal | Robert Frégeau | 4,885 | 8.5 | -8% | 19,287.41 | |||
Green | Michel Paulette | 1,218 | 2.1 | 0% | 37.24 |
Canadian federal election, 2015 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ∆% | Expenditures | |||
Bloc Québécois | Michel Boudrias | 19,238 | 33.01 | +2.23 | – | |||
Liberal | Michèle Audette | 16,316 | 27.99 | +21.07 | – | |||
New Democratic | Charmaine Borg | 14,928 | 25.61 | -25.93 | – | |||
Conservative | Michel Surprenant | 6,615 | 11.35 | +3.28 | – | |||
Green | Susan Moen | 1,016 | 1.74 | -0.95 | – | |||
Strength in Democracy | Louis Clément Sénat | 171 | 0.29 | – | – | |||
Total valid votes/Expense limit | 58,284 | 100.00 | $221,503.04 | |||||
Total rejected ballots | 1,256 | 2.11 | – | |||||
Turnout | 59,540 | 70.63 | – | |||||
Eligible voters | 84,298 | |||||||
Bloc Québécois gain from New Democratic | Swing | +14.08 | ||||||
Source: Elections Canada[31][32] |
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Profile of Charmaine Borg on CPAC's Beyond Politics
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- ↑ Hansard, 9 December 2011
- ↑ "Défendre la démocratie." CharmaineBorg.info. 18 November 2011.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "NDP gears up to fight Conservatives’ snooping law." NDP.ca. 15 September 2011.
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- ↑ Elections Canada – Confirmed candidates for Terrebonne, 30 September 2015
- ↑ Elections Canada – Preliminary Election Expenses Limits for Candidates