Osie Villeneuve

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Osie Villeneuve
Ontario MPP
In office
1975–1983
Preceded by New riding
Succeeded by Noble Villeneuve
Constituency Stormont—Dundas and Glengarry
In office
1963–1975
Preceded by Fernand Guindon
Succeeded by Riding abolished
Constituency Glengarry
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Glengarry—Prescott
In office
1957–1962
Preceded by Raymond Bruneau
Succeeded by Viateur Éthier
Ontario MPP
In office
1948–1957
Preceded by Edmund MacGillivray
Succeeded by Fernand Guindon
Constituency Glengarry
Personal details
Born (1906-06-28)June 28, 1906
Maxville, Ontario
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Ottawa, Ontario
Political party Ontario Progressive Conservative Party
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
Spouse(s) Alma MacLeod
Children 3
Occupation Livestock broker

Osias F. "Osie" Villeneuve (June 28, 1906 – September 25, 1983) was a longtime politician in Ontario, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario and the Canadian House of Commons, and was an elected representative almost continuously from the 1940s until his death.

Background

Villeneuve was born in Maxville, Ontario, and educated in the area. He worked as a livestock dealer. He played and coached minor league hockey in the 1930s and 1940s. He was inducted into the Glengarry Sports Hall of Fame in 1995. He married Alma MacLeod in 1930. Together they raised three sons.[1]

Politics

Villeneuve served on the local school board on council, and was reeve of Maxville in 1948.[1]

In the 1945 provincial election, he ran for the Progressive Conservative Party, and lost to Liberal incumbent Edmund MacGillivray by 1,613 votes in Glengarry.[2] He ran again in the 1948 election, and defeated MacGillivray by 1,788 votes.[3] Villeneuve served as a government backbench supporter under Thomas Laird Kennedy and Leslie Frost, and won re-election in the Progressive Conservative landslides of 1951 and 1955.[4][5]

Villeneuve resigned from the provincial legislature in May 1957 to run federally, as a candidate of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. He was successful, defeating Liberal incumbent Raymond Bruneau by 1,580 votes in Glengarry—Prescott in the 1957 election.[6] He served as a backbench supporter of John Diefenbaker's minority government for a year, and defeated Bruneau a second time in the Progressive Conservative landslide of 1958.[7]

He was defeated in the 1962 election, losing to Liberal Viateur Éthier by 2,857 votes.[8] Villeneuve then returned to the Ontario legislature in the 1963 election, winning his old seat of Glengarry by 1,363 votes over a Liberal challenger.[9] He was re-elected in 1967, 1971, 1975, 1977 and 1981, and served as a backbencher in the John Robarts and William Davis governments. He was never appointed to cabinet at either the federal or provincial levels.

Villeneuve suffered a heart attack in September 1983 while attending a reunion of former Progressive Conservative MPPs, and died in hospital a few hours later.[10] His seat in the Ontario legislature was subsequently won by Noble Villeneuve, a distant relative.[11]

References

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External links