Honorific-Prefix: | The Honourable |
Bud Cullen | |
Honorific-Suffix: | PC |
Birth Name: | John Sydney George Cullen |
Birth Date: | 20 April 1927 |
Birth Place: | Creighton Mine, Ontario, Canada |
Nationality: | Canada |
Death Place: | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
Constituency Mp: | Sarnia-Lambton |
Parliament: | Canadian |
Predecessor: | Electoral District created |
Successor: | Bill Campbell |
Term Start: | June 25, 1968 |
Term End: | May 22, 1979 |
Constituency Mp2: | Sarnia-Lambton |
Parliament2: | Canadian |
Predecessor2: | Bill Campbell |
Successor2: | Ken James |
Term Start2: | February 18, 1980 |
Term End2: | July 26, 1984 |
Office3: | Minister of National Revenue |
Term Start3: | 1975 |
Term End3: | 1976 |
Predecessor3: | Ron Basford |
Successor3: | Monique Bégin |
Office4: | Minister of Employment and Immigration |
Term Start4: | 1976 |
Term End4: | 1979 |
Predecessor4: | Ministry Created |
Successor4: | Ron Atkey |
Office5: | Judge (Trial Division) Federal Court of Canada |
Term Start5: | July 26, 1984 |
Term End5: | August 31, 2000 |
Appointed5: | John Turner |
Alma Mater: | University of Toronto, Osgoode Hall Law School |
Party: | Liberal |
Profession: | lawyer, politician, judge |
Jack Sydney George "Bud" Cullen, (April 20, 1927 – July 5, 2005) was a Canadian Federal Court judge and politician.
Born in Creighton Mine, Ontario, Cullen was given the nickname of Bud by his mother when he was a young boy. Later, he legally changed his name to Bud.[1] Cullen went to Creighton Mine Public School, Lansdowne Public School, and Sudbury High School before attending the University of Toronto and Osgoode Hall Law School.[2]
A lawyer practicing in Sarnia, Ontario,[1] Cullen was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1968 federal election as the Liberal Member of Parliament for Sarnia.
In 1971, he became parliamentary secretary to the Minister of National Defence. He subsequently served as parliamentary secretary to the Energy Minister (1972) and to the Finance Minister (1974–1975).
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau appointed Cullen to the Cabinet as Minister of National Revenue in 1975. Cullen moved to the position of Minister of Manpower and Immigration in 1976, and remained in the position when it was renamed Minister of Employment and Immigration the next year, until the defeat of the Trudeau government in the 1979 election.
Cullen lost his Sarnia seat in the 1979 election, but regained it in the subsequent 1980 election, but he did not return to Cabinet. Cullen was appointed a judge in the trial division of the Federal Court of Canada by Prime Minister John Turner in July 1984 prior to that year's election, and he remained on the bench until his retirement in August 2000.[1]
Prior to being elected to Sarnia City Council for the first time in the municipal elections of 1985, future Sarnia mayor Mike Bradley got his political feet wet working as an executive assistant for MP Cullen. Bradley even made a run at winning Cullen's seat in 1984 and has described him in a number of interviews as a political role model of his.
Source: Elections Canada
Source: Elections Canada
Source: Elections Canada
Source: Elections Canada
Source: Elections Canada
There is a Jack Cullen fonds at Library and Archives Canada.[3]