Charles E. Haliburton | |
Office: | MP for South Western Nova |
Term Start: | October 30, 1972 |
Term End: | July 8, 1974 |
Predecessor: | Louis-Roland Comeau |
Successor: | Coline Campbell |
Office2: | MP for South West Nova |
Term Start2: | May 22, 1979 |
Term End2: | February 18, 1980 |
Predecessor2: | Coline Campbell |
Successor2: | Coline Campbell |
Birth Date: | 23 April 1938 |
Birth Place: | Wolfville, Nova Scotia |
Party: | Progressive Conservative |
Occupation: | Judge, politician |
Charles Edward Haliburton (born April 23, 1938) is a jurist and former politician in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.
Haliburton graduated from Acadia University in 1959 with a Bachelor of Arts and then from Dalhousie University in 1962 with a Bachelor of Laws. He was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1978. Haliburton served as an Adjudicator for Small Claims Court, as both a provincial and federal Crown Prosecutor, and as Solicitor for the Municipality and the Town of Digby. He also served as Councilor and then as Mayor of the Town of Digby.[1]
Haliburton returned to private practice after politics and was subsequently appointed to the bench in 1993. He retired from the Nova Scotia Supreme Court in 2013.
Haliburton was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1972 federal election as the Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for South Western Nova. He lost his seat to Liberal challenger Coline Campbell in the 1974 federal election, but ran again in the renamed riding of South West Nova in the 1979 federal election that brought the Tories to power under Joe Clark after sixteen years of Liberal governance. He sat as a backbench supporter of Clark's minority government for seven months. Following the defeat of the Clark government in the House of Commons, another federal election was called in 1980, and Haliburton lost his seat in a rematch against Campbell.