Elaine Taylor | |
Birth Date: | 1967 12, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Watson Lake, Yukon |
Residence: | Whitehorse, Yukon |
Office1: | Deputy Premier of the Yukon |
Premier1: | Dennis Fentie Darrell Pasloski |
Term Start1: | 12 December 2005 |
Term End1: | 3 December 2016 |
Predecessor1: | Peter Jenkins |
Successor1: | Ranj Pillai |
Office2: | Minister of Tourism and Culture |
Premier2: | Darrell Pasloski |
Term Start2: | 16 January 2015 |
Term End2: | 3 December 2016 |
Predecessor2: | Mike Nixon |
Successor2: | Jeanie Dendys |
Premier3: | Dennis Fentie |
Term Start3: | 30 November 2002 |
Term End3: | 5 November 2011 |
Predecessor3: | Dale Eftoda |
Successor3: | Mike Nixon |
Office4: | Minister of Education |
Premier4: | Darrell Pasloski |
Term Start4: | 5 August 2013 |
Term End4: | 16 January 2015 |
Predecessor4: | Scott Kent |
Successor4: | Doug Graham |
Premier5: | Dennis Fentie |
Term Start5: | 2 August 2006 |
Term End5: | 28 October 2006 |
Predecessor5: | John Edzerza |
Successor5: | Patrick Rouble |
Office6: | Minister of Community Services |
Premier6: | Darrell Pasloski |
Term Start6: | 5 November 2011 |
Term End6: | 5 August 2013 |
Predecessor6: | Archie Lang |
Successor6: | Brad Cathers |
Office7: | Minister of the Public Service Commission |
Premier7: | Dennis Fentie Darrell Pasloski |
Term Start7: | 4 February 2010 |
Term End7: | 5 August 2013 |
Predecessor7: | Patrick Rouble |
Successor7: | Currie Dixon |
Premier9: | Dennis Fentie |
Term Start9: | 12 July 2004 |
Term End9: | 28 October 2006 |
Predecessor9: | John Edzerza |
Successor9: | Glenn Hart |
Office10: | Minister of the Environment |
Premier10: | Dennis Fentie |
Term Start10: | 3 July 2008 |
Term End10: | 4 February 2010 |
Predecessor10: | Dennis Fentie |
Successor10: | John Edzerza |
Office11: | Minister of Justice |
Premier11: | Dennis Fentie |
Term Start11: | 2 August 2006 |
Term End11: | 28 October 2006 |
Predecessor11: | John Edzerza |
Successor11: | Marian Horne |
Term Start12: | 30 November 2002 |
Term End12: | 12 July 2004 |
Predecessor12: | Pam Buckway |
Successor12: | John Edzerza |
Assembly13: | Yukon Legislative |
Constituency Am13: | Whitehorse West |
Term Start13: | 4 November 2002 |
Term End13: | 3 December 2016 |
Predecessor13: | Dennis Schneider |
Successor13: | Richard Mostyn |
Party: | Yukon Party |
Occupation: | Politician; Political Staffer |
Elaine Taylor (born 3 December 1967 in Watson Lake, Yukon) is a Canadian politician. She is the former Deputy Premier of the Yukon and represented the electoral district of Whitehorse West in the Yukon Legislative Assembly.[1] First elected in 2002, and re-elected in 2006 and 2011, she was defeated in the 2016 Yukon general election by Richard Mostyn of the Yukon Liberal Party.[2]
At the time of her defeat, she was the longest continuously serving Cabinet minister in Canada and longest-serving Cabinet minister in the Yukon.
She is a member of the Yukon Party.
Taylor first attempted to enter electoral politics in the 2000 Yukon election by contesting New Democrat Cabinet minister Dave Sloan for his seat of Whitehorse West. Whitehorse West, the former seat of Yukon Government Leader Tony Penikett, had been held by the New Democrats since it was first established in 1978. Taylor, running for the Yukon Party, and Sloan, both lost to Liberal candidate Dennis Schneider, with Taylor finishing in third. Schneider had won as part of the Liberals' sweep of the City of Whitehorse during that election.
Taylor tried again to capture Whitehorse West in the 2002 election against Schneider. The short-lived Liberal government of Pat Duncan had called a snap election in an effort to shore up its political support after a series of high-profile Cabinet defections reduced it to a minority government. Taylor was successful in capturing the riding from Schneider, and joined the Dennis Fentie's Yukon Party caucus in forming a majority government. It was the first time the Yukon Party had succeeded in capturing the riding of Whitehorse West, though the nature of the riding had changed significantly since 1978.
Taylor was sworn into Cabinet on 30 November 2002, as the Minister of Business, Tourism and Culture (later renamed to Tourism and Culture) and Minister of Justice.[3] She was the only woman in both Cabinet and the Yukon Party caucus during her first term.
Taylor was later appointed Minister of the Public Service Commission in July 2004, taking over from Cabinet minister John Edzerza who in turn inherited her portfolio of Justice. In that same shuffle, Taylor gained responsibility for the Women's Directorate portfolio,[4] which had been previously reduced to a branch of the Cabinet Offices under the Pat Duncan government. Taylor had been tasked with returning the Women's Directorate to a ministerial portfolio when she was first sworn into Cabinet.[5]
Taylor's higher profile in the Yukon Party caucus during its first term led Premier Fentie to name her acting Deputy Premier in December 2005,[6] following the resignation of incumbent Peter Jenkins from Cabinet over an expense dispute with the Yukon Government.[7] Fentie made Taylor's position permanent in January 2008.[8]
Taylor's role in the Yukon Party caucus became even more prominent in August 2006 when Cabinet minister John Edzerza defected from the Yukon Party caucus to run for the New Democrats in the 2006 election. Taylor inherited Edzerza's portfolios of Education and Justice - the latter of which she had surrendered to Edzerza in 2004 - until the election scheduled for October 2006.[9]
Taylor sought re-election in Whitehorse West in the 2006 election and was re-elected by a large margin. She was once again sworn into Cabinet, retaining her interim Deputy Premier title and her position as Minister of Tourism and Culture and Minister responsible for the Women's Directorate. Her portfolios of the Public Service Commission, Education, and Justice were transferred to other colleagues.[10]
During the 32nd Assembly, Taylor served as the Government House Leader,[11] and also as Chair of the Legislative Overview Committee, the Cabinet Committee on Legislation, and the Standing Committee on Appointments to Major Government Boards and Committees.[12] She was also a member of the Standing Committee on Rules, Elections and Privileges.[13]
In a 2008 Cabinet shuffle, Taylor handed over responsibility for the Women's Directorate portfolio to Justice Minister Marian Horne, but Fentie appointed her once again as Minister of the Environment in July 2008;[14] a portfolio Fentie had held since the 2006 election.[15] Taylor held the Environment post until 2010 when, in a surprise move, now-New Democrat MLA John Edzerza once again crossed the floor the Yukon Party. Fentie had lost his majority when Cabinet minister Brad Cathers had left caucus to sit as an independent when it was revealed that Fentie had been engaged in secret talks to privatize Yukon Energy through a sale to ATCO Electric. Cathers resigned in protest over Fentie's lack of transparency and treatment of both ministers and political staff.[16] [17] Edzerza's floor crossing re-established Fentie's majority in the legislature. Taylor, though publicly upset about having to surrender the Environment portfolio, nevertheless complied.[18]
In 2011, Fentie announced that he would resign as Premier and leader of the Yukon Party.[19] Taylor chose to endorse local businessman Rod Taylor (no relation) for the Yukon Party leadership, but Rod Taylor pulled out of his leadership bid in favour of local pharmacist Darrell Pasloski, who had run unsuccessfully for the Conservatives in the federal riding of Yukon in the 2008 federal election.[20] Despite having endorsed Pasloski's opponent, Taylor was kept on in her Deputy Premier capacity and remained in Cabinet.
Taylor chose to seek re-election for a third term in the 2011 election in Whitehorse West. She once again won comfortably with more than half the vote and was appointed to Pasloski's Cabinet as Deputy Premier, Minister of Community Services, Minister of the Public Service Commission, Minister responsible for the Women’s Directorate, the Minister responsible for the French Language Services Directorate. As Minister of Community Services, Taylor was handed responsibility for the beleaguered Whistle Bend subdivision development project that had been subject to slow progress and stagnant demand.[21]
Taylor was shuffled into the position of Education minister in August 2013, taking over from Minister Scott Kent who had endured several controversies regarding his department's management of a string of controversies in the Catholic school system. Taylor remained in that position until Pasloski's final Cabinet shuffle in January 2015,[22] when she once again retained responsibility for Tourism and Culture.[23] Taylor stayed as Minister of Tourism and Culture, and kept her portfolio responsibilities for the Women's Directorate and the French Language Services Directorate for the rest of 33rd Assembly. By the end of the 33rd Assembly, Taylor was the longest-serving incumbent Cabinet minister in Canada and the longest-serving Cabinet minister in Yukon history.
Taylor sought another term in the 2016 election, but was narrowly defeated by a margin of 22 votes by Liberal candidate and former journalist Richard Mostyn. Taylor joined Premier Pasloski and Cabinet ministers Doug Graham and Mike Nixon in defeat on election night, when the Yukon Party was reduced to Official Opposition status by a Liberal majority government.
Prior to running for elected office, Taylor served as Executive Assistant to John Ostashek, Yukon Government Leader and leader of the Yukon Party, before his defeat in the 1996 Yukon election. She was also a researcher and constituency caseworker for the Yukon Party Caucus and a visitor receptionist in the Yukon Department of Tourism.[24]
Taylor, born and raised in Watson Lake, Yukon, holds a Bachelor of Arts in political science from the University of Alberta.
|-| Liberal| Richard Mostyn| align="right"| 455| align="right"| 45.8%| align="right"| +17.1%|-|-| NDP| Stu Clark| align="right"| 106| align="right"| 10.7%| align="right"| -2.2%|-! align=left colspan=3|Total! align=right| 994! align=right| 100.0%! align=right| - |}
|-|-| Liberal| Cully Robinson| align="right"| 209| align="right"| 28.7%| align="right"| -9.9%|-| NDP| Louis Gagnon| align="right"| 94| align="right"| 12.9%| align="right"| +5.1%|-! align=left colspan=3|Total! align=right| 729! align=right| 100.0%! align=right| - |}
|-|-| Liberal| Mike Walton| align="right"| 371| align="right"| 38.6%| align="right"| +0.6%|-| NDP| Rhoda Merkel| align="right"| 75| align="right"| 7.8%| align="right"| -6.1%|-! align=left colspan=3|Total! align=right| 963! align=right| 100.0%! align=right| - |}
|-|-| Liberal| Dennis Schneider| align="right"| 319| align="right"| 38.0%| align="right"| -2.5%|-| NDP| Rachel Grantham| align="right"| 117| align="right"| 13.9%| align="right"| -17.4%|-! align=left colspan=3|Total! align=right| 840! align=right| 100.0%! align=right| - |}
|-| Liberal| Dennis Schneider| align="right"| 621| align="right"| 40.5%| align="right"| +8.4%
| NDP| Dave Sloan| align="right"| 480| align="right"| 31.3%| align="right"| -9.4%
|-! align=left colspan=3|Total! align=right| 1,535! align=right| 100.0%! align=right| - |}