George Braden | |
Order: | 2nd |
Office: | Premier of the Northwest Territories |
1Blankname: | Commissioner |
1Namedata: | John Havelock Parker |
Term Start: | June 16, 1980 |
Term End: | January 12, 1984 |
Predecessor: | Frederick Haultain |
Successor: | Richard Nerysoo |
Assembly2: | Northwest Territories Legislative |
Constituency Am2: | Yellowknife North |
Term Start2: | October 1, 1979 |
Term End2: | November 21, 1983 |
Predecessor2: | Dave Nickerson |
Successor2: | Michael Ballantyne |
Birth Date: | November 4, 1949 |
Birth Place: | Rosthern, Saskatchewan, Canada |
Residence: | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
Death Place: | Nepean, Ontario, Canada |
Party: | Independent |
Occupation: | Politician |
George Braden (November 4, 1949 – May 25, 2015) was a Canadian politician from the Northwest Territories, Canada. Elected as "Government Leader", Braden would retroactively become the second premier of the Northwest Territories, after a motion was passed in 1994 to change the official title.[1]
Prior to seeking election as member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories, Braden worked extensively with Charles "Bud" Drury, a former federal cabinet minister, who was assigned to look at further constitutional development in the Northwest Territories.
Appointed to the position of Deputy Minister for the Northwest Territories, Braden worked from Ottawa, Ontario with Walter Slipchenko (Inter-governmental Policy Analyst). Braden was first elected to the NWT Legislative Assembly in 1979. At that time the Commissioner of the Northwest Territories, appointed by the Government of Canada, was also the head of the Government of the NWT. In 1980, for the first time, the Legislative Assembly elected the Government Leader, selecting Braden, who served until 1984.[2] Braden was the second person to hold the title as Frederick Haultain had been appointed to the position in 1897.[3]
Some of the changes implemented by Braden allowed for additional representation in the legislative council, the removal of the appointed commissioner and deputy commissioner from the executive council and for the allowance of control of territorial affairs to elected members.
In 2009, Braden accepted the position of Policy Analyst for Dennis Patterson, who was, earlier the same year, appointed to the Canadian Senate for Nunavut.
Braden was the owner and CEO of his own company in Ottawa, Ontario from 1994.[4] Having met in 1989, Braden married Lise Beaudry in August 1998. As of 2009 they lived in Barrhaven, Ontario. He was diagnosed with gastric cancer on March 7, 2015, at the age of 65 years. He died at home with Lise on May 25, 2015.