Joseph-Philippe Guay Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Joseph-Philippe Guay
Constituency Mp:St. Boniface
Parliament:Canadian
Predecessor:Roger Teillet
Successor:Jack Hare
Term Start:1968
Term End:1978
Office2:Senator for St. Boniface, Manitoba
Appointed2:Pierre Trudeau
Term Start2:1978
Term End2:1990
Birth Date:4 October 1915
Birth Place:St-Vital, Manitoba
Party:Liberal

Joseph-Philippe Guay, (October 4, 1915  - July 30, 2001) was a Canadian parliamentarian, serving as a member of the Liberal Party.

Born in St. Vital, Manitoba, Guay was an alderman and mayor of Saint-Boniface, Manitoba before turning to federal politics. He won the St. Boniface Liberal nomination in the buildup to the 1968 federal election over the sitting member, cabinet minister Roger-Joseph Teillet. Guay campaigned on the fact that he, unlike Teillet, had supported Pierre Elliott Trudeau on every ballot of the 1968 Liberal Party of Canada leadership convention.[1] He was returned in the general election, and was re-elected in 1972 and 1974.

He held numerous parliamentary functions including: Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Transport (1972–1974), Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Regional Economic Expansion (1974–1975), Chief Government Whip (1975–1977), Minister of State (Multiculturalism) (1977), Minister without Portfolio (1976–1977), and Minister of National Revenue (1977–1978).

In 1978, he was appointed to the Senate representing the senatorial division of St. Boniface, Manitoba. He retired on his 75th birthday in 1990.

In 1957, he was knighted as a member of the Order of Saint Gregory the Great by Pope Pius XII.

Notes and References

  1. The final vote was: Guay 1341, Teillet 1244. See "Liberals' only Prairie MP loses riding nomination", Toronto Star, May 23, 1968, p. 1. The nomination contest is mentioned in Ian Stewart, Just One Vote: Jim Walding's nomination to constitutional defeat, (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press), 2009, p. 9.