Mac Makarchuk Explained

Mac Makarchuk
Parliament:Ontario Provincial
Term Start:1975
Term End:1981
Predecessor:Dick Beckett
Successor:Phil Gillies
Term Start1:1967
Term End1:1971
Predecessor1:George Gordon
Successor1:Dick Beckett
Riding:Brantford
Birth Date:1 November 1929
Birth Place:Stenen, Saskatchewan
Death Place:Barrie, Ontario
Residence:Brantford, Ontario
Profession:Journalist

Mitro "Mac" Makarchuk (November 1, 1929 – July 24, 2021) was a Canadian politician and journalist. He was an Ontario New Democratic Party Member of Provincial Parliament for Brantford from 1967 to 1971 and again from 1975 to 1981.[1]

Early life

Makarchuk was born in Saskatchewan in 1929.[2] In 1959, as a first year student at the University of Toronto, Makarchuk offered to underwrite a Canadian intercollegiate hockey championship between the University of Toronto Varsity Blues men's ice hockey team and University of Saskatchewan Huskies as there was no national playoff between eastern and western Canadian regional hockey champions. The University of Saskatchewan accepted the offer but it was rejected by the University of Toronto.[3] [4] A national university hockey championship, the University Cup was ultimately established in 1963. He then moved to Ontario and worked as a journalist for the Brantford Expositor.

Politics

He was the New Democratic Party of Canada's candidate in the 1965 federal election in the riding of Brantford but was defeated, coming in third place.[5] He was nominated to be the provincial party's candidate in the 1967 provincial election and sought a leave of absence from the Expositor but was refused and then fired.[6] [7]

He was elected to the provincial riding of Brantford to the Ontario legislature in 1967.[8] He served a term before being defeated in 1971 by Progressive Conservative Dick Beckett.[9] He was then elected to Brantford city council as an alderman in 1972.

He returned to the legislature in the 1975, this time defeating Beckett.[10] He was re-elected in the 1977 provincial election.[11] He lost his seat in 1981 to PC candidate Phil Gillies.[12] [13]

Makarchuk returned to Brantford City Council by winning a seat in the 1982 municipal election, serving for a three-year term as councillor for ward 4 before retiring from politics in 1985.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Former Brantford politician was 'one of a kind' . The Expositor . August 20, 2021.
  2. Web site: Guide Parlementaire Canadien. 1971.
  3. News: Varsity Playoff: Saskatoon Interested . Saskatoon Star-Phoenix . February 2, 1959.
  4. News: Huskies Receiving New Trophy: Dominion Honors Claimed . Saskatoon Star-Phoenix . March 13, 1959.
  5. News: Results in political ridings across the nation in Canada's federal election . The Globe and Mail . November 9, 1965 . 10.
  6. Book: MacDonald, Donald C. . The Happy Warrior: Political Memoirs . 1998 . Dundurn Press . Toronto. 9781550023077 .
  7. Web site: Constituency level politics: A case study of the Co-operative Federation and New Democratic Party in Brantford, Ontario . PDF . Walter John Joseph Szmigielski . 1977 . McMaster University . Hamilton, Ontario.
  8. News: Canadian Press . Tories win, but... . The Windsor Star . October 18, 1967 . Windsor, Ontario . B2 . March 30, 2014.
  9. News: Riding-by-riding returns in provincial election . The Globe and Mail . October 23, 1971 . 10.
  10. News: Table of vote results for all Ontario ridings . The Globe and Mail . September 19, 1975 . C12.
  11. News: Ontario provincial election results riding by riding . The Globe and Mail . June 10, 1977 . D9.
  12. Book: Marunchak, Mykhaĭlo H. . The Ukrainian Canadians: a history . Ukrainian Academy of Arts and Sciences . Canada . 1982.
  13. News: Canadian Press . Winds of change, sea of security . The Windsor Star . March 20, 1981 . Windsor, Ontario . 22 . April 1, 2014.