Robert Bonner (politician) explained

Robert Bonner
Birth Date:10 September 1920
Birth Place:Vancouver, British Columbia
Death Place:Vancouver, British Columbia
Constituency Am1:Cariboo
Assembly1:British Columbia Legislative
Term Start1:29 November 1966
Term End1:22 July 1969
Predecessor1:William C. Speare
Successor1:Alex Fraser
Constituency Am2:Vancouver-Point Grey
Assembly2:British Columbia Legislative
Alongside2:Thomas Audley Bate (1953-1963)
Arthur Laing (1953-1956)
Buda Brown (1956-1962)
Pat McGeer (1962-1966)
Ralph Loffmark (1963-1966)
Term Start2:9 June 1953
Term End2:12 September 1966
Predecessor2:George Clark Miller
Successor2:Garde Gardom
Constituency Am3:Columbia
Assembly3:British Columbia Legislative
Term Start3:24 November 1952
Term End3:9 June 1953
Predecessor3:Richard Orr Newton
Successor3:Richard Orr Newton
Party:Social Credit
Branch:Canadian Army
Serviceyears:1942–1953
Rank:Lieutenant Colonel
Unit:Seaforth Highlanders of Canada
Education:University of British Columbia (BA 1942, LLB 1948)
Commands:University of British Columbia COTC

Lieutenant Colonel Robert William Bonner (10 September 1920  - 12 August 2005) was a Canadian lawyer, politician, and corporate executive. He pursued his career working in the British Columbia government and in B.C.-based companies.

Biography

Bonner was born and raised in Vancouver, and served with the Seaforth Highlanders in Italy in the Second World War. Upon his return to Canada, Bonner took a law degree from the University of British Columbia in 1948, and joined a practice in Vancouver. Active in politics from an early age, Bonner became a supporter and confidant of W.A.C. Bennett, who would go on to lead the Social Credit Party to victory in the 1952 provincial election. To the surprise of many, Bennett appointed the unelected, 32 year-old Bonner as the province's Attorney General - the youngest in B.C.'s history. Bonner would be elected to represent the riding of Vancouver-Point Grey in the provincial election of 1953, which was also the first Social Credit majority government in the province. He would retain the position of Attorney General for the next sixteen years, quickly becoming one of the most powerful ministers and closest advisors to Bennett in the Socreds' long spell of governance.

Bonner's tenure as Attorney General was marked by legal clashes with First Nations tribes over land and resource rights, especially in light of the rapid hydroelectric, mining, and forestry development of the province's hinterland. Perhaps more significantly, from a historical perspective, was the provincial government's conflicts with the Freedomites (Sons of Freedom), an anti-government religious group resident in the Kootenay region of the province. Clashes over public education led to the apprehension en masse of Freedomite children, and their confinement in a government boarding school.

During his time in cabinet, Bonner also served at various times concurrently as Minister of Commercial Transport, Minister of Education and Minister of Industrial Development, Trade and Commerce. In the legislature, Bonner proved capable, serving as Bennett's House Leader. Contemporaries described him as "articulate, urbane, and always well prepared, with a demonstrated air of superiority and a ready laugh."http://www.parl.gc.ca/Infoparl/english/issue.htm?param=104&art=516

Bonner left provincial politics in 1968 to become vice-president of MacMillan Bloedel, a Vancouver-based logging and lumber company. He would later go on to become the firm's president and chief executive officer. Bonner left Mac Blo in 1976 to become chairman of BC Hydro, the provincial crown corporation responsible for producing and supplying hydroelectric power. He retired from that position in 1985.

Bonner died in Vancouver in 2005.

References