Trent Wotherspoon Explained

Trent Wotherspoon
Birth Date:1979 9, mf=yes
Birth Place:Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Residence:Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Assembly2:Saskatchewan Legislative
Constituency Am2:Regina Rosemont
Term Start2:November 7, 2007
Predecessor2:Joanne Crofford
Party:Saskatchewan New Democrat
Profession:Teacher
Office:Leader of the Opposition in Saskatchewan
Termstart:April 12, 2016
Term End:June 20, 2017
Predecessor:Cam Broten
Successor:Nicole Sarauer
Office1:Leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
Interim
Term Start1:April 23, 2016
Term End1:June 20, 2017
Predecessor1:Cam Broten

Trent Wotherspoon is a Canadian politician[1] and former interim leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party (NDP).[2] He was elected to represent the electoral district of Regina Rosemont in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan in the 2007 election, and was re-elected in the 2011 election, and 2016 election. Wotherspoon was a candidate for the party's leadership in 2013. In 2016, the NDP caucus elected Wotherspoon to serve as Leader of the Opposition following the defeat of Cam Broten in the 2016 provincial election and the party's provincial council elected him interim leader.[3]

Early life

Wotherspoon was born in Regina where he lives with his wife Stephanie, a school teacher. Wotherspoon went to university at the University of Regina where he completed a Bachelor of Education degree. While at university, Wotherspoon also took classes in business administration. He also ran a painting company to help cover tuition.[4]

Wotherspoon worked with the Regina Public Schools system where he helped to develop a new adult campus. He also helped implement a new holistic vocational adaptation program for students who displayed severe violent behaviours and lower cognitive abilities, and worked with the Ranch Ehrlo Society to provide addiction and behavioural treatment. Wotherspoon went on to create a youth justice program that helped high risk offenders. Also, he was a member of the Business Improvement District for the City of Regina's Warehouse District.[5]

Political career

Wotherspoon was elected in November 2007 and over the term became the opposition critic for Finance, SaskPower and SaskEnergy, as well as Chair of the Public Accounts committee, and committee member for Crown and Central Agencies and Saskatchewan's Commonwealth Parliamentary Association. Following the 2011 election Wotherspoon continued on as the critic for Finance and SaskPower and became the new critic for Education.

2013 NDP leadership campaign

On September 14, 2012, Wotherspoon announced his candidacy for the leadership of the Saskatchewan NDP.[6] [7] He was one of three declared candidates including MLA Cam Broten and doctor Ryan Meili. A fourth candidate, economist Erin Weir, withdrew from the race before the leadership vote.[8] At the leadership convention, Wotherspoon received the fewest votes on the first ballot and withdrew. Broten won on the second ballot by a narrow margin.[9]

Interim leader

Wotherspoon was interim leader of the NDP, and leader of the opposition in the Saskatchewan legislature, from 2016 until June 2017 when he announced his resignation in order to consider seeking the permanent leadership of the party in the March 3, 2018 leadership election.[10] MLA Ryan Meili was elected party leader with 55% of the vote in March 2018.[11] Wotherspoon was re-elected in the 2020 general election.

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As of June 22, 2024, he chairs the Public Accounts Committee of the Legislature and serves as the Official Opposition critic for Finance, SaskTel, Agriculture, the Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation, Highways and Infrastructure, the Global Transportation Hub and the Regina Bypass, SaskBuilds and Procurement, and Affordability.

Electoral record

Overview

YearTypeRidingPartyVotes for WotherspoonResultSwing
Total%.
2007Provincial
general
Regina
Rosemont
New
Democratic
4,02653.45%1stN/AHold
20113,56754.85%1st+1.40%Hold
20163,99453.95%1st−0.90%Hold
20204,10257.86%1st+3.91%Hold

Provincial constituency elections

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2013-03-08. A look at Trent Wotherspoon, running for leader of the Saskatchewan NDP. 2020-06-12. HuffPost Canada. en.
  2. Web site: Trent Wotherspoon becomes interim leader of Saskatchewan NDP CBC News.
  3. Web site: NDP's Trent Wotherspoon elected leader of the Opposition in legislature. 2020-06-12. Regina Leader Post. en-CA.
  4. |http://www.trent4leader.ca/about|Trent4Leader| access-date = 2012-11-29
  5. |Web site: Trent Wotherspoon « Saskatchewan NDP . 2012-10-11 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121001052845/http://saskndp.ca/mlas/trent-wotherspoon . 2012-10-01 . |Saskatchewan NDP| access-date = 2012-11-29
  6. News: Wotherspoon, Meili declare candidacy . Couture . Joe . . A4 . September 15, 2012 . December 30, 2023 . newspapers.com.
  7. News: Trent Wotherspoon running for NDP leadership . Book . Patrick . News Talk 980 CJME . . September 15, 2012 . 2012-10-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121101182008/http://cjme.com/story/trent-wotherspoon-running-ndp-leadership/75190 . 2012-11-01 . dead .
  8. News: Erin Weir drops out of Saskatchewan NDP race. CBC News. 2013-02-20. 2018-05-31.
  9. Web site: Broten narrowly defeats Meili to become leader of Saskatchewan NDP. CBC News. 2013-03-09. 2018-05-31.
  10. Web site: Trent Wotherspoon resigning as NDP interim leader, considering run for permanent party leadership CBC News.
  11. News: CBC. 2018-03-03. 'Winds of change:' Ryan Meili wins Sask. NDP leadership. CBC News. 2020-11-18.