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Aideen Nicholson

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Aideen Nicholson (born April 29 1927) is a former Canadian politician. Nicholson was born in Dublin, Ireland. She was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and later at the London School of Economics. A social worker by profiession, Nicholson worked at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, taught at George Brown Community College and the University of Toronto and also worked at Ontario Correctional Services and as a founding member of the Ontario Commission on the Status of Women. She entered politics in the 1974 federal election, defeating Paul Hellyer in the riding of Trinity in Toronto and was re-elected three times as a Liberal. She served as parliamentary secretary for several years and was on the Liberal front bench after the party entered the opposition as a result of the 1984 federal election. She served as Chair of the Public Accounts Committee from 1984 through 1987. Due to redistribution, her riding disappeared prior to the 1988 election, and she decided to seek the Liberal nomination in St. Paul's riding, which was held by Progressive Conservative cabinet minister Barbara McDougall. The nomination was contested by Paul Hellyer, whom Nicholson had defeated when he ran as a Tory in 1974 but who had rejoined the Liberals in 1982. Nicholson defeated Hellyer for the Liberal nomination, but was unable to defeat McDougall in the general election. She subsequently was appointed to the Immigration Review Board[1] In 2003, Nicholson was the recipient of the Distinguished Service Award by the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians[2].

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Aideen Nicholson from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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