From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
Chaviva Milada Hošek |
|
In office
1987 – 1990 |
| Preceded by |
Tony Grande |
| Succeeded by |
Tony Rizzo |
|
| Born |
October 6, 1946 (1946-10-06) (age 63)
Czechoslovakia |
| Political party |
Liberal |
| Residence |
Toronto |
| Occupation |
Professor |
Chaviva Milada Hošek OC (born 6 October, 1946) is a Canadian academic, feminist and
former politician.
Background
The child of Holocaust survivors, Hošek was born to a Hungarian Jewish family living in Bohemia and raised in Montreal. She received her
undergraduate degree from McGill University and earned a doctorate in English
literature from Harvard in 1973 (specializing in the
poetry of Walt
Whitman).
She worked as a professor of English Literature at the University of Toronto for
thirteen years. An active feminist, she served as president of the National
Action Committee on the Status of Women from 1984 to 1986. She
later described her time at the NAC as "the harshest political
experience I ever had", claiming that the group was polarized by
internal divisions during this period.[2] Hosek was named
B'nai Brith Woman of the Year in 1984 and
received the YWCA Woman of Distinction Award in 1986 for Community
and Public Service.
Politics
In the 1987 Ontario election,
Hošek sought and won a seat in the Legislative Assembly of
Ontario as the Liberal Member of
Provincial Parliament for the Toronto constituency of Oakwood, defeating Ontario New Democratic
Party incumbent Tony
Grande by 1,331 votes. She was immediately appointed to David Peterson's
cabinet as Minister
of Housing, and embarked on a program to expand social
housing.
Hošek resigned from cabinet on October 1, 1989, due to charges
that she had hired a developer in her department. Hosek had also
attracted controversy by not reappointing popular former Toronto mayor John Sewell to the board of the Metro
Toronto Housing Authority. She was later cleared by the provincial
auditor of any wrongdoing.
The Peterson government was defeated in the 1990 Ontario election,
Hosek lost her riding to Tony Rizzo of the NDP by 2,280 votes.
Later
life
Hošek became director of the Liberal Party of Canada's caucus research bureau in 1990.
Along with Paul
Martin, she co-authored Creating
Opportunity, as the party's campaign platform for the 1993 federal election
was called. After Liberal leader Jean Chrétien became Prime Minister of Canada,
Hosek was appointed Director of Policy and Research in the Prime
Minister's Office, and wrote the Liberal platforms for the 1997 and 2000 federal
elections
In 2001, Hošek left the PMO to become president and CEO of the
Canadian Institute
for Advanced Research.
In 2006, she was made an Officer of the Order of
Canada.[1]
On Thursday, June 25, 2009, Hošek received an honourary degree from York
University.
References
- ^
Order of Canada citation. [1]
External
links