Lorne Mayencourt

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Lorne Mayencourt

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Lorne Mayencourt
MLA for Vancouver-Burrard
In office
2001–2008
Preceded by Tim Stevenson
Succeeded by Spencer Chandra Herbert
Personal details
Political party British Columbia Liberal Party
Other political
affiliations
Conservative Party of Canada
Residence Vancouver, British Columbia

Lorne Mayencourt is a Canadian politician, who formerly represented the electoral district of Vancouver-Burrard in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia as a member of the BC Liberal party.

Mayencourt was first elected in the 2001 provincial election, defeating New Democrat opponent Tim Stevenson.

He was previously the founder and, for its first five years, executive director of the Vancouver Friends for Life Society, which supports people living with AIDS, cancer and other life-threatening illnesses.

He is the founder of the BC New Hope Recovery Society and Baldy Hughes Therapeutic Community in North Central BC which supports addicts in a long-term recovery community.

In the 2005 election, conflicting results throughout the night had both Mayencourt and Stevenson declared the victor in Vancouver-Burrard, and the uncertainty continued for several weeks. In the final count of regular ballots, Stevenson was declared the winner by 17 votes; however, when absentee ballots were counted on May 30, Mayencourt was declared the winner by a margin of 18 votes. After a judicial recount, Mayencourt was declared the victor by 11 votes.

He is known for his Private Member's Bill called the Safe Streets Act (2004), which aimed to deter aggressive panhandling. He chaired the provincial Safe Schools Task Force (2003) and introduced the Safe Schools Act (2005) to combat bullying in the school system based on racism, sexism and homophobia. He introduced the Apology Act to facilitate sincere and timely reconciliation between government, business and citizens.

Mayencourt announced that he would not run in the 2009 provincial election, and resigned early to run as the Conservative Party of Canada's candidate in Vancouver Centre for the 2008 general election. He lost to incumbent Liberal MP Hedy Fry.[1]

Mayencourt currently lives in Vancouver, B.C.

Electoral record

B.C. General Election 2005: Vancouver-Burrard
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
     BC Liberal Lorne Mayencourt 12,009 42.16% -5.94
     NDP Tim Stevenson 11,998 42.12% +11.04
     Green Janek Patrick John Kuchmistrz 3,698 12.98% -3.21
     Libertarian John Clarke 388 1.36%
     Work Less Lisa Voldeng 170 0.60%
     Sex Party John Gordon Ince 111 0.39%
     DRBC Ian McLeod 82 0.29%
     Platinum Antonio Francisco Ferreira 27 0.09%
Total 28,483 100.00
B.C. General Election 2001: Vancouver-Burrard
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
     BC Liberal Lorne Mayencourt 11,396 48.11% +10.88 $46,939
     NDP Tim Stevenson 7,359 31.07% -18.63 $45,493
     Green Robbie Mattu 3,826 16.15% +13.52 $1,029
     Marijuana Marc Emery 906 3.82% $394
     Unity Gregory Paul Michael Hartnell 290 1.15%
     Independent Boris Bear 136 0.57% $157
     People's Front Joseph Theriault 40 0.17% $57
     Independent Rhino Helvis 25 0.11% $100
Total Valid Votes 23,688 100.00%
Total Rejected Ballots 123 0.52%
Turnout 23,811 63.67%

References

  1. ^ "Vancouver Centre". Canada Votes 2008 (CBC). http://www.cbc.ca/news/canadavotes/riding/298/candidate.html. Retrieved 2009-11-29. 

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