Stanley Haidasz

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Stanley Haidasz
Senator
In office
1978–1998
Member of Parliament
In office
1962–1978
Preceded by Arthur Maloney
Succeeded by Yuri Shymko
Constituency Parkdale
Member of Parliament
In office
1957–1958
Preceded by Donald Carrick
Succeeded by Edward Lockyer
Constituency Trinity
Personal details
Born (1923-03-04)March 4, 1923
Toronto, Ontario
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Political party Liberal Party of Canada
Profession Cardiologist

Stanley Haidasz, PC, MD (March 4, 1923 – August 6, 2009) was a Canadian politician.

Life and career

Haidasz was born to Polish parents who immigrated to Canada in 1910 from Stanislawów. He studied medicine graduating from the University of Toronto in 1951, and did post-graduate work in cardiology at the University of Chicago.

Haidasz entered politics when he ran in the 1957 election, and became the Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) for the Toronto riding of Trinity. He was defeated in the 1958 election in which John George Diefenbaker led the Progressive Conservative Party to a landslide victory.

Haidasz returned to the Canadian House of Commons in the 1962 election, representing the Toronto riding of Parkdale. He retained his seat through five succeeding elections until 1978 when he became the first Canadian of Polish descent to be appointed to the Canadian Senate.[1]

In 1964, he served as head of Canada's delegation to the World Food Program in Geneva, and as a delegate to the United Nations General Assembly.

He served as parliamentary secretary to a number of ministers in the 1960s. In 1972, he was appointed to the Cabinet as Canada's first Minister of State for multiculturalism and served in that position until 1974.

During his career, Haidasz was instrumental in the passage of Medicare, the Canada Pension Plan and Income Supplement, the Clean Air Act and other legislation. He also initiated the Anti-Smoking Tobacco Bill.[2]

He retired from the Senate in 1998 upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 75.

He was awarded a Commander Cross with Star of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland in 1998.[3]

Books about Stanley Haidasz

References

External links