Denis Rocan
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Denis Rocan (born February 14, 1949) is a former politician from Manitoba, Canada. He was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1986 to 2007, and served as speaker of the assembly from 1988 to 1995. Rocan was a member of the Progressive Conservative Party, but became an independent in 2007.<ref name="members">Template:Cite web</ref>
Life
Rocan was born to a French-Canadian family in Somerset, Manitoba and was raised in north-end Winnipeg.<ref name="revparl">Template:Cite journal</ref> He is also Métis by background<ref name="honour" /> and a direct descendant of Jean-Baptiste Lagimodière and Marie-Anne Gaboury, the maternal grandparents of Louis Riel. He was educated at Sacré-Coeur in Winnipeg, Somerset Collegiate and Otterburne College. He is fluently bilingual in English and French. Rocan worked as a farmer before entering political life, and also operated a building and moving company and a grain business.<ref name="revparl" /> He is a Shriner and a freemason, as well as a member of the Royal Canadian Legion.
He was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the 1986 provincial election, winning the rural, southern constituency of Turtle Mountain.<ref name="members"/> Rural seats in southern Manitoba are generally considered safe for the Progressive Conservative party, and Rocan was elected by more than 2,000 votes over his nearest opponent.<ref name=vote2007/> The New Democratic Party won the election, and Rocan served as a member of the opposition.
Rocan was re-elected over Liberal candidate Ross McMillan in the 1988 election, though his majority was cut to about 600 votes.<ref name=vote2007>Template:Cite news</ref> The Progressive Conservatives emerged from this election with a minority government, and Rocan was appointed as speaker of the assembly by premier Gary Filmon on July 21, 1988.<ref name="members"/> He was the first Franco-Manitoban to serve as speaker for the provincial assembly.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Support for the Liberal Party declined in the 1990 provincial election, and Rocan was easily re-elected in the redistributed constituency of Gladstone. He won the constituency a second time in the 1995 election, but was not re-appointed as speaker and served for the next four years as a backbench supporter of Filmon's government.<ref name="members"/> Rocan was respected by all parties in the legislature, and his tenure as speaker was free of the controversies over partisanship which plagued his successor, Louise Dacquay.
Further redistribution brought Rocan into the riding of Carman for the 1999 provincial election. He was easily returned, and was re-elected again in the 2003 election.<ref name="members"/> The Progressive Conservatives lost both elections to the New Democratic Party, and Rocan served as a member of the opposition. A former smoker, he supported premier Gary Doer's efforts to ban public smoking in 2003.<ref name=honour/>
Rocan supported his friend Reg Alcock in the federal elections of 2000 and 2004, even though Alcock was a Liberal.<ref name=honour>Template:Cite news</ref> Alcock won his re-election bids in Winnipeg South in those years.
On November 16, 2006, Rocan lost the Carman Conservative nomination to Blaine Pedersen. On April 18, 2007, Rocan was removed from the Conservative caucus for supporting the NDP budget, which his party opposed.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He considered running as an independent candidate in the 2007 election, but declined.
Electoral record
Template:2003 Manitoba general election/Carman
References
External links
- 1949 births
- Living people
- First Nations politicians
- Franco-Manitoban people
- Métis politicians
- Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba
- Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba MLAs
- People from Pembina Valley Region, Manitoba
- 20th-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba
- Canadian Métis people
- 21st-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba
- Politicians affected by a party expulsion process