Lloyd Francis
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Cyril Lloyd Francis Template:Post-nominals (March 19, 1920 – January 20, 2007) was a Canadian politician and speaker of the House of Commons.<ref name=OttawaBoy/> A member of the Liberal Party, he represented Carleton and Ottawa West in the House of Commons.
Biography
Following service in the Royal Canadian Air Force during World War II, Francis earned a Master of Arts (MA) and doctorate (Ph.D) in economics, and lectured in the discipline from 1948 to 1951 at the University at Buffalo. He then joined the Department of National Health and Welfare in Ottawa as a senior economist.
In 1956, Lloyd Francis and partner, lawyer Donald Sim, carrying on business as Lynhar Developments, acquired and laid out the Stinson Avenue area of Bells Corners in Nepean. They quickly formed a partnership with William Teron, T.F.S. Lands, to build the houses in Lynwood Village.<ref>"The City Beyond" by Dr. Bruce Elliott, p. 274-280</ref>
The Lynwood Plaza at Bells Corners was built by Francis and Sim's Lynhar Developments and included what would become the landmark Robinson IGA.
Long time Nepean Reeve D. Aubrey Moodie, in his book, "The Spirit of Nepean" described Francis as one of the contributors to the foundation of Nepean.<ref>"The Spirit of Nepean," D. Aubrey Moodie p. 56-57</ref> Moodie explains about the introduction of lot levies, now known as development charges, and how they contributed to the financial stability of Nepean Township. It was the transfer of large sums of money in the form of lot levies, along with Francis and Teron's aggressive development activity that enabled much of Nepean's Parkwood Hills and Bells Corners neighbourhoods to be built. To the pleasure of some and the disdain of others, Mr. Francis was one of a list of individuals credited with the introduction of lot levies as a development finance tool that is relied upon to this day to fund infrastructure commensurate with new residential developments.
In 1958, Francis became President of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada, a union representing civil servants in certain professions. In 1959, he entered municipal politics by being elected alderman on Ottawa City Council. From 1960 to 1963, he served on the city's Board of Control and as Deputy Mayor.
He entered federal politics as a Liberal candidate in the 1962 election but was defeated in the Ottawa-area riding of Carleton. His electoral record was mixed throughout his career and he would only win election on alternate attempts. Accordingly, he served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Carleton from 1963 to 1965 and then for Ottawa West in 1968–1972, 1974–1979 and 1980–1984. In his autobiography, Ottawa Boy, Francis described his anger when, in 1974, Liberal Party insiders tried to "parachute" in an alternate candidate, Byron Hyde, a politically inexperienced outsider, to run against him, to be the Liberal Party candidate for his riding.<ref name=OttawaBoy/>
He served as Chief Government Whip from 1970 to 1971 and then as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Veterans Affairs until he was defeated in the 1972 election. After he returned to Parliament in the 1974 election, he served as Parliamentary Secretary to the President of the Treasury Board from 1975 to 1976.
In 1980, he became Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons. He succeeded Jeanne Sauvé as Speaker on January 15, 1984, when Sauvé became Governor General of Canada.
The Liberal government was defeated in the 1984 election, and Francis lost his seat. His term as Speaker ended when the new House of Commons convened in November of that year.
On the conclusion of his term as Speaker, Francis was appointed to the Queen's Privy Council for Canada. In late 1984, the new Prime Minister of Canada, Brian Mulroney, appointed Francis to the position of Ambassador to Portugal. Francis returned to Ottawa at the conclusion of his appointment in 1987.
He died in January 2007, after suffering from stomach cancer.
The Francis Tapes
In 1985, prior to him leaving to Portugal as Canada's Ambassador, Francis gave a revealing interview in recorded tapes made for the Public Archives of Canada and the Library of Parliament as part of historical archives that he claimed to have thought would be released only 15 or 25 years later.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The tapes revealed alleged sexual harassment and fraud in the House of Commons.
Electoral record
Template:1963 Canadian federal election/Carleton Template:1965 Canadian federal election/Carleton Template:Canadian election result/top |- Template:Canadian party colour |Liberal |Lloyd Francis |align="right"| 23,750 || 52.61 Template:Canadian party colour |Progressive Conservative |Richard A. Bell |align="right"|16,392 || 36.31 Template:Canadian party colour |New Democratic |Ralph Sutherland |align="right"| 5,003 || 11.08 Template:End
Template:Canadian election result/top |- Template:Canadian party colour |Progressive Conservative |Peter Reilly |align="right"| 22,169 Template:Canadian party colour |Liberal |Lloyd Francis |align="right"| 18,423 Template:Canadian party colour |New Democratic |Pauline Jewett |align="right"| 13,498 Template:Canadian party colour |Social Credit |Priscilla Hamelin |align="right"| 245 Template:End
Template:Canadian election result/top |- Template:Canadian party colour |Liberal |Lloyd Francis |align="right"| 23,604 Template:Canadian party colour |Progressive Conservative |Peter Reilly |align="right"| 21,838 Template:Canadian party colour |New Democratic |Doris Shackleton |align="right"| 6,480 Template:Canadian party colour |No affiliation |Lawrence F. Sullivan |align="right"| 432 Template:Canadian party colour |Social Credit |Jacques Lapointe |align="right"|192 Template:Canadian party colour |Communist |Jean Greatbatch |align="right"| 78 Template:Canadian party colour |Marxist–Leninist |Richard Bowen |align="right"| 67 Template:End
Template:Canadian election result/top |- Template:Canadian party colour |Progressive Conservative |Kenneth Binks |align="right"|24,981 Template:Canadian party colour |Liberal |Lloyd Francis |align="right"| 22,985 Template:Canadian party colour |New Democratic |Abby Pollonetsky |align="right"| 7,051 Template:Canadian party colour |Independent |John Turmel |align="right"| 193 Template:End
Template:Canadian election result/top |- Template:Canadian party colour |Liberal |Lloyd Francis |align="right"| 22,460 Template:Canadian party colour |Progressive Conservative |Kenneth Binks |align="right"| 21,940 Template:Canadian party colour |New Democratic |Abby Pollonetsky |align="right"| 5,955 Template:Canadian party colour |Independent |John A. Clark |align="right"| 398 Template:End
Template:Canadian election result/top |- Template:Canadian party colour |Progressive Conservative |David Daubney |align="right"|26,591 Template:Canadian party colour |Liberal |Lloyd Francis |align="right"| 19,314 Template:Canadian party colour |New Democratic |Ross Chapman |align="right"| 8,304 Template:Canadian party colour |Independent |Thérèse Turmel |align="right"|285 Template:End
References
External links
- CBC, Former Ottawa MP, Speaker Lloyd Francis dies, January 22, 2007.
- Ottawa Citizen, 'He taught us the duty of public service', January 22, 2007.
- Biography of Cyril Lloyd Francis from the Library of Parliament.
- Template:Canadian Parliament links
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- 1920 births
- 2007 deaths
- Businesspeople from Ottawa
- Canadian Unitarians
- Liberal Party of Canada MPs
- Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Ontario
- Members of the King's Privy Council for Canada
- Ottawa city councillors
- Speakers of the House of Commons of Canada
- Deaths from stomach cancer in Canada
- University at Buffalo alumni
- Ottawa controllers
- Military personnel from Ottawa
- Ambassadors of Canada to Portugal
- Royal Canadian Air Force personnel of World War II
- Canadian expatriates in the United States
- 20th-century members of the House of Commons of Canada