Term Start1: | October 25, 1993 |
Term End1: | June 28, 2004 |
Predecessor1: | Gerald Merrithew |
Successor1: | Paul Zed |
Riding1: | Saint John |
Birth Name: | Elsie Eleanore Fairweather |
Birth Date: | 20 April 1932 |
Birth Place: | Shediac, New Brunswick, Canada |
Death Place: | Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada |
Party: | Conservative (2003-2016) |
Otherparty: | Progressive Conservative (1993–2003) |
Residence: | Saint John, New Brunswick |
Office2: | Interim Leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada |
Term Start2: | April 2, 1998 |
Term End2: | November 14, 1998 |
Predecessor2: | Jean Charest |
Successor2: | Joe Clark |
Order3: | 72nd |
Office3: | Mayor of Saint John, New Brunswick |
Term Start3: | 1983 |
Term End3: | 1993 |
Predecessor3: | Bob Lockhart |
Successor3: | Thomas J. Higgins |
Elsie Eleanore Wayne (née Fairweather; April 20, 1932 – August 23, 2016) was a Canadian politician who served as a Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for Saint John from 1993 to 2004. She was born in Shediac, New Brunswick.
In 1977, she was elected to the Saint John municipal council. In 1983, she became the first female mayor of Saint John, and became extremely popular in the city.
In the 1993 federal election, she ran as the governing Progressive Conservative Party's candidate in the riding of Saint John. In this election, the Tories suffered the worst ever defeat for a governing party at the federal level in Canada. Wayne was one of only two Tories elected nationwide, the other being Jean Charest; Charest won his third term at Sherbrooke in 1993. She was also the only non-Liberal elected in Atlantic Canada that year. She was elected by 4,000 votes, but never faced another contest nearly that close.
In 1998, when Charest resigned the leadership of the PC party to become leader of the Quebec Liberal Party, Wayne was appointed the PC party's interim leader, a post she held until former Prime Minister Joe Clark was elected party leader later that year.
She supported the merger of the Progressive Conservatives (led by Peter MacKay) and the Canadian Alliance (led by Stephen Harper) in 2003.
Wayne announced her retirement from politics on February 16, 2004[1] and did not run for re-election in the 2004 election to the House of Commons of Canada.
Politically, she was known as being socially conservative, vehemently opposing same-sex marriage.[2] [3] She was also against abortion rights, decriminalization of marijuana, and Viagra for war veterans.[4] [5]
Fiscally, Wayne was a strong believer in Canada's social safety net and the welfare state, which was typical for most Tories from Atlantic Canada. She was also among Canada's most vocal monarchists.
Wayne considered a run for her old seat in the 2006 election,[6] but decided against a comeback.[7] She did, however, serve as chairwoman of the Conservative campaign in Atlantic Canada.
She was married to Richard Wayne, with whom she had two sons, Daniel and Stephen. In November 2009, she suffered a stroke.[8] She was released from hospital in February 2010.[9] She died on August 23, 2016, at her home in Saint John.[10]