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11 Facts About Louise Dacquay

1.

Louise Dacquay was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1990 to 2003, and served as speaker of the assembly from 1995 to 1999.

2.

Louise Dacquay is a certified business education teacher, and worked as an educator for seventeen years, mostly in the Fort Garry School Division of Winnipeg.

3.

Louise Dacquay was a regional organizer for the Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba from 1984 to 1986, and an executive director of the party from 1987 to 1989.

4.

Louise Dacquay won the seat from veteran councillor Evelyne Reese in 1986, but lost it to Reese three years later.

5.

Louise Dacquay was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the 1990 provincial election, defeating incumbent Liberal Herold Driedger by forty-seven votes in the south-end Winnipeg constituency of Seine River.

6.

Louise Dacquay was named deputy speaker of the assembly on October 11,1990, and held this position for the next four and a half years.

7.

Louise Dacquay was re-elected by an increased margin in the 1995 provincial election, and was appointed speaker of the assembly by premier Gary Filmon on May 23,1995.

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8.

Louise Dacquay is generally regarded, along with Myrna Phillips of the NDP, as one of the weakest and most partisan Speakers in recent history.

9.

The Progressive Conservatives were defeated in the provincial election of 1999, though Louise Dacquay was personally re-elected in Seine River.

10.

Louise Dacquay served as opposition critic for culture, heritage and tourism in the legislative session which followed.

11.

The NDP campaign targeted Seine River in the 2003 election, and Louise Dacquay lost her constituency to NDP candidate Theresa Oswald by a margin of 4,314 votes to 3,582.