Corky Evans
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Corky Evans (born January 2, 1948, in Berkeley, California, U.S.A.) is a prominent provincial politician in British Columbia, Canada. He twice ran for the leadership the New Democratic Party of British Columbia, placing second both times. In both cases, the party formed the government of BC and its leader became Premier of British Columbia. He has served in several cabinet ministries.
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[edit] Early life and career
While his birth certificate recorded his name as Conrad St. George Evans, he insists Corky Evans is his correct name.
Born in California the son of a prominent defense attorney and a graduate of Palo Verde High School in Tucson, Arizona, he moved to British Columbia in 1969 with his wife and two daughters. Their son was born soon after. Before his election to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, Evans worked as a stevedore, logger, tree-planter, heavy equipment operator, first aid attendant, and highways surveyor. By the mid 1970s, Evans had settled in the Kootenay region of southern British Columbia, and became active in local environmental and land use initiatives, particularly in developing the Slocan Valley Forest Management Project, which aimed to control logging and protect watersheds.
In 1975, he became a Canadian citizen and he joined the New Democratic Party. He was elected to the Central Kootenay Regional District government, serving three consecutive terms as director and hospital board member.
[edit] In provincial politics
After one unsuccessful run for the provincial legislature for the BC NDP, he was elected Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) for Nelson-Creston in the 1991 provincial election. He served as parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Forests and chair of the legislature's Select Standing Committee on Forests, Mines and Petroleum Resources.
His first run in a BC NDP leadership convention came in 1996, when Glen Clark was very widely assumed to be a shoo-in for the leadership. Evans' folksy candidacy earned him a second-place finish, and he encouraged his supporters to rally around Clark.
In Clark's cabinet, Evans became Minister of Transportation and Highways from February 1996 to June 1996. Evans and the Clark NDP government were re-elected in the 1996 general election on May 28. In June, Evans was named Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food; fisheries was spun off into a separate portfolio in February 1998.
Evans retained his position as Minister of Agriculture and Food when Dan Miller served as premier on an interim basis in 1999–2000.
In the leadership convention of February 20, 2000, Evans placed a strong second to Ujjal Dosanjh, who had been frontrunner throughout the race. Dosanjh returned Fisheries, a high-profile responsibility at the time, to Evans' portfolio. Evans had campaigned for a Ministry of Rural Development, and Dosanjh additionally named him Minister Responsible for Rural Development and empowered him to organize such a ministry.
In a cabinet shuffle of November 1, 2000, Evans left his previous portfolios to become Minister of Health and Minister Responsible for Seniors.
[edit] Defeat and return
Evans was defeated in his riding in the 2001 provincial election, when all but two NDP candidates were defeated.
He was approached to run in the 2003 BC NDP leadership convention, but declined, citing his commitment to his new job with a local community service organization.
He returned to politics as the MLA for Nelson-Creston on May 17, 2005 when he won his riding in the provincial election.
[edit] Style
Evans is noted for his folksy and homespun yet politically sophisticated oratory. With this, with his origins and background, and indeed given his lanky appearance, he has been compared to Abraham Lincoln. His leadership runs, against frontrunning candidates associated with the party's establishment, endeared him to a grassroots base of NDP supporters.
He is missing one finger.
[edit] External links
- corkyevans.com, 2005 campaign site
- Jim Hume column (Canoe.ca, October 13, 1999)
- Biography (36th Parliament of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia)