Aideen Nicholson
Aideen Nicholson was an Irish-born social worker and Canadian politician.
Background
Aideen Nicholson was born in Dublin, Ireland. She was educated at Trinity College Dublin, and later at the London School of Economics.A social worker by profession, Nicholson worked at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, taught at George Brown College and the University of Toronto and also worked at Ontario Correctional Services and as a founding member of the Ontario Commission on the Status of Women.
Politics
She entered politics in the 1972 election as the Liberal candidate in Toronto electoral district of Trinity against incumbent MP Paul Hellyer, a prominent veteran MP and a former Liberal minister who contested the party leadership in 1968 and was briefly Prime Minister Trudeau's deputy. Nicholson missed ousting Hellyer, who was running as a Progressive Conservative for the first time, by less than 200 votes out of over twenty thousands. She prevailed in the 1974 federal election however, defeating Hellyer and was re-elected three times. She served as parliamentary secretary for several years:- Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs
- Parliamentary Secretary to the Postmaster General
- Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs
- Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Supply and Services
Due to redistribution, her district merged with neighbouring Spadina prior to the 1988 election, and she opted to seek the Liberal nomination in St. Paul's riding, which was held by Progressive Conservative cabinet minister Barbara McDougall. The nomination was contested by none other than her old foe Paul Hellyer, who had rejoined the Liberals in 1982. Nicholson defeated Hellyer for the Liberal nomination, but lost to McDougall in the general election.
Later life
She subsequently was appointed to the Immigration Review Board.In 2003, Nicholson was the recipient of the Distinguished Service Award by the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians.
Nicholson was residing in Elliot Lake, Ontario. She died on May 31, 2019.