Donald Orchard
Donald Orchard (born
April 11,
1946) is a
politician in
Manitoba,
Canada. He was a member of the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from
1977 to
1995, and was a
cabinet minister in the
Progressive Conservative governments of
Sterling Lyon and
Gary Filmon.
Orchard was born in
Miami, Manitoba, and was educated at the
University of Manitoba. He worked as a farmer after graduation, becoming active in the Miami Agricultural Society and the local
Masonic organization.
He was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the
provincial election of 1977, in the safe Conservative seat of
Pembina. He was re-elected in this riding in the elections of
1981,
1986,
1988 and
1990, each time by a comfortable margin.
The Progressive Conservatives won the
1977 election under Sterling Lyon, and Orchard was appointed
Minister of Highways and Transport on
November 15,
1979. He was also appointed Chairman of the
Provisional Land Use Committee on
January 1,
1980, and was given ministerial responsibility for
Manitoba Data Services on
January 16,
1981. The
social-democratic New Democratic Party won the
1981 election, and Orchard resigned from cabinet on
November 30,
1981.
The Progressive Conservatives won a minority government in
1988 under
Gary Filmon, and Orchard was appointed
Minister of Health on
May 9 of that year (despite the fact that he attempted to remove Filmon as party leader in
1986). He held this portfolio until
September 10,
1993, when he was appointed
Minister of Energy and Mines with responsibility for the
Manitoba Hydro Act. He did not seek re-election in
1995, and resigned from cabinet on
March 20 of that year.
As Health Minister, Orchard banned Medicare coverage from
Henry Morgentaler's private
abortion clinic. This decision provoked criticism from both sides of the abortion debate; some wanted the clinic closed entirely, while others wanted full funding.
Orchard was a rural populist, on the right-wing of the Progressive Conservative Party. In
2003, he supported cooperation between the
Canadian Alliance with the
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada in the
Portageā"Lisgar riding, before the two parties were formally merged.