Arnold Peters
William Arnold Peters (
May 14,
1922-
September 17,
1996) was a
Canadian politician. He represented the
riding of
Timiskaming in the
Canadian House of Commons from 1957 to 1980. He was originally elected as a member of the
Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, which became the
New Democratic Party in 1961.
Peters, a miner and
union organizer, had been in the
Royal Canadian Air Force during
World War II.
In Parliament, Peters and his caucus colleague
Frank Howard were responsible for reforming Canada's divorce laws. In many provinces, divorce proceedings once had to be presented to Parliament for approval; Peters and Howard tried to show the ridiculousness of this by reading each divorce petition into the Commons record in great detail. Peters was also active in
prison reform, and regularly lobbied for fairer treatment of non-unionized government employees.
In the
1980 election, Peters was defeated by
Liberal candidate
Bruce Lonsdale. Lonsdale died in office just two years later; Peters ran again in the resulting
by-election, but was not re-elected.
On
September 19,
1996, two days after his death, tributes to Peters were delivered in the House of Commons by
Bill Blaikie,
Diane Marleau and
Ed Harper.