Marie Bountrogianni
Marie Bountrogianni BA, MEd (born
December 10,
1956) is a politician in
Ontario,
Canada. She is currently a member of the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario, and is a
cabinet minister in the government of
Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty.
Bountrogianni was born in
Hamilton, Ontario, the daughter of
Greek immigrants. She received a
Bachelor of Arts degree from the
University of Waterloo in 1979, a
Master of Education degree from the
University of Toronto in 1980, and a
Doctor of Education degree from the latter institution in 1983. She became a registered
psychologist in 1985, and was employed in psychological work at the
Toronto Board of Education from 1984 to 1988. From 1989 to 1999, she was Chief Psychologist of the
Hamilton Board of Education. Bountrogianni also served as an Assistant Professor at
Sir Wilfrid Laurier University from 1985 to 1987, and
McMaster University from 1992 to 1999, and was the Vice-Chair of
St. Peter's Hospital in Hamilton from 1995 to 1999. In 1997, she was hired by the
European Union to evaluate proposals for graduate school funding. Locally, she has also served as an honorary co-Chair of
Hamilton & Bay AIDSwalk and
Grace Haven Capital Campaign.
Bountrogianni first ran for the Ontario legislature in the
provincial election of 1995, as a Liberal candidate in the riding of
Hamilton Mountain. She finished ahead of incumbent
New Democrat Brian Charlton, but 1028 votes behind the winner,
Progressive Conservative Trevor Pettit.
Bountrogianni ran against Pettit again in the
1999 provincial election. There was some uncertainty in the riding as to whether Bountrogianni or NDP candidate
Chris Charlton (wife of Brian) would have a better chance of defeating Pettit, and some groups (including the
Ontario Nurses Association) recommended voting NDP as a strategic choice. As it happened, Bountrogianni was able to defeat Pettit by over 2500 votes, with Charlton finishing third. The Progressive Conservatives won the election, and Bountrogianni became the opposition critic for Colleges and Universities as well as Women's Issues. In 2002, she was named Woman of the Year in Politics by the
Hamilton Status of Women Committee.
Bountrogianni was easily re-elected in the
Ontario general election of 2003, in which the Liberals won a majority. On
October 23,
2003, she was named
Minister of Children's Services and
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration. In March 2004, the former ministry was renamed
Children Youth Services. Her appointment was regarded favourably by childcare advocates in the province.
In October 2004, Bountrogianni introduced a plan to make all public and private buildings in the province wheelchair-accessible by 2025.
After a cabinet shuffle on
June 29,
2005, Bountrogianni was named
Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and
Minister for Democratic Renewal.