'James Collus McCrae' (born
September 19,
1948) is a
politician in
Manitoba,
Canada. He served as a member of the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from
1986 to
1999, representing the
Progressive Conservative Party. From
1988 to
1999, McCrae was a
cabinet minister in the government of
Premier Gary Filmon.
McCrae was born in
Vancouver,
British Columbia. He was educated at
Brandon High School in
Brandon, Manitoba and the
Bryan College of Court Reporting in
Los Angeles,
California. He served as a court reporter for a number of years, and was a
Hansard reporter for the
Canadian House of Commons from
1975 to
1982. In
1983, McCrae was elected as a Brandon municipal councillor.
Provincial Politics
McCrae was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the
1986 provincial election, defeating
New Democratic Party candidate
Arnold Gambo by 1409 votes in the riding of
Brandon West. The NDP under
Howard Pawley narrowly won the election, and McCrae joined 25 other Progressive Conservatives in the opposition.
In
1988, the Pawley government was brought down by disgruntled NDP backbencher
Jim Walding. The Progressive Conservatives won a minority government in
the election that followed; McCrae was re-elected over
Liberal candidate
John Worley by 1421 votes, with the NDP falling to third place. On
May 9,
1988, McCrae was appointed
Attorney-General (renamed
Minister of Justice and Attorney-General) in
1990,
Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs and
Minister of Cooperative Development, with responsibility for
Constitutional Affairs and the
Liquor Control Act. On
April 21,
1989, he was relieved of all his ministries and responsibilities except for the primary portfolio of Attorney-General.
McCrae was easily re-elected in the
1990 provincial election. He was kept in the Justice portfolio and once again given responsibility for constitutional affairs and the Liquor Control Act, as well as
Corrections and most of
The Corrections Act. As Justice Minister, McCrae was responsible for implementing Canada's first administrative license suspension program for impaired drivers. On constitutional matters, he declared that Manitoba would assist in bringing about aboriginal self-government.
Following a cabinet shuffle on
September 10,
1993, McCrae was named as Manitoba's
Minister of Health. He was again re-elected without difficulty in the
provincial election of 1995. During his time as Health Minister, McCrae made the controversial decision to shut down the emergency rooms in
Winnipeg's community hospitals in favour of more centralized E.R. services.
A further cabinet shuffle on
January 6,
1997 made McCrae
Minister of the Environment and Government
House Leader, with responsibility for the
Manitoba Public Insurance Corporation Act. As Environment Minister, McCrae was criticized by the
Sierra Club for refusing to bring in plans to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
In the final cabinet shuffle of Filmon's government on
February 5,
1999, he was named
Minister of Education and Training.
Filmon's Conservatives were defeated by the New Democratic Party under
Gary Doer in the
1999 provincial election. Notwithstanding his long service in government, McCrae lost Brandon West by 352 votes to
Scott Smith of the NDP.
After Provincial Politics
McCrae ran for
Mayor of Brandon in
2002, but lost to
Dave Burgess. His campaign was hindered by local opposition to some of the decisions he had made while in government. He did not seek re-election to the provincial legislature in
2003.
He currently makes his living as a
Real Estate agent and was re-elected to Brandon city council in October 2006 after a 20 year hiatus. He also wrote a book in
2006, ''Dancing Winds'', a romance set during the second World War at a concentration camp (
[1]).