(Redirected from Tom Nevakshonoff)'Thomas Nevakshonoff' (born
December 22,
1958 in
Winnipeg) is a politician in
Manitoba,
Canada. He is currently a member of the
Manitoba legislature.
Nevakshonoff moved with his parents to
Poplarfield in
1959. He moved to
Fisher Branch in
1972, and graduated from the
Fisher Branch Collegiate Institute in
1977. He then spent eighteen years working in Canada's oilfields.
In
1987, Nevakshonoff graduated from
Carleton University in
Ottawa with a
Bachelor of Arts degree in East European Studies (he himself is from a
Doukhobor family that moved to Canada in
1899). He travelled to
Russia in
1992 for a language immersion program; the following year, he was commissioned by the Canadian Embassy in Russia to write their annual report on the oil sector.
Nevakshonoff is President of
Aberdeen House, a family-owned lodge located just south of
Flin Flon.
Nevakshonoff was elected to the
Manitoba legislature as a
New Democrat in the
provincial election of 1999, defeating
Progressive Conservative Betty Green by 3809 votes to 3260 in the riding of
Interlake. This election was notable for an effort by the local Tory campaign to spread false information about Nevakshonoff's past.
The controversy centred around Nevakshonoff's criminal record. During the 1970s (when he was still a teenager), Nevakshonoff had twice been charged with impaired driving, as well as less serious offenses. He was also charged with drug possession in
1979 when the police discovered
marijuana at a party in his parent's house (this charge were subsequently dropped). During the 1999 campaign, a document was issued which accused Nevakshonoff of having a more extensive record of arrests -- claiming that he had served jail time for a break and enter in the 1970s, and that he was involved in either a drinking or
drug-related crime in
1996. In fact, he had served one hour of jail time in the 1970s for arriving late to a court appearance, and had been fined in 1996 for not wearing a seatbelt and failing to renew his driver's license.
Many (including former
Premier Edward Schreyer) suspected that the Progressive Conservatives were behind the accusatory document in question. Despite initial denials, Tory organizer
Heather Campbell-Dewar pled guilty to defaming Nevakshonoff's character in
2001.
In
2003, he supported
Bill Blaikie's campaign to become leader of the federal
New Democratic Party.
Nevakshonoff was re-elected in the
2003 election, defeating Betty Green again by a wider margin. He was returned again in the
2007 election.