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Brian Mulroney was born
on March 20, 1939 in Baie-Comeau,
Quebec. Mulroney attended a Catholic
High School in New Brunswick and then
entered St Francis Xavier University in
Nova Scotia where he studied
several subjects before drawn to
Political Science which he graduated
with Honours in. He then took his Law
degree at Dalhousie University and then
due to illness restarted that degree at
Laval University in Quebec City. After
graduation he was hired by Howard, Cate,
Ogilvy, after finally passing the Bar
exam on his third attempt, and
settled in Montreal.
While in University
Mulroney had joined the Conservative
Party and campaigned for the local
Conservative Candidate in the 1956
provincial election which were led by
Robert Stanfield who won the election.
Mulroney was swept up by party politics
and while attending the 1956
Conservative Leadership Convention,
became a staunch supporter of John
Diefenbaker. He also developed many
connections in the party, such as Ted
Rogers, which were to help in in later
years. he then helped with the 1958
Federal election which brought
Diefenbaker to power. While in Quebec
City he was very active in the
Conservative youth wing whose leader at
the time was Joe Clark.
Mulroney practiced law in
the field of labour relations but
continued to work hard and intimately in
the Conservative Party. As Diefenbaker's
leadership came increasingly under
pressure, Mulroney joined the Dalton
Camp move to oust him and at the 1967
leadership convention he backed Davie
Fulton from B.C.. When Fulton was
eliminated from the race, Mulroney
persuaded most of his supporters to
switch to Robert Stanfield which put him
over the top and made him the new
leader.
By 1974 Mulroney had been
asked to serve on the Cliché Commission
to investigate the James Bay project
where he cultivated friendships with
both Robert Bourassa, Premier of Quebec
and Lucien Bouchard his future
Lieutenant.
In 1974 Robert Stanfield
lost his third straight Federal Election
to the Liberals and decide to step down.
Mulroney was encourage to enter the race
and to use his Quebec residence as a
base form which to build his campaign
on. During the 1976 campaign. he spent
over $500,000 on the leadership race and
although he showed strongly on the first
ballot, he faded and Joe Clark won the
race. |