Eymard Georges Corbin
Eymard Georges Corbin (born August 2 1934) is a Canadian parliamentarian. Corbin, a journalist by profession, was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the 1968 Canadian election as the Liberal Member of Parliament for Madawaska—Victoria, New Brunswick. He served as a parliamentary secretary in the early 1970s and was Deputy Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons in 1984. In July, 1984, he was one of three appointees to the Senate made by Prime Minister John Turner as part of a controversial agreement with his predecessor, Pierre Trudeau. Turner had agreed to make several patronage appointments on Trudeau's behalf in order to prevent Trudeau from creating enough vacancies in the House of Commons to leave Turner with a minority government. Turner was famously blasted for the arrangement by Progressive Conservative leader Brian Mulroney during a nationally televised leaders' debate during the 1984 Canadian election. The exchange between Mulroney and Turner in which Turner claimed he "had no option" was a turning point in the campaign and contributed to the defeat of Turner's government in the election. Corbin is the last remaining Turner appointee in the Senate.
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