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==Family==
==Family==
Freda is married, with a school-age son Alec. His wife, Jacqueline M. Brunshaw, is a Toronto-based clinical psychologist. <ref name="BioInfoBank Librar">Brunshaw J (Jacqueline) [http://lib.bioinfo.pl/auid:4467157] BioInfoBank Library Psychologist's papers - Psychoanalytic patients in the U.S., Canada, and Australia: II. A DSM-III-R validation study. - J Am Psychoanal Assoc. ;50 (2):615-27 12206545</ref> Freda is a grand-nephew of [[Robert Winters]], who served as a [[minister of the Crown]] in the [[Cabinet of Canada|Cabinets]] of [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Ministers]] [[Louis St. Laurent]] and [[Lester Pearson]].<ref name="CCR" />
Freda is married, with a school-age son Alec. His wife, Jacqueline M. Brunshaw, is a Toronto-based clinical psychologist. <ref name="BioInfoBank Librar">Brunshaw J (Jacqueline) [http://lib.bioinfo.pl/auid:4467157] BioInfoBank Library Psychologist's papers - Psychoanalytic patients in the U.S., Canada, and Australia: II. A DSM-III-R validation study. - J Am Psychoanal Assoc. ;50 (2):615-27 12206545</ref> Freda is a grand-nephew of [[Robert Winters]], who served as a [[Cabinet of Canada|Cabinet Minister]] under [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Ministers]] [[Louis St. Laurent]] and [[Lester Pearson]].<ref name="CCR" />


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 01:14, 14 February 2008

Tom Freda
Born1956
NationalityCanadian
EducationSheridan College Institute and Ryerson University
Known forco-founder of Citizens for a Canadian Republic[1]
TitleNational Director of Citizens for a Canadian Republic[1]
SpouseJacqueline M. Brunshaw (PhD)[2]
Childrenson Alec

Thomas (Tom) Freda (Born 1956) is a co-founder and current national director of Toronto, Ontario-based Citizens for a Canadian Republic,[1] a non-profit, non-partisan organization representing the Canadian republican movement. He is the main Anglophone media spokesperson for the group.[3]

I believe [the monarchy] is a limiting factor on our national identity and one of the reasons why the question of what it means to be a Canadian continues to be an issue. The British monarchy’s entrenchment in our constitution is the last thread of colonialism and its removal will be among the final steps in our evolution as a nation." [4] Tom Freda, 2005

A native of Nova Scotia, he was born in Halifax and moved with his family to Bridgewater in 1961. In 1977, he moved to Toronto to study at Sheridan College and Ryerson Polytechnical Institute. He remained in the city and now works in the fields of advertising, marketing, design and photography.[5]

Freda's involvement with Canadian republicanism began in 1997 when, as an Internet activist he established the websites, Republic of Canada Online and Monarchy-Free Canada, which were instrumental in uniting republicans to form Citizens for a Canadian Republic in 2002.[6]

Already there are Canadian republican web sites on the Internet. Two key examples as I write are 'Republic of Canada Online' and 'The Anti-monarchist League of Canada.' " ( ... ) An optimistic analyst could argue that, in the early twenty-first century, the earliest beginnings of a popular Canadian republican movement are blowing gently in the wind."

— Randall White, Is Canada Trapped in a Time Warp? Political Symbols in the Age of the Internet - 2001

Family

Freda is married, with a school-age son Alec. His wife, Jacqueline M. Brunshaw, is a Toronto-based clinical psychologist. [2] Freda is a grand-nephew of Robert Winters, who served as a Cabinet Minister under Prime Ministers Louis St. Laurent and Lester Pearson.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Citizens for a Canadian Republic: Press Release; October 10, 2002
  2. ^ a b Brunshaw J (Jacqueline) [1] BioInfoBank Library Psychologist's papers - Psychoanalytic patients in the U.S., Canada, and Australia: II. A DSM-III-R validation study. - J Am Psychoanal Assoc. ;50 (2):615-27 12206545
  3. ^ Boutet, Chris; National Post: Majority of Canadians want to ditch monarchy: poll; October 1, 2007
  4. ^ Speech to Canadian Ethnic Media Association 6 Oct 2005
  5. ^ a b Citizens for a Canadian Republic: National Director
  6. ^ White, Randall (PhD); Is Canada Trapped in a Time Warp? Political Symbols in the Age of the Internet; Toronto: Eastend Books, 2001; p. 112; ISBN: 1896973248