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Michael Breaugh

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Michael James Breaugh (born September 13 1942 in Kingston, Ontario) is a former Canadian politician. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1975 to 1990, and in the Canadian House of Commons from 1990 to 1993.

Breaugh was educated at Peterborough Teachers' College, Queen's University and the University of Toronto. A teacher by training, he was on the executive of the Ontario English Catholic Teachers Association when he was first elected to the Ontario legislature in the 1975 Ontario election. A New Democrat, he won an easy victory in the working-class riding of Oshawa. He was re-elected in the 1977 election.

The NDP had seemed poised for an electoral breakthrough in 1977, but instead fell to third-place status in the legislature. When Stephen Lewis stepped down as Ontario NDP leader in 1978, Breaugh ran to succeed him. He received 499 votes at the NDP leadership convention, finishing third in a field of only three candidates. Surprisingly, most of his supporters went to Michael Cassidy rather than presumed frontrunner Ian Deans on the second ballot, giving Cassidy a narrow victory.

Cassidy was not widely supported by the NDP's leading organizers, and the party ran what was acknowledged as a poor campaign in the 1981 provincial election. Breaugh was re-elected, though by a narrower margin than before.

Breaugh had a poor relationship with Bob Rae, who replaced Cassidy as party leader in 1982. The party experienced a modest recovery under Rae in the 1985 election, and Breaugh was again re-elected by a significant margin. In the election of 1987, however, he defeated Liberal candidate Cathy O'Flynn by the reduced margin of 2,916 votes as the Liberals won a landslide majority government.

Breaugh often clashed with Bob Rae in the 1980s, criticising his leadership. After Rae's 1990 decision to stay in provincial politics rather than shift to the federal scene, Breaugh left Queen's Park and ran for a seat in the Canadian House of Commons, in a by-election called in Oshawa to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of former New Democratic Party leader Ed Broadbent. Breaugh again defeated O'Flynn to win the by-election, which was held a month before the 1990 Ontario election that brought Rae's NDP to power.

Rae's NDP became increasingly unpopular between 1990 and 1993, and lost much of its support from organized labour through Social Contract austerity legislation. These developments had a detrimental effect on ohe federal NDP, which lost all of its Ontario seats in the 1993 federal election. Breaugh was reduced to a fourth-place finish in Oshawa, where the local branch of the Canadian Auto Workers had previously disaffiliated from the NDP.

Breaugh has not sought a political comeback since this time.