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・ Raymond Simard
・ Raymond Simon
・ Raymond Smallman
・ Raymond Smillie
・ Raymond Smith
・ Raymond Smith (cricketer, born 1935)
・ Raymond Smith Dugan
・ Raymond Smullyan
・ Raymond Snoddy
・ Raymond Sokolov
・ Raymond Sommer
・ Raymond Soubie
・ Raymond Souplex
・ Raymond Souster
・ Raymond Souster Award
Raymond Speaker
・ Raymond Spencer
・ Raymond Spencer Rodgers
・ Raymond Squires
・ Raymond St. Jacques
・ Raymond St. Leger
・ Raymond Stampede
・ Raymond Starbuck
・ Raymond Stasse
・ Raymond Stebbins
・ Raymond Steed
・ Raymond Steele
・ Raymond Stein
・ Raymond Stevens (judoka)
・ Raymond Stock


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Raymond Speaker : ウィキペディア英語版
Raymond Speaker

Raymond Albert "Ray" Speaker, (born December 13, 1935) is a farmer and Canadian politician.
Speaker was born and raised in Enchant, Alberta where he farms to this day. He also worked as a teacher until 1962.
==Provincial politics==

He entered politics in the 1963 provincial election when he was elected as an Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) for the Social Credit Party of Alberta from the mostly rural riding of Little Bow. He served as minister without portfolio in 1967, Minister of Health and Social Development and Minister of Personnel in 1968, and Chairman of the Human Resources Development Authority in 1969.
He remained a Social Credit MLA for many years after the party lost power in the 1971 election, usually winning handily even as the party's support ebbed away in the rest of the province. When party leader Robert Curtis Clark returned to the backbench in 1980, a few months after losing the 1979 election, Speaker became parliamentary leader of the party and hence Leader of the Opposition. However, in 1982, Speaker announced that Social Credit would be sitting out the next provincial election due to dwindling support for the party. A few months earlier, Clark's former seat had been resoundingly lost in a by-election, costing Social Credit official party status. Speaker's announcement was disavowed by party officials. A motion to dissolve the party failed. Soon after the writs were dropped for the election, Speaker and Walt Buck resigned from the party and were reelected as independents.
Denied funding guaranteed to political parties, Speaker and Buck formed a new right-wing party, the Representative Party of Alberta. It branded itself as a modern version of Social Credit without the social credit monetary policy, and was intended to be a home for former Socreds who had also left what remained of the party. Speaker was elected its leader. However, in 1989, Speaker crossed the floor to the Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta. He was reelected with 70 percent of the vote in 1989, his highest total. Following that election, he was named to the cabinet as Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs.

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