Jump to content

Anne Cools

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Anne. Cools)
Anne Cools
Senator from Ontario
(Toronto Centre-York)
In office
January 13, 1984 – August 12, 2018
Nominated byPierre Trudeau
Appointed byEdward Schreyer
Personal details
Born
Anne Clare Cools

(1943-08-12) August 12, 1943 (age 81)
Barbados, British West Indies
Political partyIndependent Senators Group (2016–2018)
Other political
affiliations
Liberal (1984–2004)
Conservative (2004–2007)
Non-affiliated (2007–2016)
SpouseRolf Calhoun

Anne Clare Cools (born August 12, 1943) is a Canadian retired senator and the longest serving member of the Senate of Canada. As a social worker, Cools was a pioneer in the protection of women from domestic violence, running one of the first domestic violence shelters in Canada.

Personal life and education

[edit]

Cools was born and raised in Barbados, as the daughter of pharmacist Lucius Unique Cools and homemaker Rosita Gordon Miller Cools. Both her grandfather and an uncle were politically active on the island. When she was four years old, two of her siblings died. In Barbados, Cools attended Queen's College Girls School. In 1957, when she was 13 years old, her family immigrated to Canada, where she studied at Thomas D'Arcy McGee High School in Montreal. Cools received a B.A. degree in social sciences, sociology and psychology from McGill University. Cools is married to business consultant Rolf Calhoun. Her personal interests include classical music, playing the piano, reading, gardening and dogs. [1][2][3]

Advocacy

[edit]

Racism

[edit]

In February 1969, Cools participated in a 13 day long civil disobedience sit-in at Sir George Williams University (later Concordia University), where over 400 students occupied the computer center to protest the school's inadequate handling of complaints of racism against a professor. When the riot-police stormed the building, some floors were set on fire, computers were destroyed and computer cards and paper rained down from the 9th floor onto the street below, where there was a counter-demonstration chanting "let the niggers burn". While Cools was nowhere near the 9th floor, she was one of 97 students arrested, and unlike most of them, Cools refused to plead guilty to be set free, instead, she served two months in jail. About the affair, she has said "it took me a long time to recover... it shocked me to my core". Several years later she was pardoned.[4]

Domestic violence

[edit]

As a social worker, Cools was one of the pioneers in the protection of women from domestic abuse. In 1974, Cools moved to Toronto where she founded and served as the executive director for Women in Transition Inc., one of the first shelters for domestic violence victims in Canada. With a high demand for its services, Cools obtained funding for and opened a second shelter in 1987. She co-organized Canada's first domestic violence conference, Couples in Conflict.[2][3]

Cools has presented evidence that men and women are equally capable of domestic violence and aggression, which is not a gendered characteristic, but a human pathology of intimacy. In January 2016, in a Canadaland audio podcast interview with Desmond Cole, Cools supported and cited the work of the English domestic violence pioneer and expert Erin Pizzey, when she claimed that women are equally violent as men in domestic violence conflicts.[3][5]

Child custody

[edit]

Cools is a strong advocate for children's rights, that they after divorce should have continuing relationships with both mothers and fathers, and the importance of fathers for the children's development. In the 1990s, Cools was instrumental in the creation of and served on the Senate/House Special Joint Committee on Child Custody and Access, which in December 1998 issued its report, For the Sake of the Children. A principal recommendation of this report was that following a relationship breakdown, shared parenting should be presumed to be in the best interests of the child.[2][3][6][7] She was candid in her criticism of the Liberal government of Prime Minister Jean Chrétien when proposed legislation to be introduced in the House of Commons was shelved after intense lobbying by women's groups.[8]

Feminism

[edit]

While a strong advocate for women and domestic violence victims, she has also criticized certain aspects of the feminist movement, e.g. stating that "this feminism that has grown up suddenly in the last few years, where all virtue and goodness are stacked up on the side of women, and all evil and violence is stacked up on the side of men—well, human nature doesn't work that way."[2]

Political career

[edit]

National Parole Board

[edit]

From 1980 to 1984, Cools served on the National Parole Board of Canada, which is the parole board for federal prisoners.[3]

Canadian House of Commons

[edit]

She twice sought election to the House of Commons of Canada as a candidate of the Liberal Party of Canada. She lost the Liberal nomination in a highly contested race against John Evans for the 1978 by-election in Rosedale. Her campaign for the nomination was documented in the National Film Board of Canada's 1979 film The Right Candidate for Rosedale. She ran again in 1979, and won the nomination but was defeated in both the 1979 and 1980 elections by Progressive Conservative candidate David Crombie.[6]

Canadian Senate

[edit]

In 1984, Cools was appointed to the Senate of Canada by governor general Edward Schreyer, on the recommendation of prime minister Pierre Trudeau, becoming the first black person in the Canadian senate. She had designated herself as representing the Senate division of Toronto-Centre-York.[3]

Cools became increasingly critical of the Liberal governments of Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin, and of same-sex marriage. On June 9, 2004, she announced that she was crossing the floor to join the Conservative Party of Canada.[6]

In the fall of 2006, Cools was barred from her committee duties for the Conservative Party, after questioning a new government accountability bill. In 2007, Cools was ousted from the Conservative party group after accusing two fellow senators of having grabbed and assaulted her. She also mentioned that she had witnessed a senator hitting a child. She sat as a non-affiliated Senator from 2007 until 2017 when she joined the Independent Senators Group.[2][6][9]

From the retirement of Lowell Murray on September 26, 2011, until her own retirement on August 12, 2018, Cools was the longest-serving member of the Senate. She is the first female black Senator in North America.[5] With the retirement of Charlie Watt, Cools was the last Senator appointed by Pierre Trudeau remaining in the Senate.[6]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Senator Anne C. Cools Toronto - Ontario: Biography". Senator Cools. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 5, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e Cools, Anne, Contemporary Black Biography, Encyclopedia.com, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f TorontoDV, Biography of The Hon. Senator Anne Cools
  4. ^ Royson James, When Canada lost its innocence, The Star, September 11, 2015.
  5. ^ a b Sexton, Kevin (January 4, 2016). "Episode #: 34 A senator on mischief, mutiny and men's rights". Canadaland. Retrieved January 5, 2016.
  6. ^ a b c d e Sarah Turnbull, One-on-one with Senator Cools: Taking a bold stance in the Red Chamber, iPolitics, February 9, 2018.
  7. ^ Pearson, The Honourable Landon; Gallaway, M.P., Roger (December 1998). "For the Sake of the Children: Report of the Special Joint Committee on Child Custody and Access". Parliament of Canada. Retrieved January 5, 2016.
  8. ^ Robert Franklin, Shared Parenting Issue Comes to Canadian TV, National Parents Organization, April 17, 2013.
  9. ^ Canadian Press (June 7, 2005). "Senator's Assault Claim Prompts Calls for Action". The London Free Press. Archived from the original on January 15, 2013. Retrieved February 24, 2007.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
[edit]