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Vicki Huntington

Victoria Huntington
Member of the British Columbia Legislative Assembly
for Delta South
In office
May 12, 2009 – May 9, 2017
Preceded by Val Roddick
Succeeded by Ian Paton
Personal details
Political party Independent
Residence Ladner, British Columbia

Victoria (Vicki) Huntington is a Canadian politician who served in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia from 2009 until 2017 as an independent for Delta South.

Huntington is a native of Vancouver, BC, and has a degree in political science from the University of British Columbia. Much of her early career was spent in the RCMP Security Service and subsequently working with ministers of the crown in Ottawa. More recently, she served five terms as an elected Councillor in the municipality of Delta.

Huntington worked with the RCMP Security Service for most of the 1970s. Prior to joining the force she was commissioned a first lieutenant in the Canadian Army Intelligence Corps (Res).

Following her years with the Security Service, Huntington served as band manager for the Gitanmaax Indian Reserve in Hazelton. She later worked as a policy assistant to the federal Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, as a member of the Nisga’a Task Group, and as vice chair of the Lower Mainland Treaty Advisory Committee (LMTAC) and its representative on the Provincial Treaty Negotiating Team.

During her years in Ottawa, Huntington also served as executive assistant and acting chief of staff to the Solicitor General of Canada and to the Minister of National Revenue. She was also involved in various capacities with the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. She returned to British Columbia in 1988 as the director of the Federal Ministers’ Regional Offices at Canada Place in Vancouver.

Huntington received an award from the Delta Farmland and Wildlife Trust for exceptional service.

A resident of Ladner (Delta), British Columbia, Huntington was first elected in 1993 to Delta Municipal Council and returned to council at or near the top of the polls in the four subsequent municipal elections. She declined to run again in 2008.

Huntington ran in the 2009 general election. She finished a close second in initial results on election night, with opponent Wally Oppal leading by a margin of just two votes over Huntington. On May 26, 2009, the recount revealed that Huntington had defeated Oppal by 32 votes. The result in Delta South was subject to an automatic judicial recount because the margin of victory was fewer than one-500th of all votes cast. Huntington won the judicial recount to become the first independent MLA elected to the B.C. provincial legislature since the general election of 1949.


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