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Peter Van Loan, former House Leader under Stephen Harper, retiring from politics

Government House Leader Peter Van Loan responds to a question during Question Period in the House of Commons Friday December 12, 2014 in Ottawa.
Government House Leader Peter Van Loan responds to a question during Question Period in the House of Commons Friday December 12, 2014 in Ottawa. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

OTTAWA – A longtime Conservative member of Parliament who once stood as then-prime minister Stephen Harper‘s Government House Leader is stepping away from politics.

Ontario MP Peter Van Loan told a gathering of supporters at his farm on Sunday that he will retire from the House of Commons, effective Sept. 30.

Van Loan was first elected in the riding of York-Simcoe in 2004. He became a cabinet minister in 2006 and remained in Harper’s inner circle until 2015, when the Conservatives were defeated by the Trudeau Liberals.

While he also held portfolios in international trade, public safety, intergovernmental affairs and sports, it was as House Leader that Van Loan spent most of his time. It’s also where he helped introduce some of the former government’s most controversial legislation, including an ill-fated bill designed to ban women from wearing a niqab at citizenship ceremonies.

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WATCH: Peter Van Loan accuses Trudeau of misusing Question Period (2013)

Van Loan also caused a near brawl in 2012 when he stormed across the floor of the House of Commons to confront New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen over an attempt by the NDP to have a vote on the then-Tory government’s omnibus budget bill ruled invalid.

Born in Niagara Falls, Ont., Van Loan threw his support behind neighbouring Simcoe-Grey MP Kellie Leitch during the 2016 Conservative Party leadership race, when she proposed screening immigrants for Canadian values.

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