Stephen Woodworth (politician)


Stephen Woodworth is a Canadian politician. He represented the electoral district of Kitchener Centre in the House of Commons of Canada for the Conservative Party of Canada in the 40th and 41st parliaments.

Politics and elected office

Woodworth first ran for public office in the 1988 federal election, representing the Liberal Party in the riding of Waterloo, finishing second to veteran Progressive Conservative MP Walter McLean. In 1993, he again sought the Liberal nomination in Waterloo, but this time lost to Andrew Telegdi.
In 1994, Woodworth was elected to the Waterloo Catholic District School Board, representing Kitchener, and served in that capacity until 2003. During his tenure, Woodworth fought to prevent sex education from being taught in local Catholic high schools.
In the Canadian federal election of 2008, Woodworth ran for the Conservative Party of Canada and was elected as an MP for Kitchener Centre by a margin of 339 votes. He was re-elected in 2011.
As an MP, Woodworth served as a member of several parliamentary committees, including the committees for Environment and Sustainable Development, Justice and Human Rights, Public Accounts, and Fisheries and Oceans.

Abortion debate

In 2012, Woodworth introduced Motion 312, a private member's motion which attempted to re-open the debate around Canadian abortion law. The bill proposed to create a special committee to redefine Canada's legal definition of human being. The motion was defeated 203-91.
In 2013, Woodworth followed up with a second private member's motion, Motion 476, again attempting to challenge Canada's abortion laws. However, Woodworth failed to receive the unanimous consent of Parliament required to reopen the debate after his previous motion was defeated.

After Parliament

In the 2015 Canadian federal election, Woodworth was defeated by Liberal candidate Raj Saini, losing by a margin of nearly 10,000 votes.
In 2016, Woodworth founded the Democracy Defence Initiative, an anti-abortion advocacy group.
He ran in the 2019 Canadian federal election, placing third behind incumbent Raj Saini and Green Party candidate Mike Morrice.

Electoral record