Haliburton first attempted to enter provincial politics in the 1949 election, but was defeated by 184 votes.[3] He ran again in the 1953 election, and was elected in the dual-member riding of Kings County with Progressive Conservative George Arthur Boggs.[4] In the 1956 election, Haliburton was re-elected in the new Kings South riding by 774 votes.[5] In November 1956, Haliburton was appointed to the Executive Council of Nova Scotia as Minister of Agriculture and Marketing.[2][6] In July 1959, he was given an additional role in cabinet as Minister of Lands and Forests.[2] Haliburton was re-elected in the 1960,[7] and 1963 elections.[8] In July 1964, Haliburton was moved to Minister of Fisheries, while remaining as Minister of Lands and Forests.[2][9] He was re-elected in the 1967 election.[10] When George Isaac Smith was sworn in as premier in September 1967, Haliburton retained his previous cabinet roles, but was also named Minister of Education.[2][11] In May 1968, Smith shuffled his cabinet, moving Haliburton to Provincial Secretary.[2][12] He did not reoffer in the 1970 election.[1]
^"G.I. Smith sworn in as N.S. Premier; Stanfield gets ready for Ottawa move". The Globe and Mail. September 14, 1967.
^"Premier shifts 7 portfolios in N.S. cabinet". The Globe and Mail. May 10, 1968.
^"Haliburton praised by former political colleagues". The Chronicle Herald. March 14, 1990.
Further reading
Haliburton, E. D., and Gordon Haliburton. Boats, Books and Apples: A Portrait of E.D. Haliburton, a Rugged Individualist. Wolfville, N.S: Haliburton Farms and Stoney Hill Pub, 2003. ISBN0969538227