David Marler


David Francis Herbert Marler is a Canadian lawyer in Knowlton, Quebec who specializes in transportation and international law. He has been a candidate for the House of Commons of Canada on two occasions.

Early life, career, and family

Marler was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. After graduating from Malvern College in England, Marler received a Bachelor of Arts degree in literature from Bishop's University and a Bachelor of Laws degree from McGill University. He has published articles on maritime law, served as city councillor in Lac-Tremblant-Nord, and been a director of the Brome Lake Chamber of Commerce. He is member of the United Church of Canada. Since 1995, he has been Senior & Managing Partner at the law firm of Marler & Associates.
Marler's family has been active in politics and government for many decades. He is the grandson of Herbert Meredith Marler, who served as a cabinet minister in the government of William Lyon Mackenzie King, and a grand-nephew of George Carlyle Marler, who was a cabinet minister in the governments of Louis St. Laurent and Jean Lesage.

Federal politics

Marler moved to Brome—Missisquoi in 2003 and ran for the Conservative Party of Canada in the 2006 federal election, after defeating Jacques Dalton for the nomination. He highlighted his support for provincial rights within the Canadian constitution and actively supported his party's promise for more free votes in the House of Commons of Canada. Marler's campaign manager described him as "the least conservative of Conservative candidates." He finished third against Bloc Québécois candidate Christian Ouellet.
In December 2006, Marler was appointed as a commissioner on the Eastern Townships School Board to replace an incumbent who had resigned. He did not seek re-election in late 2007.
Marler left the Conservative Party in January 2008. He has said that he refused to accept thirty thousand dollars via the party's controversial "in-and-out" transfer scheme during the 2006 election, and that party officials later informed him they did not want him as a candidate in 2008. The Conservative Party rejected the accusation.
In the 2008 election, Marler published a piece entitled, ""Sixty-Six Said Yes; a Personal Account of a Campaign and a Scandal," covering his involvement with the Conservative Party. He ran as an independent, saying that a Conservative majority government would be dangerous for Canadian democracy.

Electoral record