MacLauchlan was president of the University of Prince Edward Island from 1999 to 2011. During his tenure, he helped the university raise millions of dollars for research and development and oversaw a doubling of enrollment to 4,500 students. He was previously dean of the law school of the University of New Brunswick and a law professor at Dalhousie University. MacLauchlan has been criticized for a 2006 decision as president of the University of PEI when he banned from campus an edition of the student newspaper, The Cadre, which reprinted controversial Danish cartoons of Muhammad. In a statement, MacLauchlan said that the newspaper's edition, which had re-published political cartoons depicting a prophet of Islam, was "a reckless invitation to disorder." The CanadianSociety for Academic Freedom and Scholarship issued a statement describing MacLauchlan's actions as "contrary to the duty of all university presidents to maintain their campuses as places where debate of controversial issues may take place."
Political career
On November 28, 2014, MacLauchlan announced his candidacy for the leadership of the governing Prince Edward Island Liberal Party. He was the sole candidate at the close of nominations on January 20, 2015 and was acclaimed leader on February 21, 2015. He was sworn in as the 32nd Premier of Prince Edward Island, on February 23, 2015. MacLauchlan was the first member of the Order of Canada to become premier of a province after induction into the order, the first openly gay Premier of Prince Edward Island, and the first openly gay man to be premier of a province. MacLauchlan's Liberals then led the Liberals to a majority in the 2015 general election. He won election as MLA for York-Oyster Bed, a seat previously held by his chief of staffRobert Vessey. After the 2019 election, in which the Liberals placed third and MacLauchlan lost his own seat, he announced his resignation as the leader of Liberal Party effective as soon as the Liberal Party chooses an interim leader.
Personal life
MacLauchlan is openly gay; his partner Duncan McIntosh is the founding artistic director of the Watermark Theatre. MacLauchlan has chaired the Palmer Conference on Public Sector Leadership in 2012: Canada as a Leader in Immigration Policy and Practice, and co-chaired the 2013 Georgetown Conference: Redefining Rural. He also wrote Alex B. Campbell: The Prince Edward Island Premier Who Rocked the Cradle, a biography of Alex Campbell.