Dr. Chalmers ran as a Progressive Conservative candidate in the riding of Fredericton South during the 1960 provincial election and was successful in being elected as a member of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick. He was re-elected as a member of the opposition in the 1963 and 1967 elections, during which time he also served on the hospital building committee, which was seeking to replace the Victoria Public Hospital with a new regional hospital.[6]
Upon Dr. Chalmers' re-election in the 1970 provincial election, the Progressive Conservatives under the leadership of Richard Hatfield formed the government. Chalmers was appointed to the Executive Council and served as a "Minister Without Portfolio" from 1970 to 1972 and again from 1976 to 1978. Chalmers used his cabinet position in the early 1970s to advocate for the new regional hospital, as well as for solutions to alcohol and drug addiction problems in the province.[7]
Chalmers left politics and retired from actively practising medicine in 1978. He was appointed chair of the Alcoholism and Drug Dependency Commission of New Brunswick and served as a consulting emeritus in general surgery at the hospital named after him.[8]
Dr. Chalmers died on April 26, 1993, in Fredericton.
Personal life
In 1935 Dr. Chalmers married Eloise Roberts and they had two children. Chalmers' wife died in 1954 and in 1956 he re-married to Mrs. Winnifred Hickey who already had two children from her previous marriage; they subsequently had two additional children. His brother Robert Chalmers (1913 - 2003) was a prominent local obstetrician and gynecologist.[9]
Dr. Chalmers' eldest daughter Sharon Pollock is a Canadian playwright. The character "Ev" in Pollock's play Doc is based on Dr. Everett Chalmers [10]
His granddaughter Jennifer Pollock was an active political figure in Alberta. She represented Ward 1 and Ward 2 as a Public School Trustee on the Calgary Board of Education from 1992 to 1999. She was a candidate for the Liberal Party of Canada in the federal riding of Calgary West in the 2006 and 2008 federal elections.[11]