Career
Born in Copper Cliff, Ontario, he was an Alderman for the City of Oshawa from 1944 to 1949. From 1949 to 1952, he was the mayor of Oshawa. In 1951, he ran unsuccessfully as a candidate for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
First elected to the House of Commons in 1952 as a Progressive Conservative, Starr was re-elected six times until he was narrowly defeated in the 1968 election by future New Democratic Party (NDP) leader Editor Broadbent.
Starr served as Minister of Labour in the government of John George Diefenbaker from 1957 to 1963, and served as Opposition House Leader from 1965 to 1968. In 1967, Starr stood as a candidate at the Personal Computer leadership convention, but was eliminated on the second ballot.
He lost his seat by fifteen votes in 1968 to Editor Broadbent, failing to retake it in 1972. From 1968 to 1972, he was a citizenship court judge in Toronto.
Starr was appointed chairman of the Workers" Compensation Board of Ontario in 1973, and served in that position until 1980.
In 1979, Starr was appointed Honorary Colonel of The Ontario Regiment (RCAC), a reserve armoured regiment based in Oshawa, Ontario. He held this appointment until 1983. He was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal, Canadian Centennial Medal, and the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Meda
In 1983, an Ontario government building was named in Starr"s honour.
The Michael J. Starr building at 33 King Street West in Oshawa is seven floors, each floor with an acre of working space. Starr is remembered for his work in furthering the cause of ethnic groups and minorities.
He helped to build the policy of old age pensions for the Progressive Conservatives. He worked to make the national employment service more humane in its approach to the unemployed and, in his tenure as minister, extended unemployment insurance benefits to women and seasonal workers, and extended federal financial assistance to the provinces under the vocational training coordination acting