Background
Born in Saint Catharines, Ontario, Domm was the son of a United Church of Canada minister.
Born in Saint Catharines, Ontario, Domm was the son of a United Church of Canada minister.
He was educated at the Ryerson Institute of Technology and became a radio broadcaster in Peterborough.
He was best known for his crusades against the metric system and in favour of capital punishment. Domm represented the riding of Peterborough, Ontario from the 1979 federal election until his defeat in the 1993 election. Domm"s campaign against Metric conversion in Canada was most vocal during the final Pierre Trudeau government of 1980 to 1984.
In 1983, he and other Tory MPs illegally pumped gas using Imperial measurements at their "Freedom to Measure" gas station.
The station was leased by the MPs in hopes of provoking the government into laying charges and thus allowing a legal challenge to mandatory use of metric. The government ignored the station and it closed after a year.
When the Progressive Conservatives formed government following the 1984 federal election, Domm became parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs, the government minister responsible for the metrification program However, while the Metric Commission was disbanded and rules on enforcing metric were loosened, the "metrification" of the country was not reversed.
Domm"s lobbying for the death penalty resulted in a free vote being held in the House of Commons in 1988, however the motion to restore capital punishment was defeated.
He was more successful in his campaign for the restoration of Via Rail service on the Toronto-Peterborough-Havelock line. Domm also took stands against bilingualism, abortion and gun control voting against his party on several occasions.