The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.2004, Síða 12

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.2004, Síða 12
10 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 59 #1 Lenore Berscheid, and we both agreed that after sixteen years of me going to Ottawa, and with me being sixty-six years of age, that this presented a sterling opportunity for me to finish off my public career. So, I indicated to the Prime Minister that yes, I would be willing to make this change. Mr. Murray had some concerns handling his own affairs; I never spoke with Mayor Murray. A month later he cleared his deck, and on 27 April 2004 I agreed to become the lieutenant-governor. Of course I was surprised! Does anybody contemplate such a thing? How does one go about forming a strategy to become the lieutenant-gover- nor? It is one of those appointments where all of the stars have to fall in line. If Mr. Liba’s term had not ended for another year, or had ended a year earlier it would not have happened to me, it would have hap- pened to somebody else. There is always luck in life. Sure you have to have talent, you have to bring certain things to the table, whatever the table is, but life does have its luck. Conservatives refer to Robert Stanfield as the greatest Prime Minister Canada never had! Why was he not Prime Minister? Because Pierre Trudeau was there. He ran against Pierre Trudeau three times, and he lost three times. Stanfield had bad luck. It was not a comment on his tal- ent, but here was this formidable man Trudeau. I had luck, but I am humble about it. Kevin: You are the second Icelandic- Canadian to hold the office of lieutenant- governor of Manitoba; His Honour, Dr. George Johnson was first. How do you like the job so far? Mr. Harvard: I love it so far. Today I approach the end of my third week, at the beginning of the learning curve, but I plan to enjoy it, because I believe in it! People need their collective expression; the state needs its collective expression. You can express the people’s voices through an office like the lieutenant-governor’s; this job can very often accentuate the positive. In this office you look for achievement, you look for success; you offer kudos and congratulations. Partisan politics is adver- sarial, competitive; nothing wrong with that, we need that. Sometimes it gets rough. My role now is much different, and, I think, necessary. Government has an extensive ceremonial side. If you did not have the monarchy, as we know it in Canada, who would do this work? It would fall to the Premier. The Premier is a very busy guy already. The monarchy offers a clear division between the head of government and the head of state; this posi- tion is non-political, as it should be. Partisan politics coloured my past, but no longer; nothing in me would cause me to show favouritism to one person or group of people because of their politics. I have purged myself of partisan politics. When you are a member of parliament, yes you are a partisan person, but when it came to case work - a tax problem, a pension prob- lem, some problem with respect to govern- ment, not policy so much as just an indi- vidual case, I never asked them whether Pharmacists: ERNEST STEFANSON GARRY FEDORCHUK 642-5504 [R^PHARMASAVE We care about your health Centre and Fourth / Gimli, MB / ROC 1 BO

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The Icelandic Canadian

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