Stephen Harper is a Canadian entrepreneur, economist, retired politician, and former Prime Minister of the country
@Former Prime Minister of Canada, Life Achievements and Personal Life
Stephen Harper is a Canadian entrepreneur, economist, retired politician, and former Prime Minister of the country
Stephen Harper born at
Stephen Harper met his future wife Laureen Ann Teskey in 1990. Teskey, who is a Conservative herself, was working for ‘GTO Printing’ at the time. The computer graphics firm printed the necessary graphs and tables for Harper’s paper for his master's degree in Economics. They wed on December 11, 1993. They have two children together, a son, Benjamin (born 1996) and a daughter, Rachel (born 1999).
His favourite sport is ice hockey. He published ‘A Great Game: The Forgotten Leafs and the Rise of Professional Hockey’, a non-fiction book about the early decades of professional hockey in North America, on November 5, 2013, through ‘Simon & Schuster Canada’.
Stephen Harper was born on April 30, 1959, in Leaside, a neighbourhood in Toronto, Ontario, Canada to parents Joseph Harris Harper and Margaret (née Johnston). He has two younger brothers, Grant and Robert.
He studied at the ‘Northlea Public School’, and after that at ‘John G. Althouse Middle School’ and ‘Richview Collegiate Institute’, when his family moved to the Etobicoke neighbourhood.
He attended the ‘University of Toronto’ in 1978 for two months before dropping out to relocate to Edmonton, Alberta. He started working at ‘Imperial Oil’, the same company his father was employed for, as a mail-room clerk and in other capacities.
Three years later, he enrolled at the ‘University of Calgary’ and received a bachelor’s degree in economics in 1985 and a master’s degree in the same in 1991.
While politics was not Stephen Harper’s first preference as a career, he did participate in political activities in high school as a member of the ‘Young Liberals Club’. However, his political affiliation changed from liberalism to conservatism when he became disillusioned with Pierre Trudeau’s ‘National Energy Program’.
He joined the ‘Progressive Conservative Party’ in 1985 and worked in the capacity of the chief aide to MP Jim Hawkes. Within a year he quit as he was completely disenchanted with the party and Prime Minister Brian Mulroney’s government.
Upon an invitation from Preston Manning, the founder and leader of the Canadian ‘Reform Party’, Harper spoke at the party’s inaugural convention in Winnipeg in 1987 and later, joined their ranks as the Chief Policy Officer. He suffered defeat in the first election of his career, the 1988 federal election for the Calgary West seat, losing to Hawkes. Harper would go on to defeat Hawks in the next federal election in 1993.
During his tenure as a Reform Party MP from 1993 to 1997, Harper was vocal about socially conservative issues. He spoke out against Justice Minister Allan Rock’s plans to extend spousal benefits to same-sex couples.
The Reform Party, with Manning at the helm, was rapidly drifting towards populism, something which Harper vehemently opposed. In protest, he decided not to contest in the 1997 federal election. On January 14, 1997, the same day as his resignation, he was picked to be the vice-president of the ‘National Citizens Coalition’, a conservative lobby group. He would eventually serve as the group’s president.
An important legacy of the Harper administration is the motion that recognized that “the Québécois form a nation within a united Canada." It received 266 for and 16 against votes and was subsequently passed.
In his inauguration speech in 2006, he hailed Elizabeth II as the head of state of Canada. He reintroduced the word ‘royal’ to the Canadian army and navy’s official names, 49 years since it was omitted.
Harper’s economic policy was an extremely successful one. Canada came out of the recession economically more stable than any other G7 country. It also registered the lowest debt-to-GDP ratio among the same.
The Harper administration called terrorism the greatest struggle of our generation, as fascism and communism had been for the previous ones. Canada’s defence spending rose to an all-time high since World-war II under him, though it still accounted for only 1% of the country’s GDP.