Penticton Herald

Oak Bay gets footnote in VP sweepstake­s

- JACK KNOX

As it turns out, the next vice president of the United States won’t be married to an Oak Bay grad. On Tuesday, political betting sites —yes, there are such things — listed Susan Rice as the favourite to become Joe Biden’s running mate, but no, the Democratic presidenti­al candidate chose Kamala Harris instead.

Not that Rice’s Victoria-raised husband, Ian Cameron, sounded devastated by the decision.

“It was a real honour to have gone through the process,” he said, on the phone from their home in Washington, D.C., sounding very much like someone used to the world of highlevel diplomacy, which he is. Rice was a pillar of the Obama administra­tion, which is one reason why, despite never having held elected office, she found herself among the women being vetted for the second slot on the Democratic ticket. The couple know how Washington works.

Still, Cameron acknowledg­es, it’s nothing he dreamed of while growing up on

Vancouver Island.

He comes from a well-known family. His grandfathe­r was a Texan who moved to Victoria and became a big deal in forestry and shipbuildi­ng. Ian’s father, Newton Cameron, founded Victoria Plywood, in 1950. Newton and Marjorie Cameron were married for almost six decades before dying within five months of one another in 2008.

Ian went to Oak Bay High, where he was student council president in 1979, before attending Stanford University, which is where he met Rice in 1983. They went on to have a longdistan­ce relationsh­ip — Cameron worked in television in Ottawa, earned a master’s degree from the London School of Economics, then became a producer for the CBC’s current affairs show The Journal in Toronto in 1988.

Rice, a Rhodes scholar who earned a doctorate at Oxford, joined him in Toronto a couple of years later, taking a job with some management consultant­s. In a CBC interview last year she told Adrienne Arsenault of the impact legendary CBC host Barbara Frum had on their lives: “She was a real champion of our impending marriage and very enthusiast­ic about it.” Rice got cold feet, though, wasn’t certain she was ready to commit — something she wasn’t sure of until the morning in 1992 when she switched on the radio and learned that Frum had died.

“It made me realize this was a relationsh­ip I wanted to be in for the rest of my life, that she was right about the fact that we were right together,” Rice told Arsenault.

“Barbara was really attached to Susan and Susan was attached to Barbara,” Cameron says. Rice and Cameron wed in September 1992.

They moved to Washington, D.C., after she was recruited by the Clinton administra­tion to serve on the National Security Council. Cameron thought they would go back to Canada after a couple of years but “she won the cross-border battle of which country we’d end up in.”

He stayed with the CBC in Washington until 1998, when he joined ABC News, working as senior producer at World News Tonight before becoming executive producer of This Week With George Stephanopo­ulos in 2008.

He left in 2011, and now spends time doing non-profit work, sitting on boards, tutoring kids.

The couple have a daughter in high school in Washington and a son at Stanford where — shades of Alex P. Keaton of Family Ties — he became president of the campus Republican­s.

Rice spent Barack Obama’s first term as the U.S.’s ambassador to the United Nations before becoming the president’s national security adviser. In 2012 she was considered a frontrunne­r to replace Hillary Clinton as secretary of state, though the job went to John Kerry. There’s a Victoria connection there, too: Kerry hired St. Michaels University School grad Marvin Nicholson for his congressio­nal office. Nicholson eventually moved to Obama’s 2008 campaign team, later becoming White House trip director and, perhaps more importantl­y, the friend the president would turn to when he wanted to blow off steam by going golfing or shooting hoops.

Cameron said it was “somewhat surreal” to go to the White House during the Obama years and end up talking about Vancouver Island with Nicholson or Obama’s brother-inlaw, Konrad Ng, who earned his master’s degree at UVic.

Likewise, Cameron found himself swapping Island tales with Diana Krall when the Nanaimo singer performed at the White House. “Victoria is never too far from my mind,” Cameron says.

It’s a rare year that Rice and Cameron don’t come to Vancouver Island. “We usually get up every summer to visit,” Cameron says. He shares a family place at Shawnigan Lake with his siblings. “There’s nothing better.”

There’ll be no Island trip this year, though. Rice will be campaignin­g for Biden, with whom she is expected to have a future should he unhorse Donald Trump.

“If she is not chosen as vice-president and Mr Biden wins the election, she could potentiall­y become secretary of state,” the BBC’s White House correspond­ent wrote this week.

Jack Knox is a long-time, award-winning columnist with the Victoria Times

Colonist.

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