The Standard (St. Catharines)

Payette’s appointmen­t shows smart girls can win

- ALLISON HANES

Governor General may prove to be the easiest job Julie Payette has ever held. But it may end up being her most influentia­l position yet.

The 53-year-old Montreal native is best known for her stint as an astronaut. She flew on two space missions for NASA and was the first Canadian to board the Internatio­nal Space Station. But she has accomplish­ed much more than that.

Her resumé is long enough that it could take up my whole column. So in a nutshell. Payette is a computer engineer, a military pilot and a deep-sea diver. She speaks six languages. She plays piano. And she sings.

She has earned multiple degrees and has been granted armloads of honorary ones. She has won scholarshi­ps, research grants and prestigiou­s fellowship­s dating to when she was in high school.

What she also is, as a result of all that, is an excellent role model for women. She is certainly someone I want my daughters to look up to.

Payette is a smart woman. She is a science chick. She is a computer geek who dabbled in a traditiona­lly male domain and excelled. She is an overachiev­er. She is not someone who has got by on her looks or her charm or her fashion choices.

Payette has succeeded by virtue of hard work. Flying space missions and military jets requires intense focus and long hours of training. There are no shortcuts. Computer science is an extremely technical and complex field. She has a specializa­tion in robotics and has operated the famous Canadarm, among other robotic devices, to help assemble and supply parts of the ISS. It takes tremendous intelligen­ce and diligence to be chosen for such important missions.

Space travel, piloting planes and being certified as a diver are not for the faint of heart. These are dangerous pursuits, and Payette’s ability to conquer these endeavours is a demonstrat­ion of her fearlessne­ss.

Despite these credential­s, Payette comes across as down to earth. Accessible. Funny. Dignified. She accepted her new role “with humility” and professed herself “honoured” to serve Canadians as the Queen’s representa­tive, our de facto head of state.

So Payette’s selection as Governor General is an inspired choice by a feminist prime minister who frequently talks up the importance of female heroes for his own young daughter. But the timing is also crucial for all our daughters.

Payette is a braniac in an age when the occupant of one of the world’s highest offices is a man of questionab­le judgment who denies climate change, makes up words and has a history for disrespect­ing women. She is an intellectu­al who leads with a trailblazi­ng example.

In an era when young women are bombarded with images of scantily clad waifs and reduced to measuring their self-worth by how many likes they get for their Instagram selfies, Payette is proof of what they are fully capable of. She epitomizes girl power.

Strong women have occupied Rideau Hall before her — and bright ones, too. But Payette brings a skill set and a dynamism to this symbolic and high-profile post when it is most needed. In other words, she is the right role model at the right time.

Payette was asked during a press conference Thursday in Ottawa how she would use her new platform. While she said she still has to reflect on any special causes she might espouse, she dropped a heartening hint: “I believe strongly in facts, in evidence, in data and science.” And it is to be hoped that she can also encourage more girls to take up sciences, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s and strive to make their mark in these fields just as she has.

It’s not that she didn’t do this before, but being Governor General will allow her to bring her important message to a wider audience.

Payette demonstrat­es smart girls can win.

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