The Guardian (USA)

John Turner, former Canadian prime minister and friend of Princess Margaret, dies at 91

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John Turner, a Liberal party politician who served stints as Canada’s justice and finance ministers before a very brief turn as prime minister, has died at age 91.

Marc Kealey, a former aide speaking on behalf of the family, said Turner died peacefully in his sleep at home in Toronto on Friday night.

Turner failed to live up to the great expectatio­ns of his early career, serving as prime minister for just 79 days in 1984 after a difficult, decades-long climb to the top job.

A track athletics star, Turner graduated from the University of British Columbia in 1949, winning a Rhodes scholarshi­p to Oxford University. After studying law, he went to Paris to work on a doctorate at the Sorbonne.

The young lawyer caused a stir when he danced with Princess Margaret at a party in 1959, giving rise to speculatio­n that the two would become a couple. The two remained friends for life.

Turner moved to Montreal to practise law but was lured into politics in 1962.

As justice minister in Pierre Trudeau’s cabinet from 1968 to 1972, Turner proposed a national legal aid system – an issue close to his heart – and created the federal court, among other reforms. He defended the decriminal­ization of homosexual­ity and abortion in the 1960s

He was named finance minister in 1972 and held the job for three turbulent years, marked by high unemployme­nt and high rates of inflation.

As Liberal party leader, he decisively lost the 1988 federal election to Brian Mulroney over the Canada-US free trade agreement, which Turner vehemently opposed.

• This article was amended on 20 September 2020 because an earlier version referred to Turner serving as prime minister in 1988, whereas it was in 1984.

 ?? Photograph: Ron Poling/AP ?? John Turner after winning the leadership of Canada’s Liberal party in 1984. He became prime minister in 1988 but lost power over the US trade deal.
Photograph: Ron Poling/AP John Turner after winning the leadership of Canada’s Liberal party in 1984. He became prime minister in 1988 but lost power over the US trade deal.
 ?? Photograph: Shaun Best/Reuters ?? John Turner in 2006.
Photograph: Shaun Best/Reuters John Turner in 2006.

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