An interview with Canada’s Governor General

Governor General David JohnstonThanks to a strange set of circumstances involving Twitter and a longstanding history of witty repartee with the Canadian Consulate’s digital team, I was granted the chance to interview His Excellency, the Right Honourable David Johnston, Governor General of Canada, on Thursday, April 23.

The Governor General, constitutional head of the Canadian government as representative of the Queen, performs a series of diplomatic, ceremonial and cultural job duties. That’s why, starting Sunday, April 26, he started a four-day tour of the Great Lakes region of the United States. I spoke to him before his trip began for a lovely chat about his childhood in the hockey-and-steel town of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, and the purpose of his trip to Minneapolis, St. Paul, Chicago and Detroit.

LISTEN NOW to my interview with the Governor General:

Johnston was a three-sport athlete at Sault Ste. Marie, playing hockey with Hall of Famers Lou Nanne, Phil and Tony Esposito and going on to become a two-time All American captain of the Harvard University hockey team. He would become a lawyer and respected law professor before Queen Elizabeth II granted him his current title in 2010.

The Governor General participates in a Canada-U.S. Forum Monday in Minneapolis before giving the keynote address at the Great Lakes Economic Forum Tuesday in Chicago, and then concluding his trip in Detroit later this week.

My interview with Johnston was broadcast as part of the Saturday, April 25 “Give and Take” program and will air again Monday morning at 7:20 a.m. on Northern Community Radio. In Northern Minnesota, that means 91.7 KAXE in Grand Rapids and the Iron Range, 90.5 KBXE in Bemidji and Bagley, 89.9 FM Brainerd and 103.9 FM Ely. The station streams live at KAXE.org.

Or, if you’ve read this far, perhaps you’d just like to listen to the interview now.

Some highlights from the interview with Governor General Johnston:

ON HIS OFFICE’S APOLITICAL ROLE:

“It’s delightful in the sense that as I visit communities and other nations that I’m not negotiating difficult matters or tensions but attempting to strengthen the people-to-people relationships and say, you know, when people get to know one another better and build on what they have in common, good things happen.”

ON OUR REGION/NATION’S SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP:

“We’ve enjoyed so much security, so much prosperity and so much exchange of ideas and innovation. In today’s world where national boundaries are diminishing somewhat you look at regional ecosystems and what they have in common and how they enrich one another. First of all the Canada and U.S. trade relationship is by far the largest in the world. Canada is the largest customer for 35 U.S. states. That basin of the Great Lakes connecting towns and communities is one of the busiest in the world with a great deal of movement back and forth — goods, services, ideas and education. Our challenge is to take that very special relationship of the Great Lakes and say how do we move it up another level or two and be very ambitious about it.”

ON THE GREAT LAKES STATES AND PROVINCES CONSTITUTING THE FOURTH LARGEST ECONOMY IN THE WORLD:

Isn’t that impressive that a geographical region that circumscribes a lakes system is the fourth largest economy in the world. It’s built yes, initially on natural resources. It began with the fur trade and then it became agriculture,

When you think of the cross border movement of intellectual property, and therefore goods and services, and where we have to go, it’s really quite exciting. And it’s all in this backdrop of really good friends who enjoy one another’s company and contribute so much to the health of the communities on either side of the border.

ON HOW WE CAN RENEW OUR INDUSTRIAL CITIES:

We have to be innovative, don’t we. We have to be resilient. We have seen economic cycles and industrial cycles throughout history. Those societies that manage those best are always looking ahead.

… What we must do to our natural resources based economy is add value to those resources, use ingenuity and great public education systems to trade not just with one another but with the world, and constantly reinvent ourselves.

… I believe that happens best if you are vigorous and aggressive in your competition, to take your trade directly to the world. Then build the collaborative networks and partnerships that develop from that.”

THE ONE THING HE WANTS NORTHERN MINNESOTANS TO KNOW:

“We’ve been great neighbors and we face the challenge of reinventing ourselves. Let’s do it and see the Great Lakes as something that brings us together as it has for 400 years.”

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This piece was cross-posted with my Up North Report blog for the Star Tribune.

Comments

  1. Sooo ‘Thomas Cromwell’ of you Aaron…

  2. I won’t lie. I could slide into a constitutional monarchy *reeeeeaal* easy. Parliamentary politics seem to be holding functionality a little better into the new media age.

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