What to know about David Johnston, the new special rapporteur on foreign interference
OTTAWA — Former governor general David Johnston is the “eminent Canadian,” as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau put it, who will oversee investigations into foreign interference in Canadian elections. With controversy swirling around his appointment as special rapporteur, and the official Opposition raising questions about his political loyalties, here’s a look at Johnston’s history.
Born: June 28, 1941 in Copper Cliff, near Sudbury, Ont., to parents Dorothy Stonehouse and Lloyd Johnston, the manager of a local hardware store.
Early years: After his family moved to Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Johnston attended Sault Collegiate Institute. He earned a bachelor’s degree at Harvard University, where his hockey exploits saw him named to the school’s athletic hall of fame. He even contemplated an NHL career. Instead, Johnston went on to earn bachelor of laws degrees at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom and at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont.
Academic career: Johnston stayed in academia, taking an assistant professor job in the Queen’s law faculty in 1966. He moved to the University of Toronto law school in 1968, became dean of Western University’s legal faculty in 1974 and was named principal and vice-chancellor of McGill University in 1979. He returned to a teaching role at McGill in 1994 and, five years later, move on to the University of Waterloo as its president and vice-chancellor. Johnston also served as president of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada and of the Conférence des recteurs et des principaux des universités du Québec, and was the first non-American to chair Harvard’s Board of Overseers. He authored or co-authored more than 25 books, including several on securities law and early cyberlaw, and one that argued against Quebec separatism. He has more than two dozen honorary degrees.