Janis Johnson Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Janis G. Johnson
Office:Senator for Manitoba
Appointed:Brian Mulroney
Successor:Mary Jane McCallum
Term Start:September 27, 1990
Term End:September 27, 2016
Birth Date:27 April 1946
Birth Place:Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Spouse:Frank Moores (1973–2005; his death)
Party:Conservative
Children:1
Residence:Gimli, Manitoba (Canada)
Alma Mater:University of Manitoba
Occupation:Businesswoman, Public Affairs Consultant
Profession:Senator
Committees:Foreign Affairs and International Trade
Website:www.janisjohnson.ca

Janis Icelandic: Guðrún|label=none|text=|italic=no Johnson (born April 27, 1946) is a retired Canadian politician who served as a senator, representing the province of Manitoba.

Serving her position for 26 years until her retirement, Johnson is the longest-serving senator of Manitoba.[1] [2] She is also the longest-serving Conservative member of Senate, and was the first woman to serve as the national director of the former Progressive Conservative Party of Canada.[3]

Early life and education

Janis Icelandic: Guðrún|label=none|text=|italic=no Johnson was born in Winnipeg on 27 April 1946, to Doris Marjorie Blöndal and George Johnson. George was the Minister of Health and Public Welfare in the Manitoba Legislature, later becoming the province's 20th Lieutenant Governor.[4] Her mother was of Icelandic ancestry.[5]

Johnson attended Kelvin High School[6] and the University of Winnipeg Collegiate, where she graduated in 1965.[7] She went on to receive a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science with honours standing in 1968 from the University of Manitoba. She was also a leader of the university's students' union.

Career

After completing her degree in 1968, Johnson moved to Ottawa, where she was a youth policy advisor to the Robert Stanfield, then-leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. She went on to become policy advisor to the party president.

From 1971 to 1979, Johnson worked closely with Frank Moores, helping to organize his campaign for Premier of Newfoundland, which led to the defeat of Joey Smallwood in 1971. (Johnson and Moores would later marry in 1973.)

In 1979, she returned to Manitoba and became an advisor to Premier Sterling Lyon, whereafter she set up the first Progressive Conservative Women's Caucus of Winnipeg. She also worked as a freelance consultant in public affairs as well as being a lecturer in the University of Manitoba's Faculty of Continuing Education.

In 1983, she served as Manitoba co-chair of Brian Mulroney’s successful campaign for national PC leadership, becoming the first woman to serve as the national director of the federal PC Party in September.

In 1985, Johnson established a public policy and communications firm in Winnipeg, called Janis Johnson & Associates, which worked in the areas of women's health and equality, Indigenous affairs, and cultural policy. That year, she joined the Canadian National Railways board of directors, where she served until 1990; Johnson notably convinced CN to establish a head office daycare, a first in Canada's corporate sector.

Senate career

In 1990, Johnson was appointed to represent the province of Manitoba in the Senate by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. She was a senior member of the Standing Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade, the Senate Committee on Energy, the Environment and Natural Resources, and Senate Chair of the Canada-United States Inter-Parliamentary Group.

Johnson's first speech in the Senate was about the Mulroney government's anti-abortion bill, which she voted against.[8]

In 2014, Johnson became the Honorary Chair of Nature Canada's Women for Nature Initiative.

In 2015, Johnson was named among 30 senators in an audit of Senate expenses. She criticized the report, but later repaid the $22,706 it said she owed in questionable travel expenses, maintaining that they were legitimate and the report was incorrect.[9] [10]

Johnson retired from the Senate on September 27, 2016, exactly 26 years after she was appointed. She was the longest-serving Conservative member of the Senate and Manitoba's longest-serving senator.[11] [12]

Volunteerism

Johnson has also been active in the volunteer sector. Active in the Icelandic Festival of Manitoba, she founded the Gimli Film Festival in 2000, which she continues to chair.[13]

She was also a founding member of the Manitoba Special Olympics board and sat on the Canadian Special Olympics board for 10 years. Johnson has also served on the advisory board of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, as well as the board of directors of the University of Winnipeg, Prairie Theatre Exchange, and the Winnipeg Art Gallery.[14]

She also contributed to the founding of the Mature Women's Health Clinic (now the Women's Health Centre) and assisted in the development of Qaumajuq at the Winnipeg Art Gallery.[15]

Personal life

Johnson was the second wife of Frank Moores, whom Johnson worked closely with and helped to organize his (successful) campaign for Premier of Newfoundland in 1971.[16]

The two married in 1973, and had one son, Stefan Moores, in 1975.

Awards and honours

Johnson is the recipient of many honours, including:

In August 2000, she became one of the few Canadians to be awarded Iceland's Order of the Falcon by the Government of Iceland, for her efforts in promoting Canada–Iceland relations.

In 2022, Johnson was appointed to the Order of Canada, and in July 2023, was inducted into the Order of Manitoba.

In 2014, she was the first Honorary Chair of Women for Nature, an initiative of Nature Canada, one of the country's leading nature and outdoors advocacy organizations.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Dawkins, Glen. 2023 May 14. "Broadcaster, rock music historian and longest-serving senator head up Order of Manitoba list." Winnipeg Sun. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  2. Web site: Honourable Janis Gundrun Johnson, C.M. . 2023-07-22 . Nellie McClung . en.
  3. "Conservative Senator Janis Johnson retires after 26 years." CBC News. 2016 September 16. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  4. Web site: Faces of the Icelandic community. November 24, 2012. October 29, 2016. Winnipeg Free Press.
  5. Web site: Johnson, The Honourable Dr. George & Doris. 2016-10-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20151118024639/http://bookoflife.nihm.ca/bookoflife/JohnsonDrG_1.html. 2015-11-18. dead.
  6. Web site: Janis Johnson Hall of Fame . 2023-07-23 . kelvin.schoolhistory.club . en.
  7. Web site: UWC Alumni Report: The Honourable Janis Johnson, C.M. (Class of 1965) Collegiate The University of Winnipeg . 2023-07-23 . collegiate.uwinnipeg.ca.
  8. Book: 84. Abortion Politics, Women's Movements, and the Democratic State: A Comparative Study of State Feminism. Dorothy E.. McBride. Dorothy M.. Stetson. 2001. Oxford University Press. 9780199242658.
  9. Web site: Manitoba Senator Janis Johnson repays $20K in flagged expenses; insists they were legitimate. Mia. Rabson. Winnipeg Free Press. June 18, 2015. October 29, 2016.
  10. Web site: Manitoba Senator Janis Johnson repays travel expenses. Winnipeg Sun. June 19, 2015. October 29, 2016.
  11. Web site: Conservative Senator Janis Johnson retires after 26 years. CBC News. September 22, 2016. October 29, 2016.
  12. Web site: Manitoba's most veteran senator to depart. Mia. Rabson. Winnipeg Free Press. September 22, 2016. October 29, 2016.
  13. Web site: Board of Directors . 2023-07-23 . Gimli International Film Festival . en-CA.
  14. https://janisjohnson.ca/about/
  15. Web site: Order of Manitoba – Manitoba Lieutenant Governor . 2023-07-23 . en-US.
  16. Web site: Former Newfoundland premier Frank Moores dies. CBC News. July 10, 2005. October 29, 2016.