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Stephen Harper Biography
Conservative politician who became the 22nd Prime Minister of Canada in 2006. He won his third consecutive election in 2011 after his Cabinet was defeated in a no-confidence vote that year after being found in contempt of Parliament.
He became a member of the Richview Collegiate team on the television quiz show Reach for the Top.
He is an ally of Canadian fossil fuels and he has promoted their export to the U.S. and China.
He married Laureen Teskey in 1993, and the couple have two children together.
He was the Prime Minister of Canada the same time George W. Bush was President of the United States.
Harper was born and raised in Leaside, Toronto, the first of three sons of Margaret (née Johnston) and Joseph Harris Harper, an accountant at Imperial Oil. The Harper family traces its ancestry back to Yorkshire, England with Christopher Harper having emigrated from Yorkshire to Nova Scotia in 1784, where he later served as Justice of the Peace in the area that is now New Brunswick.
Soon after leaving parliament, Harper and Tom Flanagan co-authored an opinion piece entitled “Our Benign Dictatorship”, which argued that the Liberal Party only retained power through a dysfunctional political system and a divided opposition. Harper and Flanagan argued that national conservative governments between 1917 and 1993 were founded on temporary alliances between Western populists and Quebec nationalists, and were unable to govern because of their fundamental contradictions. The authors called for an alliance of Canada’s conservative parties, and suggested that meaningful political change might require electoral reforms such as proportional representation. “Our Benign Dictatorship” also commended Conrad Black’s purchase of the Southam newspaper chain, arguing that his stewardship would provide for a “pluralistic” editorial view to counter the “monolithically liberal and feminist” approach of the previous management.
Stephen Joseph Harper PC CC (born April 30, 1959) is a Canadian economist and politician who served as the 22nd prime minister of Canada for nearly a decade, from February 6, 2006, to November 4, 2015. Harper has served as the chairman of the International Democrat Union since February 2018.
Harper attended Northlea Public School and, later, John G. Althouse Middle School and Richview Collegiate Institute, both in Etobicoke, Toronto. He graduated from high-school in 1978, and was a member of Richview Collegiate’s team on Reach for the Top, a televised academic quiz show for high school students. Harper enrolled at the University of Toronto but dropped out after two months. He then moved to Edmonton, Alberta, where he found work in the mail room at Imperial Oil. Later, he advanced to work on the company’s computer systems. He took up post-secondary studies again at the University of Calgary, where he completed a bachelor’s degree in economics in 1985. He later returned there to earn a master’s degree in economics, completed in 1991. Throughout his career, Harper has kept strong links to the University of Calgary. Trained as an economist, Harper was the first prime minister with an economics degree since Pierre Trudeau and the first prime minister without a law degree since Joe Clark.
Harper became involved in politics as a member of his high school’s Young Liberals Club. He later changed his political allegiance because he disagreed with the National Energy Program (NEP) of Pierre Trudeau’s Liberal government. He became chief aide to Progressive Conservative MP Jim Hawkes in 1985, but later became disillusioned with the party and the government of Brian Mulroney, especially the administration’s fiscal policy and its inability to fully revoke the NEP until 1986. He left the PC Party that same year.
Manning invited him to participate in the party, and Harper gave a speech at Reform’s 1987 founding convention in Winnipeg. He became the Reform Party’s Chief Policy Officer, and he played a major role in drafting the 1988 election platform. The 1988 elections platform otherwise known as the Blue Book, which helped formed the principles and policies of the party. Harper was influenced by his political mentor, Tom Flanagan when writing the book. He is credited with creating Reform’s campaign slogan, “The West wants in!”
Harper ran for the House of Commons of Canada in the 1988 federal election, appearing on the ballot as Steve Harper in Calgary West and losing by a wide margin to Hawkes, his former employer. After Reform candidate Deborah Grey was elected as the party’s first MP in a 1989 by-election, Harper became Grey’s executive assistant, and was her chief adviser and speechwriter until 1993. He remained prominent in the Reform Party’s national organization in his role as policy chief, encouraging the party to expand beyond its Western base, and arguing that strictly regional parties were at risk of being taken over by radical elements. He delivered a speech at the Reform Party’s 1991 national convention, in which he condemned extremist views.
Harper has shown admiration for the State of Israel since the early 1990s. Friends and colleagues describe his views as being the product of thinking and reading deeply about the Middle East. “Toronto Rabbi Philip Scheim, who accompanied Harper to Israel” in 2014 said, “I sense that [Harper] sees Israel as a manifestation of justice and a righting of historical wrongs, especially in light of the Holocaust.”
Harper’s relationship with Manning became strained in 1992, because of conflicting strategies over the Charlottetown Accord. Harper opposed the Accord on principle for ideological reasons, while Manning was initially more open to compromise. Harper also criticized Manning’s decision to hire Rick Anderson as an adviser, believing that Anderson was not sufficiently committed to the Reform Party’s principles. He resigned as the policy chief in October 1992.
Harper married Laureen Teskey on December 11, 1993. Laureen was formerly married to New Zealander Neil Fenton from 1985 to 1988. The Harpers have two children: Benjamin and Rachel. Harper is the third prime minister, after Pierre Trudeau and John Turner, to send his children to Rockcliffe Park Public School, in Ottawa. He is a member of the evangelical Christian and Missionary Alliance and attends church at the East Gate Alliance Church in Ottawa. According to party literature, he is learning Spanish.
Harper stood for office again in the 1993 federal election, and defeated Jim Hawkes amid a significant Reform breakthrough in Western Canada. His campaign likely benefited from a $50,000 print and television campaign organized by the National Citizens Coalition against Hawkes, although the NCC did not endorse Harper directly.
Harper was one of the founding members of the Reform Party of Canada and under that banner was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in 1993 in Calgary West. He did not seek re-election in the 1997 federal election. Harper instead joined and later led the National Citizens Coalition, a conservative lobbyist group. In 2002, he succeeded Stockwell Day as leader of the Canadian Alliance, the successor to the Reform Party and returned to parliament as Leader of the Opposition by winning Preston Manning’s former seat. In 2003, Harper reached an agreement with the leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, Peter MacKay, for the merger of their two parties to form the Conservative Party of Canada. Harper was subsequently elected as the party’s first leader in March 2004. As party leader, Leader of the Opposition, and then Prime Minister Harper represented the riding of Calgary Southwest in Alberta from 2002 to 2015. He also represented Calgary Heritage from 2015 until 2016 after the Conservatives lost the 2015 election.
Despite his prominent position in the party, Harper’s relationship with the Reform Party leadership was frequently strained. In early 1994, he criticized a party decision to establish a personal expense account for Manning at a time when other Reform MPs had been asked to forego parliamentary perquisites. He was formally rebuked by the Reform executive council despite winning support from some MPs. His relationship with Manning grew increasingly fractious in the mid-1990s, and he pointedly declined to express any opinion on Manning’s leadership during a 1996 interview. This friction was indicative of a fundamental divide between the two men: Harper was strongly committed to conservative principles and opposed Manning’s inclinations toward populism, which Harper saw as leading to compromise on core ideological matters.
At the Reform Party’s 1994 policy convention, Harper was part of a small minority of delegates who voted against restricting the definition of marriage to “the union of one man and one woman”. He actually opposed both same-sex marriage and mandated benefits for same-sex couples, but argued that political parties should refrain from taking official positions on these and other “issues of conscience”.
Though socially libertarian, Harper has expressed some socially conservative views on certain issues. In 1994, he opposed plans by federal Justice Minister Allan Rock to introduce spousal benefits for same-sex couples. Citing the recent failure of a similar initiative in Ontario, he was quoted as saying, “What I hope they learn is not to get into it. There are more important social and economic issues, not to mention the unity question.” Harper also spoke against the possibility of the Canadian Human Rights Commission or the Supreme Court changing federal policy in these and other matters.
Harper was the only Reform MP to support the creation of the Canadian Firearms Registry at second reading in 1995, although he later voted against it at third reading stage. He said at the time that he initially voted for the registry because of a poll showing that most of his constituents supported it, and added that he changed his vote when a second poll showed the opposite result. It was reported in April 1995, that some Progressive Conservatives opposed to Jean Charest’s leadership wanted to remove both Charest and Manning, and unite the Reform and Progressive Conservative parties under Harper’s leadership.
Harper emerged a prominent member of the Reform Party caucus. He was active on constitutional issues during his first parliament, and played a prominent role in drafting the Reform Party’s strategy for the 1995 Quebec referendum. A long-standing opponent of centralized federalism, he stood with Preston Manning in Montreal to introduce a twenty-point plan to “decentralize and modernize” Canada in the event of a “no” victory. Harper later argued that the “no” side’s narrow plurality was a worst-case scenario, in that no-one had won a mandate for change.
In 1997, Harper delivered a controversial speech on Canadian identity to the Council for National Policy, a conservative American think tank. He made comments such as “Canada is a Northern European welfare state in the worst sense of the term, and very proud of it”, “if you’re like all Americans, you know almost nothing except for your own country. Which makes you probably knowledgeable about one more country than most Canadians”, and “the NDP [New Democratic Party] is kind of proof that the Devil lives and interferes in the affairs of men.” These statements were made public and criticized during the 2006 election. Harper argued that the speech was intended as humour, and not as serious analysis.
Harper remained active in constitutional issues. He was a prominent opponent of the Calgary Declaration on national unity in late 1997, describing it as an “appeasement strategy” against Quebec nationalism. He called for federalist politicians to reject this strategy, and approach future constitutional talks from the position that “Quebec separatists are the problem and they need to be fixed”. In late 1999, Harper called for the federal government to establish clear rules for any future Quebec referendum on sovereignty. Some have identified Harper’s views as an influence on the Chrétien government’s Clarity Act.
In April 1997, Harper suggested that the Reform Party was drifting toward social conservatism and ignoring the principles of economic conservatism. The Liberal Party lost seats but managed to retain a narrow majority government in the 1997 federal election, while Reform made only modest gains.
These tensions culminated in late 1996 when Harper announced that he would not be a candidate in the next federal election. He resigned his parliamentary seat on January 14, 1997, the same day that he was appointed as a vice-president of the National Citizens Coalition (NCC), a conservative think-tank and advocacy group. He was promoted to NCC president later in the year.
Harper considered campaigning for the Progressive Conservative Party leadership in 1998, after Jean Charest left federal politics. Among those encouraging his candidacy were senior aides to Ontario Premier Mike Harris, including Tony Clement and Tom Long. He eventually decided against running, arguing that it would “burn bridges to those Reformers with whom I worked for many years” and prevent an alliance of right-wing parties from taking shape. Harper was sceptical about the Reform Party’s United Alternative initiative in 1999, arguing that it would serve to consolidate Manning’s hold on the party leadership. He also expressed concern that the UA would dilute Reform’s ideological focus.
As president of the NCC from 1998 to 2002, Harper launched an ultimately unsuccessful legal battle against federal election laws restricting third-party advertising. He led the NCC in several campaigns against the Canadian Wheat Board, and supported Finance Minister Paul Martin’s 2000 tax cuts as a positive first step toward tax reform.
Harper also wrote an editorial in late 2000 arguing that Alberta and the rest of Canada were “embark[ing] on divergent and potentially hostile paths to defining their country”. He said that Alberta had chosen the “best of Canada’s heritage—a combination of American enterprise and individualism with the British traditions of order and co-operation” while Canada “appears content to become a second-tier socialistic country … led by a second-world strongman appropriately suited for the task”. He also called for a “stronger and much more autonomous Alberta”, while rejecting calls for separatism. In the 2001 Alberta provincial election, Harper led the NCC in a “Vote Anything but Liberal” campaign. Some articles from this period described him as a possible successor to Klein.
After the Canadian Alliance’s poor showing in the 2000 election, Harper joined with other Western conservatives in co-authoring a document called the “Alberta Agenda”. The letter called on Alberta to reform publicly funded health care, replace the Canada Pension Plan with a provincial plan and replace the Royal Canadian Mounted Police with a provincial police force. It became known as the “firewall letter”, because it called on the provincial government to “build firewalls around Alberta” to stop the federal government from redistributing its wealth to less affluent regions. Alberta Premier Ralph Klein agreed with some of the letter’s recommendations, but distanced himself from the “firewall” comments.
After the death of Pierre Trudeau in 2000, Harper wrote an editorial criticizing Trudeau’s policies as they affected Western Canada. He wrote that Trudeau “embraced the fashionable causes of his time, with variable enthusiasm and differing results”, but “took a pass” on the issues that “truly defined his century”. Harper subsequently accused Trudeau of promoting “unabashed socialism”, and argued that Canadian governments between 1972 and 2002 had restricted economic growth through “state corporatism”.
After the death of Pierre Trudeau in 2000, Harper wrote an editorial criticizing Trudeau’s policies as they affected Western Canada. He wrote that Trudeau “embraced the fashionable causes of his time, with variable enthusiasm and differing results”, but “took a pass” on the issues that “truly defined his century”. Harper subsequently accused Trudeau of promoting “unabashed socialism”, and argued that Canadian governments between 1972 and 2002 had restricted economic growth through “state corporatism”.
Stockwell Day called a new Canadian Alliance leadership race for 2002, and soon declared himself a candidate. Harper emerged as Day’s main rival, and declared his own candidacy on December 3, 2001. He eventually won the support of at least 28 Alliance MPs, including Scott Reid, James Rajotte and Keith Martin. During the campaign, Harper reprised his earlier warnings against an alliance with Quebecois nationalists, and called for his party to become the federalist option in Quebec. He argued that “the French language is not imperilled in Quebec”, and opposed “special status” for the province in the Canadian Constitution accordingly. He also endorsed greater provincial autonomy on Medicare, and said that he would not co-operate with the Progressive Conservatives as long as they were led by Joe Clark. On social issues, Harper argued for “parental rights” to use corporal punishment against their children and supported raising the age of sexual consent. He described his potential support base as “similar to what George Bush tapped”.
Day’s leadership of the Canadian Alliance became increasingly troubled throughout the summer of 2001, as several party MPs called for his resignation. In June, the National Post newspaper reported that former Reform MP Ian McClelland was organizing a possible leadership challenge on Harper’s behalf. Harper announced his resignation from the NCC presidency in August 2001, to prepare a campaign.
Harper and the NCC endorsed a private school tax credit proposed by Ontario’s Progressive Conservative government in 2001, arguing that it would “save about $7,000 for each student who does not attend a union-run public school”. Education Minister Janet Ecker criticized this, saying that her government’s intent was not to save money at the expense of public education.
What's Stephen Harper Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Stephen Harper Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |