ALUMNI PROFILE
Recognizing a ‘Renaissance person’ For the modest Ted Johnson, Law’76, the Order of Canada marks the completion of a remarkable 42-year public/private sector career BY KEN CUTHBERTSON, LAW’83
The news was a delightful surprise, but it was also puzzling, says Montrealer J. Edward (Ted) Johnson, Law’76. When he heard the December 2020 announcement that he had been appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada, he scratched his head. “Seems it had something to do with my corporate activities and volunteering with not-for-profit organizations,” he speculated. However, what the unassuming Mr. Johnson found puzzling was anything but to his family, friends, and colleagues. After all, his distinguished 42-year legal career, which “officially” ended with his 2018 retirement, was remarkable for its excellence, its impact, and its public/ private diversity. “Ted is a true Renaissance person,” says his long-time friend, Senator Peter Harder. “He’s as comfortable in a canoe paddling our northern rivers as in a palace with political leaders debating the challenges of our times. His career ranged from executive assistant to a prime minister to the board rooms of the nation. His philanthropy and civic leadership have contributed to expanding opportunities for young Canadians in their academic pursuits and strengthening civil society – all with quiet good humour, humility, and dignity.” After earning an undergraduate degree at Western’s Ivey School of Business, Johnson spent a year at Sciences Po in France, and then enrolled at McGill Law. For his final two years of study, however, he transferred to Queen’s Law, where he made “fond memories, especially of classes with Professors Dan Soberman and George Alexandrowicz.” Following his articles with the Justice Department in Ottawa, he became Special Assistant to Justice Minister Ron Basford and then to Finance Minister Jean Chretien and then, 1980-1984, Executive Assistant to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. This was during the time of two federalist successes: the failure of Quebec’s separation referendum (1980) and then negotiating the 1982 repatriation of the Constitution. “Working for Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau was demanding and challenging, but also hugely rewarding and a privilege beyond anything I ever could have hoped for,” says Johnson.
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The lessons he learned have stayed with him. As an unabashed federalist, he agrees with the March 25 Supreme Court of Canada ruling that approved the constitutionality of the federal government’s carbon tax. “That decision was constructive, and going forward I think it will prove to be the right one.” Johnson concedes that the SCC ruling may well lead to increased tension between Ottawa and the provinces in the short term, but he believes the federation will arrive at a new equilibrium. “There’s an ebb and flow to federal-provincial relations. We’ve been here before.”
“Ted Johnson is as comfortable in a canoe paddling our northern rivers as in a palace with political leaders debating the challenges of our times.” — Senator Peter Harder
When Trudeau retired in 1984, Johnson left Ottawa to go into private practice with Lang, Michener in Toronto. Then in 1985, he joined Montreal-based Power Corporation and its Power Financial subsidiary, serving as Senior Vice-President plus General Counsel and Secretary of both companies. After 33 years in the roles, he reflects that “I had the incredibly good fortune to be at Power Corporation at a time of unprecedented consolidation activity in the Canadian financial services industry, and I developed some thoughts on the questions of corporate governance that I’ve brought with me into my not-for-profit and charitable involvements.”