Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Elizabeth May Says She's Engaged: 'I Had A Crush On Him, He Had A Crush On Me'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2018 07:59 PM
    VICTORIA — Green party Leader Elizabeth May is engaged and is making plans for a wedding next spring.
     
     
    May said Monday she and John Kidder will be married in Victoria on April 22 and are planning a train trip from Vancouver to Ottawa shortly afterwards as their honeymoon.
     
     
    She said the couple have known each other for about five years, but the sparks flew at a Green Party convention in Vancouver in September. 
     
     
    Kidder, who is from Ashcroft, B.C., popped the question about a month later.
     
     
    Kidder, 71, has deep roots in the Green party, running federally for a seat in B.C. and is a founder of the provincial party.
     
     
    May says he is a retired technology entrepreneur who operates a hops farm in Ashcroft, but also spends time in Vancouver.
     
     
    "I had a crush on him and he had a crush on me," said May, who represents the B.C. riding of Saanich-Gulf Islands in the House of Commons. "It was kind of like high school."
     
     
    She said once the pair decided they were an item, the proposal came quickly.
     
     
    "When you know it's right, it's right. Whirlwind," she added.
     
     
    Kidder is the brother of the late actress Margot Kidder, May said. He has three children and four grandchildren.
     
     
    May, who has a daughter, three stepchildren and seven grandchildren, credited her friend Sylvia Olsen with playing matchmaker. Olsen is the mother of Adam Olsen, the Green member of the B.C. legislature for Saanich-North and the Islands.
     
     
    She said Olsen told her she would encourage Kidder to make the move.
     
     
    "Let's face it," said May. "I didn't have time. I said, 'I don't need a partner.' I'm really busy. I'm quite happy as a single woman."
     
     
    But now May said she's thrilled.
     
     
    "I feel pretty goofy," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Backlog Of Irregular Asylum Claims Has Ballooned To Over 28,000

    Backlog Of Irregular Asylum Claims Has Ballooned To Over 28,000
     The backlog of asylum claims from irregular migrants awaiting a decision on whether they can stay in Canada has grown to over 28,000.

    Backlog Of Irregular Asylum Claims Has Ballooned To Over 28,000

    Quebec University Joins Growing Trend Toward Letting Students Use Preferred Names

    Quebec University Joins Growing Trend Toward Letting Students Use Preferred Names
    MONTREAL — A major Quebec university is joining a growing movement toward allowing students — including transgender students who've long sought the provision — to use a name other than their given name on campus.

    Quebec University Joins Growing Trend Toward Letting Students Use Preferred Names

    One Month After Legalization, Illicit Cannabis Shops Doing Brisk Business

    TORONTO — The three surveillance cameras and the steady flow of people in and out of the small, nondescript grey building are the only hint of the brisk business this downtown Toronto cannabis dispensary does behind closed doors.

    One Month After Legalization, Illicit Cannabis Shops Doing Brisk Business

    Dead Saskatoon Tattoo Artist's Skin Removed, Preserved To Honour His Work

    SASKATOON — When Chris Wenzel knew he was going to die, he had an unusual request for his wife.

    Dead Saskatoon Tattoo Artist's Skin Removed, Preserved To Honour His Work

    B.C. Man Trapped In Truck For Several Days Recovers In Victoria Hospital

    A 23-year-old Vancouver Island man is recovering in a Victoria hospital after his truck went off a cliff and he was pinned in the vehicle with a broken femur for several days.

    B.C. Man Trapped In Truck For Several Days Recovers In Victoria Hospital

    Toronto 'Carding' Activist Desmond Cole Stopped By Police In Vancouver

    VANCOUVER — A Toronto activist and writer who was stopped by Vancouver police a day after arriving in the city says his experience reveals what daily life is like for black and Indigenous residents.

    Toronto 'Carding' Activist Desmond Cole Stopped By Police In Vancouver