Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former PM Kim Campbell Tells Business Leaders: Forget Biases Against Women, People Of Colour

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Apr, 2015 09:51 AM
    VANCOUVER — Former prime minister Kim Campbell says that despite the fact that a colleague once called her a "boring leader," she always felt compelled to get involved and engage people.
     
    Campbell, who led the Progressive Conservatives for five months in 1993, gave the keynote speech on leadership at the annual luncheon of the Canadian Club of Vancouver.
     
    She told the crowd of business people and politicians that great leaders are not only born but can be made when they're put in a particular situation.
     
    "I think the world is full of examples of people who found themselves in the circumstance that forced them to discover resources within themselves they never knew were there."
     
    The B.C.-born former lawyer called on business leaders to overcome biases against women and people of colour.
     
    "When I was young, women asked to be included on the basis of justice and fairness. But women were often excluded in order not to compromise standards or the bottom line," she said.
     
    "Now we know that diversity actually improves performance and that women in leadership positions actually improve the bottom line."
     
    Campbell now serves as the founding principal of the Peter Lougheed Leadership College at the University of Alberta.
     
    She joked that she's had an interesting life through her travels and academic work since political retirement was thrust upon her by the Canadian electorate.
     
    The event was held in honour of recent winners of the Order of Canada and the Order of B.C.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Marijuana Use Among Teens, Young Adults May Be Down, StatsCan Survey Suggests

    Marijuana Use Among Teens, Young Adults May Be Down, StatsCan Survey Suggests
    The survey shows younger Canadians are still the biggest consumers of marijuana, with a third of 18- to 24-year-old respondents reporting they had used marijuana or hashish in the past year.

    Marijuana Use Among Teens, Young Adults May Be Down, StatsCan Survey Suggests

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers
    WESTASKIWIN, Alta. — The trial for a man charged with attempted murder in the shooting of two Mounties in rural Alberta has begun with him pleading not guilty.

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage
    TORONTO — House prices have jumped dramatically over the past year in Canada's two most expensive real estate markets, Vancouver and Toronto, but other major cities showed a mixed bag of results.

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It
    HALIFAX — Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau says he doesn't see any possibility of a coalition with the NDP, a day after he said he would "maybe" be more open to the idea if Tom Mulcair wasn't running the party.

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting
    OTTAWA — In a decision that could reverberate in cities and towns across the country, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that prayers cannot be recited before municipal council meetings in the Quebec town of Saguenay.

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting

    Canadian Diplomat's Teen Son Charged With Murder In Florida: Report

    MIAMI — U.S. media are reporting that a Canadian diplomat's teenage son accused of involvement in a drug-related shootout that killed his older brother in Florida has been charged with first-degree murder.

    Canadian Diplomat's Teen Son Charged With Murder In Florida: Report