Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Brian Mulroney Officially Opens University Institute In N.S. That Bears His Name

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Sep, 2019 06:23 PM
  • Brian Mulroney Officially Opens University Institute In N.S. That Bears His Name

ANTIGONISH, N.S. - Former prime minister Brian Mulroney officially opened an institute of government named after him at St. Francis Xavier University in central Nova Scotia on Wednesday.

 

Canada's 18th prime minister graduated from the university in 1959.

 

The $60-million Brian Mulroney Institute of Government, housed in a new 75,000-square-foot building called Mulroney Hall, will offer what it says will be Canada's only public policy program for undergraduates.

 

In a speech prepared for delivery at the event, Mulroney said the institute would provide opportunities for young Canadians and others from around the world to "learn, lead and help build a better world for us all."

 

After thanking the many donors who made financial contributions to the project, Mulroney reminisced about growing up in Baie-Comeau, Que., where his father Benedict worked at the paper mill as an electrician.

 

In a story he has told many times before, Mulroney recounted how his father was opposed to his young son's plan to seek an apprenticeship at the mill.

 

Mulroney said his father told him: "The only way out of a paper mill town is through a university door — and you are going to university."

 

After graduating from St. Francis Xavier, Mulroney said he headed for the "big city with the bright lights, to conquer the world," but he said he had no money, no connections and no influence.

 

"But I had two things of far greater worth: a degree from St. FX and the values that had been inculcated into us by a superb faculty and university leaders, here in Antigonish."

 

The former prime minister, who held office between 1984 and 1993, said the school "opened the door to a wider world" by teaching him about the "power of ideas to transform our country, from one century to the next."

 

He said the university's professors also taught him never to give up.

 

"Defeat is not something to fear but surrender is something to reject," he said, repeating a phase he has used over the years.

 

"Throughout an active and sometimes tumultuous life, never once did it ever occur to me to quit. I learned on this campus that failure was not an option."

 

A text of Mulroney's speech was provided to The Canadian Press before delivery.

 

The plan to create the institute was launched in 2012, and Mulroney donated $1 million to the original fundraising campaign. He then helped raise almost $100 million — most of it from private donations, though the Nova Scotia government contributed $5 million.

 

Mulroney made a point of thanking Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for his "unflagging support," adding that Trudeau's former principal secretary, Gerald Butts, was also an important supporter.

 

When the project was first announced in October 2016, Mulroney said about $10 million would be set aside for an endowment to support student scholarships and bursaries.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

MONTREAL — Cattle producers across the country are backing Quebec colleagues who have filed a complaint over a popular new meatless burger that is being advertised as "plant-based meat."

Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels
VANCOUVER — Over 100 people have fallen sick following a suspected norovirus outbreak at two Vancouver-area hotels over the weekend.

More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says the government is "deeply concerned" about China's decision to formally arrest two Canadians citizens it has been holding since December.

Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation

Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation
PARIS — A new digital charter will dictate how the country will combat hate speech, misinformation and online electoral interference in Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a technology conference in Paris on Thursday.

Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation

Archbishop Fears Quebec Government's Secularism Bill Will Erode Freedoms

MONTREAL — The Quebec government's move to legislate on secularism will come at the expense of individual freedoms, Montreal's archbishop said Thursday.

Archbishop Fears Quebec Government's Secularism Bill Will Erode Freedoms

Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.

Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.
WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump has granted a full pardon to Conrad Black, a former newspaper publisher who has written a flattering political biography of Trump.

Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.