Campbell, Kim (1947–)
Campbell, Kim (1947–)
Canadian prime minister. Name variations: A. Kim Campbell. Born Avril Phaedra Campbell, Mar 10, 1947, in Port Alberni, British Columbia, Canada; attended University of British Columbia and London School of Economics; m. Nathan Divinsky, 1972 (div. 1983); m. Howard Eddy, 1986 (div. 1993).
Lawyer, lecturer, Progressive Conservative, served in the British Columbia legislature for Vancouver-Point Grey riding (1986–88); elected to House of Commons for Vancouver Centre (1988); was minister of state (Indian Affairs and Northern Development, 1989–90), minister of justice and attorney general of Canada (1990–93), minister of national defense (1993), minister of veterans affairs (1993), minister responsible for Federal-Provincial Relations (1993); was the 1st woman and 1st native British Columbian to serve as prime minister of Canada (June 25, 1993–Nov 3, 1993); was the 1st former Canadian prime minister to be given a diplomatic post after leaving office, Canada's consul general in Los Angeles (1996).
See also autobiography Time and Chance: The Political Memoirs of Canada's First Woman Prime Minister (Doubleday, 1996).