Sterling Lyon, who served as the Premier of Manitoba from 1977
to 1981, died yesterday after a brief illness. He was 83.
For those unfamiliar politics north of the border you could
think of Lyon as an early version of a Tea Partier, Canadian
style. Lyon came to power unexpectedly in 1977 when he
defeated two term New Democratic Party (NDP) Premier Ed
Schreyer. He was amongst the first conservative
politicians in any jurisdiction to address the issue of deficits
and debts. Lyon described his method of governing as
“acute, protracted restraint.”
Unfortunately, the pace of his reforms went too fast, too soon
for Manitobans who tossed Lyon’s Tories out of office in 1981 and
returned the NDP to power, this time under Howard Pawley.
However, a subsequent generation of Canadian politicians,
conservative and otherwise, would adopt the practice of “acute,
protracted restraint.” They owe a debt to Sterling Lyon.
For a summary of Lyon’s political career, here’s a
good piece in the Winnipeg Free Press co-written by
Jared Wesley, an assistant professor of political studies at the
University of Manitoba and David Stewart, the chair of the
political science department at the University of Calgary.