Gordon Towers


Thomas Gordon Towers, was a Canadian politician, Member of Parliament and the 13th Lieutenant Governor of Alberta.

Early life

Thomas Gordon Towers was born on July 5, 1919, the youngest of four children to Thomas Henry Towers and Janet Morrison, on the family's homestead in the Willowdale District southeast of Red Deer, Alberta.
Gordon Towers was educated at the Willowdale School, and although he aspired to go to university, he was unable to leave the family farm due to the Great Depression.
Gordon Towers married Doris Roberta Nicholson on December 27, 1940, and they had five children together and fostered one daughter.
In March 1941 Towers joined the Royal Canadian Artillery, but was given an honourable discharge after three months in May 1941 due to a hip injury.

Federal political career

A farmer by profession, Gordon Towers was an unsuccessful Progressive Conservative candidate in Red Deer, Alberta in the 1963 and 1965 federal elections, losing to the federal Social Credit Leader Robert N. Thompson both times.
He won a seat in the House of Commons of Canada in the 1972 election, and was re-elected four subsequent times in 1974, 1979, 1980 and 1984. He did not run in the 1988 election following a heart attack in 1987. From 1984 to 1986, he was the Parliamentary Secretary to the Solicitor General of Canada. From 1986 to 1987, he was the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of State for Science and Technology. Towers was a Delegate to the United Nations General Assembly in 1978, and a Delegate of the Canadian Branch, Commonwealth Parliamentary Association, to the 29th Parliamentary Seminar, which was held at Westminster.
Gordon Towers introduced several pieces of legislation to Parliament regarding the representation, including the 1982 Private Members Bill C-223 which proposed Parliament would continue to limits its membership to 282 until Canada reached a population of 50 million. All of Towers' private member bills died on the Order Paper.

Lieutenant Governor of Alberta

On the advice of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney Towers was appointed Lieutenant Governor of Alberta by Governor General Ray Hnatyshyn on March 11, 1991. Towers served in this post from March 11, 1991, to April 17, 1996, when his successor Bud Olson was sworn in as the 14th Lieutenant Governor.
In 1993, Towers broke with tradition and refused the advice of Economic Development Minister Ken Kowalski and did not approve an order in council for a $1.5 million grant program. The program would have granted a substantial government loan for the restructuring of a motor hotel, and Towers exercise his right to withhold approval based on insufficient documentation. Towers insisted the Office of the Lieutenant Governor "is not just a rubber stamp". Towers eventually approved the order in council on March 1, once a full explanation had been provided.
In another unusual move, Towers opened the Fourth Sitting of the 22nd Alberta Legislature with a "90-minute state-of-affairs address" rather than the traditional speech from the throne. Towers' reasoning for the change was that the session would last only a couple weeks until the 1993 Alberta general election was called.

Later life

Towers' created significant controversy when he called for the resignation of his successor as Lieutenant Governor, Bud Olsen, after he held the 1997 New Year's levee in Medicine Hat, becoming the first time the province's levee had been held outside the capital, Edmonton. Towers went so far as to appeal to Prime Minister Jean Chrétien for Olsen's removal from office.
Gordon Towers died in Red Deer from complications of diabetes on June 8, 1999. He is buried in the Red Deer Cemetery.

Honours and awards

In 1989, Towers was named the Paul Harris Fellow by Rotary International, and the 1990 Citizen of the Year by the Red Deer Chamber of Commerce. Towers was made a Knight of Grace of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem in 1991, and honorary lieutenant colonel of the 749 Communications Squadron, Red Deer, in 1992.
In 1992 Towers received an honorary doctor of laws from the University of Alberta.

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