Geills Turner (néeKilgour; born December 23, 1937) is a Canadian businesswoman and the widow of John Turner, the 17th Prime Minister of Canada. Her first name is pronounced like "Jill".[1]
She met John Turner when she was a campaign worker for his first election campaign[2] and she "brought computers into Turner's campaign."[1] They married in 1963 and had three children: Elizabeth (born 1964), Michael (born 1965), David (born 1968, died 2021), and James Andrew (born 1972).[2][3]
Spouse of the prime minister
Her husband served as prime minister of Canada from June 30 to September 17, 1984.[4]
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation states that "she was not keen to subsume her personality to further her husband’s goals, and for the most part stayed out of the spotlight." She also did not like the way she was portrayed in the press and therefore tried to stay away from it.[5] In his book Birds of a Feather: The Press and the Politicians, Allan Fotheringham claimed that Turner tried to exact her revenge on the press during the 1988 election campaign by secretly taking photographs of journalists partying on a campaign bus, with an eye toward publishing them in a magazine. The photographs were never subsequently published, however, and Fotheringham states that John Turner himself most likely killed the idea.[6]
Later life
After the family returned to Toronto, Turner enrolled in a four-year photography program at Ryerson University.[2]
In 2001, Turner made news when she crashed her minivan and was charged for careless driving. She stated that she had momentarily stopped driving responsibly to save her dog.[7]
In March 2008 Turner brought an action in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice against the City of Guelph, claiming ownership of several of John McCrae's wartime medals which were donated to the McCrae House in 1997 and 2005. She was seeking to have personal possession of the medals. The action was settled in 2012 with an agreement for the medals to remain with the museum.[8][9]