Words matter. These are the best Kim Campbell Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
On the same day I was sworn in as Prime Minister of Canada, I announced the most sweeping reform ever undertaken in the structure of our federal government.
We Canadians are not given as a people to great patriotic displays.
Government cannot and must not replace private initiative.
I know Quebecers don’t want to relive old battles; they prefer to build for the future.
In all modesty, we must admit that governments are not always the best doctors when it comes to diagnosing economic ailments and prescribing the right treatment.
For too many, to work means having less income.
I believe it is time for new leadership that is able to leave the ’70s behind.
Governments allocate enormous resources for social programs. And it is true that for many years we have had one of the best social service systems in the world. Yet we are still incapable of meeting the needs of tens of thousands of Canadian families.
There is no greater honour than to serve Canadians.
I have always believed governments must adapt to the needs of the people, not the other way around.
Despite our high rate of unemployment, 300,000 jobs go unfilled largely because many of the unemployed lack the skills needed today as a result of technological progress.
For me, unemployment and poverty in the Greater Montreal area is not mainly a problem of structure, or design, or statistics. It is a profoundly human situation.
It would be naive to imagine we have solved all our income security problems simply because the roles of the federal and provincial governments in the area of skills training have been clarified.
I believe that Canadians have the common sense to see that a better future cannot be built on fragmentation.
For people on social assistance, the loss of free dental care, prescription drugs and subsidized housing can greatly outweigh additional income from working. We’ve all heard the stories.
The world has changed profoundly since our programs were first established.
An increasing number of Canadians must juggle the demands of work with the need to care for children, or for family members who are ill or too frail to care for themselves. Our programs have simply not kept pace with these societal changes.
Canada is the homeland of equality, justice and tolerance.