Ontario woman could become Iceland's first lady if husband wins election

spaminator

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Ontario woman could become Iceland's first lady if husband wins election
Diana Mehta, THE CANADIAN PRESS
First posted: Sunday, June 19, 2016 10:47 AM EDT | Updated: Sunday, June 19, 2016 11:09 AM EDT
In just a few days an Ontario woman will find out if she is to become the first lady of Iceland.
Eliza Reid, who married an Icelandic history professor and moved to the Nordic country more than ten years ago, has found herself at the centre of an election campaign in which her husband has emerged as the front-runner for the office of the president.
The whirlwind race, and its implications for the future, have Reid grappling with the very real possibility of taking up a public position and having to move her family into the presidential residence.
"When I was growing up in the Ottawa Valley it would never have occurred to me that my future would have taken me in this direction," said the 40-year-old. "I feel like I've been very welcomed by Icelandic society. It would be a tremendous honour to be able to have that role."
As election day looms on June 25, Reid believes her Canadian background has helped in a campaign which cropped up "completely out of the blue."
"As a Canadian, my stereotype is a bit that I am grounded and regular and don't try to be something that I'm not," said the mother of four who works as a writer and editor. "And I think those are things about us that appeal to the electorate, we're just what you see is what you get."
Reid met her husband, Gudni Johannesson, when they were both studying history in England. They moved to Iceland in 2003 and married a year later.
Running for the presidency -- a largely ceremonial role which has been compared to Canada's Governor General -- only came up this spring, Reid said.
Iceland's outgoing president first announced in his New Year address that he would not be seeking another term as the country's head of state, prompting people to start declaring their interest, she said.
Some asked Reid's husband, who is an academic expert on the history of the presidency, if he would consider running, but the suggestions weren't initially acted upon, she said.
The situation changed in April, when the Panama Papers scandal revealed that the family of Iceland's prime minister had offshore accounts, Reid said.
The prime minister ended up resigning, Johannesson was called upon to provide a fair bit of commentary on the matter, and his public profile rose, she said.
"He was seen as having intelligent, but non-partisan things to say about what was going on," said Reid. "People just started calling our house, sending him Facebook messages and calling his cellphone...saying you should really consider running."
After mulling it over with his family, Johannesson announced on May 5 that he would run for the presidency and has since emerged as the leading candidate.
"People don't necessarily want a career politician as their head of state," said Reid. "Gudni is seen as being very knowledgeable of the institution of the presidency, of its roles and limitations, but is also not seen as having his own private agenda."
Since their campaign began, Reid has been by her husband's side at almost every event, and says she has been received warmly by his supporters.
"People often elect the couple, especially because of this sort of figurehead capacity of (the role)," she said. "People like to know that I was born somewhere else but I've learned the language and have been taking part in society for a number of years."
The family of Guðni Th. Jóhannesson (with his wife, Eliza to the right) who is a Canadian. (Gudni Johannesson website)

Ontario woman could become Iceland's first lady if husband wins election | Canad
 

Blackleaf

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Labour MP for Aberavon, Stephen Kinnock - the son of Neil Kinnock, the former leader of the Labour Party who lost the 1987 General Election against Thatcher and the 1992 General Election against Major - is married to Helle Thorning-Schmidt, the Danish Prime Minister between 2011 and 2015. So Kinnock was Denmark's First Lady during those years.

Incidentally, Welsh windbag Neil Kinnock is a member of the Remain campaign - not surprising, really, when you consider he is also a former well-paid European Commissioner.
 

Blackleaf

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I didn't know that Iceland had a 'first lady', I thought that was a peculiarly American concept.

The term was originally used in the United States in around 1838 in reference to Martha Washington in a profile by Mrs. C. H. Sigourney: Mrs. Sigourney, discussing how Martha Washington had not changed, even after her husband George became president, wrote that "The first lady of the nation still preserved the habits of early life. Indulging in no indolence, she left the pillow at dawn, and after breakfast, retired to her chamber for an hour for the study of the scriptures and devotion".

In American media the term "First Lady" is often applied to the wife of a head of state in another country, irrespective of whether a different appellation (or none) is used in that country.

Other countries, but not many, have adopted a similar term. Colombians use the term "Primera Dama" for their president's wife."

Brazilians use the term "Primeira-Dama".

Azerbaijanis use the Azerbaijani term "Birinci xanım".

Indonesians call their president's wife "Ibu Negara" (Lady/Mother of the State).

The British (and the Mauritians) use the term "Prime Ministerial Consort" to refer to the wife of their Prime Minister.
 
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spaminator

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Dam that's a Big family...

Great story Spammy..


Canadian woman becomes Iceland's first lady after husband win's election
THE CANADIAN PRESS
First posted: Sunday, June 26, 2016 09:36 AM EDT | Updated: Sunday, June 26, 2016 03:51 PM EDT
Voters in Iceland have elected a new president, and in doing so have made a Canadian woman the Nordic nation's new first lady.
Gudni Johannesson has been declared the winner of Sunday's vote, which means his wife will assume the first lady's role.
Eliza Reid -- who grew up in the Ottawa Valley -- met Johannesson when they were both studying history in England.
The pair moved to Iceland in 2003, married a year later and now have four children.
Reid, 40, who works as a writer and editor, recently said she believed her Canadian background helped her husband's campaign because she doesn't try to be something she's not, and that appeals to people.
Johannesson -- a history professor who has never before held public office -- joined the presidential race in April with a promise to restore the nation's trust in the political system after demonstrations called for the resignation of the prime minister amid a scandal involving offshore accounts.
Reid said she felt welcomed by Icelandic society and would consider it a tremendous honour to be first lady.
-- with files from The Associated Press
Eliza Reid and her husband, Gudni Johannesson are shown in this handout image during his campaign in Iceland. In just a few days Reid, an Ontario woman, will find out if she is to become the first lady of Iceland. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Hakon Broder Lund)

Canadian woman becomes Iceland's first lady after husband win's election | Canad
 

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Iceland's new first lady grew up on a hobby farm near Ashton
By Evelyn Harford, Postmedia Network
First posted: Monday, June 27, 2016 07:13 AM EDT | Updated: Monday, June 27, 2016 10:19 AM EDT
Iceland has a new first lady, and she’s from the Ottawa Valley.

Eliza Reid, 40, was ushered in as first lady of Iceland on Sunday after her husband, Gudni Johannesson, 48, was elected as the sixth president of the small Nordic country — the first new president the country has had in 20 years.

Johannesson, a history professor who has never before held public office, joined the presidential race in April with a promise to restore the nation’s trust in the political system after demonstrations called for the resignation of the prime minister amid the Panama Papers scandal involving offshore accounts.

Reid, who was born in the Ottawa Valley, met Johannesson when they were both studying history in England. Reid was pursing her master’s degree at Oxford, while her husband was pursuing his doctorate.

“We met at a fundraiser for my husband’s rowing team. All women had to purchase tickets and put them in the men’s cups, said Reid. The men would draw out a ticket from their cups, and had to take out whichever woman’s ticket they drew on a date.

“I bought 10 tickets and put eight in (Johannesson’s) cup,” she said. “So, I gave fate a little push.”

After meeting Johannesson in England, Reid decided move to Iceland with him in 2003, and they married a year later. The couple now has four children together — three boys, Duncan, 8, Donald, 6, Saethor, 4, and one girl, Edda, 2.

Before her international travels, Reid grew up on a hobby farm near Ashton, a town with a current population of about 200, located just 40 kilometres south-west of Parliament Hill — a place her parents, Hugh Reid and Allison Reid still call home.

Reid remembers being initially disappointed when her family moved from Ottawa to Ashton — she missed cable TV and her friends — but says now, “It was really nice to be in the countryside with the fresh air, animals all around and a big house with lots of space.”

Reid attended Bell High School in Nepean before leaving the Valley at 18 to study international relations at the University of Toronto, a program that she stumbled upon by happenstance.

Reid always knew she wanted to study history or politics, but was convinced to study international relations by a friend, a year above her, who was switching out of the program.

“I really think he just wanted to sell me his textbooks,” she said, “but I got convinced and I really liked it in the end.”

As a small town girl, interested in politics, Reid never thought she’d assume the role of Iceland’s first lady.

“It’s all out of the blue,” she said. But now that her husband has won his bid for president, Reid said she’s very excited about the future.

“You just never know where you’re going to end up.”

Reid said recently that she believed her Canadian background helped her husband’s campaign because she doesn’t try to be something she’s not, and that appeals to people.

She says she has been warmly received by the Icelandic people. The outgoing president’s wife is a foreign national, too, said Reid, so, Icelanders are used to that.

While Reid may have planted her roots in Iceland 13 years ago, she doesn’t miss out on any chance to come back to Ottawa and said she visits once every nine or 10 months.

“We really enjoy visiting Ottawa,” said Reid. “We have four children together and we always of course visit their grandparents (in Ottawa).”

The family of six has only been back to Ottawa once all together. Reid said she rotates which children accompany her home on her more frequent trips.

“I’ll bring two kids and the next time I’ll bring a different two,” she said. “We try to tag team it all.”

When their family’s in Ottawa, Reid said, she makes sure her kids get the quintessential Ottawa experience by taking them to see Winterlude, the Experimental Farm and Senators games.

The Ottawa-born first lady has worked in Iceland as a writer and editor for many years, and her own writing and editing business. However, she expects things to change once she assumes the role of first lady at the end of the summer.

“You can’t be a first lady and be editing an annual report,” she said. “I want to keep professionally busy, which I’m sure I will be.”

Her new role as Iceland’s first lady will be to support her husband as president and spearhead her own initiatives, including the continuation of the Iceland Writers Retreat, a yearly event that she c0-founded.

Reid said she’s going to have to do more research about which projects she’s going to pursue and get her bearings in her new role in Icelandic politics.

“I’m still just discovering it all here,” she said. “I believe there’s an office if I want it at the headquarters where the president has his office, but there isn’t a distinguished staff.”

Reid said she hopes to shape her role as first lady into something where her skills are best suited, including projects that could possibly involve immigration and writing.

“It’s an immense privilege and I’m really looking forward to the next four years.”

Johannesson will officially take office on Aug. 1.

— With files from The Canadian Press
Gudni Johannesson, with wife Eliza Reid at his side, speaks at an election party in Reykjavik, on June 25, 2016 (Halldor Kolbeins, AFP/Getty Images)

Iceland's new first lady grew up on a hobby farm near Ashton | Ontario | News |