In first official speech, Gov. Gen. Arbour calls on Canadians to learn from diversity
OTTAWA — Extreme polarization and consensus are dangerous and a better country can only be built through the “peaceful management” of our differences, Gov. Gen. Louise Arbour said Monday in her first speech as the King’s representative in Canada.
The former Supreme Court justice and international prosecutor was sworn in as Canada’s 31st Governor General in a ceremony filled with tradition, and with some of her own personal touches in the selection of music and the decision to travel to and from the event in a passenger vehicle, rather than a horse-drawn carriage.
Arbour’s speech also drew heavily from her own lived experiences as a francophone woman and jurist who also spent many years abroad as a prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunals and the UN high commissioner for human rights.
She said our ability to coexist peacefully, despite our differences, is critical to maintaining a lawful, rules-based society.

