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Headshot of Jeffrey Simpson.
Bio:

Jeffrey Simpson, The Globe and Mail's national affairs columnist, has won all three of Canada's leading literary prizes -- the Governor-General's award for non-fiction book writing, the National Magazine Award for political writing, and the National Newspaper Award for column writing (twice). He has also won the Hyman Solomon Award for excellence in public policy journalism. In January, 2000, he became an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Born in New York, Mr. Simpson came to Canada when he was 10 years old and studied at the University of Toronto Schools, Queen's University and the London School of Economics. In 1972-73, he received a parliamentary internship scholarship in Ottawa. A year later, he joined The Globe and Mail.

His career with the newspaper began at City Hall in Toronto and with coverage of Quebec politics. In 1977, he became a member of the paper's Ottawa bureau, and eighteen months later he was named The Globe and Mail's Ottawa bureau chief. From 1981-1983, Mr. Simpson served as The Globe's European correspondent based in London, England. He began writing his national affairs column in January, 1984.

Mr. Simpson has published eight books -- including Discipline of Power (1980); Spoils of Power (1988); Faultlines, Struggling for a Canadian Vision (1993); The Anxious Years (1996); Star-Spangled Canadians (2000); and The Friendly Dictatorship: Reflections on Canadian Democracy (2001). His latest book, published in the fall of 2007, with Mark Jaccard and Nic Rivers, is titled Hot Air: Meeting Canada’s Climate Change Challenge.

He has written numerous magazine articles for such publications as Saturday Night, The Report on Business Magazine, The Journal of Canadian Studies, The Queen's Quarterly. He has spoken at dozens of major conferences here and abroad on a variety of domestic and international issues. He has also been a regular contributor to television programs in both English and French and completed a two-hour documentary for CBC to accompany his book, Star-Spangled Canadians. He has been a guest lecturer at such universities as Oxford, Edinburgh, Harvard, Princeton, Brigham Young, Johns Hopkins, Maine, California plus more than a dozen universities in Canada.

In 1993-1994, Mr. Simpson was on leave from his column as a John S. Knight fellow at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. He has been a Skelton-Clark fellow and Brockington Visitor at Queen's University. He has also been a John V. Clyne fellow at the University of British Columbia, a Distinguished Visitor at the University of Alberta and a member of the Georgetown University Leadership Seminar. He has been awarded honorary doctorates of laws from the University of British Columbia, the University of Western Ontario, the University of Manitoba, l'université de Moncton, Queen's University, the University of Windsor and the University of King's College.

Mr. Simpson has been a member of the board of trustees at Queen's University; the board of overseers at Green College, University of British Columbia; the advisory councils of the Robarts Medical Research Institute and the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario, and the editorial board of The Queen's Quarterly. He has been vice-chairman of the City of Ottawa Library Board and was awarded the William Watkinson Award for outstanding contributions to the Canadian Library community.

Mr. Simpson has taught as an adjunct professor at the Queen’s Institute of Policy Studies and The University of Ottawa Law School. He is now senior fellow at the University of Ottawa’s Graduate School of Public and International Affairs.

Mr. Simpson was a juror for the Charles Taylor Prize for non-fiction books in 2008 and for the Cundill prize for history in 2011. He is also a member of the Trilateral Commission.

He lives in Ottawa with his wife Wendy. They have three children.

Latest Columns:

The Conservatives tamper with an EI way of life

Changes to employment insurance will not be well received in parts of the country where it is part of the social fabric

In a province of sacrifice, a few pursue privilege

While those about them feel the pain of restraint, Quebec’s students refuse to make even a modest contribution toward restoring their debt-burdened province to fiscal health

Ten years of sacrifice, no sense of victory for Canada in Afghanistan

It is to be regretted that Stephen Harper’s wisdom on ending Canadian participation did not inform his judgment – and NATO’s – at an earlier stage of the mission

Mulcair should drop the ‘Dutch disease’ rhetoric

If he aspires to be a national leader, the NDP leader must improve his economic analysis and appeal to the whole country

‘Time and punishment’ now Canada’s way

By shifting our prison emphasis away from rehabilitation, the government sets the stage for more crime in the long run

A Congress without compromise serves no one

Regardless of who wins the White House, the politics of ideological confrontation can be expected to thwart progress on the many challenges facing the United States

Canada and climate change: all plan, no action

The Harper government’s emissions-reduction target will never be met, and that may suit it just fine

You can talk about efficiency, but you can't hide the axe

It’s absurd to contend that Ottawa can trim $4-billion from the budget without affecting programs and services

University quality was forgotten in Quebec’s drama

The Charest government set out to fill some of the higher-education funding gap, but in the end made matters worse

Europe is divided, and it’s not alone

With all this uncertainty, the world economy remains fraught with peril. No wonder the Bank of Canada is projecting very modest growth