Born in
Windsor, Ontario, he received a
Bachelor of Commerce degree in 1961 from
Assumption University (predecessor of the
University of Windsor). Lumley established himself in business in
Cornwall in the other end of the province before entering politics. He served as Mayor of Cornwall between 1972 and 1974, and was first elected to the
House of Commons of Canada as the
Liberal Member of Parliament for
Stormont—Dundas in the
1974 federal election. In 1976, Lumley became
parliamentary secretary to the
Minister of Regional Economic Expansion. From 1977 to 1978, he served as parliamentary secretary to the
Minister of Finance. Lumley survived the
1979 election that defeated the Liberal government. The Liberals returned to power in the
1980 federal election and
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau appointed Lumley to the
cabinet as
Minister of State for Trade. After serving in a few other minor portfolios, he was promoted to
Minister of Industry and Minister of Regional Economic Expansion in 1982. Trudeau's successor,
John Turner, made Lumley his
Minister of Communications and Minister of Regional Industrial Expansion in 1984. Lumley was defeated in the
1984 federal election that fall. Following his electoral defeat, Lumley returned to the private sector and became an influential corporate figure. He served as vice-chairman of
BMO Nesbitt Burns from 1991 onwards, lead director of
Magna International, and a board member of
Bell Canada Enterprises,
Canadian National Railway and
Air Canada. In 2000, he was appointed to lead a commission examining salaries and compensation for Members of Parliament. A friend of the then-prime minister,
Paul Martin, he was consulted by Martin's government on various issues. In 2006, he was appointed Chancellor of the University of Windsor. On
July 1, 2014, he was appointed a
Member of the Order of Canada (CM) "for having served his community and country, notably as the federal minister of Industry." He also received the
Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal and
Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2002 and 2012 respectively. On April 16, 2025, Lumley died at the age of 85. ==References==