Canada has had two prime ministers who were bachelors,
William Lyon Mackenzie King and
R.B. Bennett.
Mackenzie Bowell, a widower whose wife, Harriet, died in 1884, was also not married during his term in office. Pierre Trudeau began his term as a bachelor, became the first Canadian prime minister to get married while in office and ended it as Canada's first
divorced prime minister. Three other Canadian prime ministers–
Alexander Mackenzie,
John Diefenbaker, and
John A. Macdonald—were widowers who remarried before becoming prime minister. Macdonald, Canada's first prime minister, had been a widower for ten years while in office in the former
Province of Canada. His first wife was
Isabella Clark, who died in 1857. Macdonald married his second wife,
Agnes Bernard, while in London in 1867, during the final negotiations leading up to
Confederation. Mackenzie's first wife was Helen Neil, and Diefenbaker's was
Edna Brower. Canada has also had one female prime minister,
Kim Campbell. As she had finalized her divorce from her second husband, Howard Eddy, in early 1993, there has never been a male spouse of the prime minister (although Campbell's first husband,
Nathan Divinsky, did try to attract media attention in 1993 by billing himself as the ex-husband of the prime minister). She briefly dated
Gregory Lekhtman, the inventor of Exerlopers, during her term as prime minister, but kept the relationship private and did not involve him in the
1993 election campaign. In 1997, after her prime ministership, she entered into a
common-law marriage with
Hershey Felder.
Maureen McTeer maintained a career during her life at 24 Sussex; although several others have had independent careers prior to their spouse's term as prime minister, all others have put their own careers on hold to concentrate on the public and ceremonial and philanthropic aspects of their role as a leader's spouse. McTeer was also the only spouse of a prime minister to use her birth surname, rather than her husband's surname, in her public life; although Laureen (Teskey) Harper and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau both used their birth surnames prior to their husbands becoming prime ministers, both opted to minimize any controversy by using their husband's surname once they were elevated to the public role of a prime minister's spouse. Grégoire Trudeau did, however, become the first spouse of a prime minister to use her husband's surname with her own. ==Spouses of the prime ministers==