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Maureen Anne McTeer (born February 27, 1952) is a Canadian author and lawyer, married to Joe Clark, the 16th Prime Minister of Canada.

Family and Education
McTeer was born in Cumberland, Ottawa, to John and Bea McTeer. Maureen was born into a political family. Her father was a conservative politician who ran in a municipal race but lost. Maureen was exposed to politics through her father at a young age and is reported saying that she attended some of his meetings. By the age of sixteen, Maureen was the president of her local Young Progressive Conservative club. McTeer was quoted saying, “we were taught as we were growing up... that we had a responsibility to be involved in the political process and that you lost your right to complain if you didn't vote and didn't participate. I took it seriously. It's something that gets into your blood". Her father taught her and her older sister, Colleen, to play hockey, resulting in McTeer's childhood dream of playing in the NHL. Her commitment to feminism was born when her father reminded her that girls do not play in the NHL. She switched her focus to her academic and debating talents, which earned her a scholarship to the University of Ottawa. She earned an undergraduate degree in 1973 and a law degree in 1976, both from Ottawa, where she served as features editor of the student newspaper, The Fulcrum, and was a member of the English debate team and the Progressive Conservative Campus Club. McTeer was later awarded an MA in biotechnology, law and ethics from the University of Sheffield, and in 2008 she received an honorary LLD from that institution.

Spouse of the Prime Minister
McTeer worked as a staffer in Clark's office before marrying him in 1973. When Clark became leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada in 1976, McTeer became a controversial wife of the Prime Minister. McTeer was both progressive and a passionate feminist at a time when feminism was still a relatively new social phenomenon. Additionally, Maureen kept her own surname and maintained her own career. At one official luncheon for Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, where McTeer was seated with the guest of honour, the other women at the table teased McTeer by addressing her always as "Mrs. Clark". The Queen Mother, however, did not, and after McTeer escorted the Queen Mother to her car, the latter said "Don't be bothered by criticism," and, left as parting words: "Good Luck … Ms. McTeer." As of 2015, McTeer remains the only wife of a Canadian prime minister not to assume any part of her husband's surname; although both Laureen Teskey Harper and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau had kept their own birth surnames in their earlier years of marriage, shifted to using their husband's surname upon assuming the role of prime minister's spouse, in part because of the controversy McTeer experienced.

Career
Maureen is a lawyer, specializing in health policy. She has also been a professor at various universities. In the 1988 federal election, McTeer ran as a Progressive Conservative candidate in Carleton—Gloucester, hoping to get elected alongside her husband. Despite the party's re-election victory, McTeer was not elected in her riding, coming second to the Liberal Candidate, Eugène Bellemare. As of 2016, however, she remains the only spouse of a former Canadian Prime Minister to have run for political office herself.

McTeer was also a professor and taught at the Universities of Dalhousie, Calgary and British Columbia in Canada, and was a visiting scholar at the University of California at Berkeley. McTeer was also a distinguished scholar in residence at American University in the Government department and lectured at George Mason University. McTeer is also the author of three books, In my own Name (2011), her autobiography, Parliament: Canada’s democracy and how it works (1995), and Residences: Homes of Canada’s leaders (1982). McTeer also wrote journals for various academic journals, many on the ethics of health, including euthanasia. Maureen McTeer promoted Frances Itani's novel Deafening in Canada Reads 2006. She promoted its French-language translation, Une coquille de silence, in Le combat des livres 2006.

McTeer is also a member of numerous committees and foundations including the Clinical Ethics Committee at the Ottawa Heart Institute, the Committee on Accreditation of Canadian Medical Schools, the Canadian Living Foundation’s Breakfast for Learning, the Canada-China Child Health Foundation, and the Royal Commission on New Reproductive Technologies.

Honours
In 1982, McTeer and athlete Abby Hoffman were among the organizers of the Esso Women's Nationals championship tournament for women's ice hockey. One of the tournament's trophies, the Maureen McTeer Trophy, is named for her. She was also awared the DIVA award for Outstanding Contributions to Women’s Health and Well-Being. McTeer was also awarded CBA's Louis St. Laurent Award for Legal Excellence and the Hungarian President's Cross for founding and running the Canadian Bar Association's Eastern and Central European Legal Internship Program. She is a specialist in medical law, and for a while was a member of the Royal Commission on Reproductive and Genetic Technologies (1989–1993). She received the Governor General's Award in Commemoration of the Persons Case in 2008. McTeer was also awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Laws from Carleton University in Ottawa in 2010.

Personal life
The Clarks have one daughter, born November 6, 1976 ( Catherine, who became a public figure in her own right when Clark returned to the leadership of the Progressive Conservatives in 1998. Clark is now working as a political television broadcaster with two children.

Electoral record
Riding of Carleton—Gloucester