Skip to content

U.K. PM Liz Truss’ B.C. school days — pink jumper, big fringe and a sense of humour

New PM’s example being used to help encourage B.C. students to dream big
30312489_web1_copy_20220906160952-74485971561e10bab1199b205bd13ad449302f6e3e441ecdb702a3d71eb4e1e2
U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss (middle row, second from left) is seen in a photo she posted to Instagram on July 1, 2018, showing her with classmates from Grades 6 and 7 at Parkcrest Elementary School, in Burnaby, British Columbia. Truss spent 1987-1988 at Parkcrest. Classmate Brenda Montagano, now a teacher at Parkcrest, is in the back row, fifth from left. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Instagram/Liz Truss

Brenda Montagano, a teacher at Parkcrest Elementary School in Burnaby, British Columbia, had a special item for show-and-tell on Tuesday — her own class photo from the same school 34 years ago, with new British Prime Minister Liz Truss in the second row.

Truss, who attended Grade 7 at Parkcrest in 1987-1988, is remembered by Montagano as a bright and funny student with a “cool British accent.”

“I would sometimes sit with her in the hallway doing work and she had this witty sense of humour,” said Montagano.

“You know, she would tell a joke and then have a little bit of a half smile after she told the joke.”

Montagano, who teaches Grades 5 and 6 at Parkcrest, had her pupils guess which classmate in the photo was Truss.

Truss had shared the same photo on Instagram and Twitter to mark Canada Day in 2018.

“30 years ago, I spent a year in Canada that changed my outlook on life,” wrote Truss, who included the hashtags “CanadaDay,” “maplespirit” and “pioneercountry.”

Asked to identify herself, Truss had said: “Pink jumper. Big fringe.”

Montagano — flipped collar, red hair — said it was “a bit surreal” to hear of her former classmate’s new job.

On Monday, Conservative Truss, 47, succeeded Boris Johnson and became the U.K.’s third woman prime minister.

Truss lived in Canada when her mathematician father taught at Simon Fraser University.

Montagano, a teacher for almost 25 years, recalled that Truss was also interested in mathematics and “settled in very quickly” during her brief time at Parkcrest, “no small feat” for a little girl from a different country.

“Sometimes it takes a while for kids to settle in and make friends … She was only here for a year, but everybody remembers her that she fit in very quickly, made friends quickly and was part of the community,” said Montagano.

Montagano used Truss as the basis for a class activity on Tuesday in which she invited students to write down their goals and dreams for this semester and the future.

“We talked about how you never know where the person beside you is going to end up. And we also talked about how your actions and your words really carry forwards with people,” said Montagano.

Andrew Lee, principal of Parkcrest Elementary, said there was excitement in the hallways as news spread of the connection to Truss at the start of the school year.

“To know that a student who walked these same halls as them went on to become Prime Minister of Britain is inspiring to students,” said Lee in a written statement.

“It’s something tangible to show that they, too, can dream big and succeed — no matter what their interests and aspirations. We are proud of all of our students and staff — both current and former — and it is very nice to hear that Ms. Truss remembers her time so fondly at our school.”

Truss became prime minister after winning the Conservative leadership race, beating former treasury chief Rishi Sunak in a party vote.

Truss has vowed to press ahead with the tax cuts and action to tackle Britain’s energy crisis and heavily burdened health service.

—Nono Shen, The Canadian Press

RELATED: One scandal too many: British PM Boris Johnson resigns