In opposition Johnston and Turner split over the issue of the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement with Johnston supporting free trade and Turner passionately opposing it. On January 18, 1988, Johnston resigned from the Liberal caucus to sit as an independent liberal until retiring from Parliament when the 1988 general election was called. Johnston returned to the Liberal fold in 1990, after Turner's resignation as leader, and served two terms as president of the Liberal Party of Canada from 1990 to 1994, seeing the party through its victory in the 1993 general election. In 1996 the government of Prime Minister Jean Chrétien proposed Johnston for the position of secretary-general of the OECD. Johnston was elected to the post by the organization's member governments and took up the position on June 1, 1996, and still holds it as of 2004.
Donald James Johnston, PC (born June 26, 1936) is a former Canadian politician and is the current Secretary-General of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
Johnston was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in a 1978 by-election in Westmount in Montreal, Quebec, as a candidate of the Liberal Party of Canada.
Johnston served as Minister of Justice and Attorney-General in the short-lived Turner government until its defeat in the 1984 federal election.
Johnston, 35, who was a two-year veteran of El Monte Police Department, was rendered a paraplegic, with impaired function of some vital organs, including his bladder, and complete loss of the use of his lower limbs.
Johnston, the father of a 17-year-old son from a previous marriage, chose not to retire.
Johnston was the second of three generations to serve as a police officer for the city of El Monte.