it’s not always the case in this social media age that someone becomes even more likeable after they beat someone up. but lyle stewart — the 73-year-old thunder creek/lumsden-morse mla who died this week after a long battle with cancer — was built different.
stewart had stopped on a gravel road on his way to work at the saskatchewan legislative building to help a man whose truck was in the ditch. the perpetrator — threatening him with a knife that never appeared — demanded the mla’s 2001 ford taurus.
“i thought i better do something,” the rancher calmly re-counted to bug-eyed reporters the next day.
“i got out and a fight ensued.”
“it probably wasn’t pretty. i slipped on the road in the mud and he got in the car first and took off so i jumped in on top of him,” said stewart, rehashing the events of the previous morning as if he’d been asked what he had for breakfast.
“he ripped the mirror off my windshield and whacked me in the head (with it) a few times,” he chuckled. “nothing serious at all.”
in the end, the would-be thief wound up on the floor of the car with stewart’s shoe firmly planted on his neck as the mla dialled 911. the man, wanted by city police, was arrested by the rcmp.