Misplaced Pages

Reconstruction Party of Canada

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Reconstruction Party)
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Reconstruction Party of Canada" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Political party in Canada
Reconstruction Party of Canada
Former federal party
Founded1935 (1935)
Dissolved1938
Split fromConservative Party
IdeologyKeynesianism
National conservatism
Isolationism
Political positionCentre-right

The Reconstruction Party was a Canadian political party founded by Henry Herbert Stevens, a long-time Conservative Member of Parliament (MP). Stevens served as Minister of Trade in the Arthur Meighen government of 1921, and as Minister of Trade and Commerce from 1930 to 1934 in the Depression-era government of R. B. Bennett.

He was Chairman of the Price-Spreads Commission in 1934. Stevens argued for drastic economic reform and government intervention in the economy. He quit the Bennett government and formed the Reconstruction Party when it became evident that the Tories would not implement the proposals of the Price-Spreads Commission.

The party was also isolationist: it opposed Canadian involvement in a European war and opposed the League of Nations sanctions against Fascist Italy for its invasion of Ethiopia.

The Reconstruction Party nominated 174 candidates in the 1935 federal election. It won more votes nationally than the other new parties. The Liberal vote was 2,076,394, the Conservatives 1,308,688, and that for the Reconstruction Party 389,708; while the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and the Social Credit parties garnered 386,484 and 187,045 votes respectively. Many of the votes that the party won were taken away from the Conservative Party. In 48 ridings, the margin of victory for the Liberal candidate over the Conservative candidate was less than the number of votes received by the Reconstruction Party candidate.

Despite receiving 8.7% of the vote, the party won only one seat in the House of Commons of Canada - H. H. Stevens in Kootenay East riding. The Reconstruction Party came to an end when Stevens rejoined the Conservatives in 1938.

The party had a short lived provincial wing in Alberta that ran one candidate in 1935 Alberta provincial election and picked up 192 votes.

Party program

Fifteen points summarized the "New National Policy of Reconstruction and Reform":

  • a pledge to youth,
  • a system of public works, including the completion of the Trans-Canada Highway,
  • a national housing program; and
  • in order to balance the budget, a Reconstruction government would administer federal taxes "through a single set of auditors" and would invite the provinces to cooperate in the system that would divide the returns on "an equitable and agreeable basis."

See also

References

  1. ^ "Profile – Reconstruction Party". Library of Parliament. Retrieved 20 February 2024.
  2. ^ Wilbur, J. R. H. (March 1964). "H. H. Stevens and the Reconstruction Party". Canadian Historical Review. 45 (1). University of Toronto Press: 1–28. doi:10.3138/chr-045-01-01.
Federal political parties and parliamentary groups in Canada
House of Commons
Senate
Other registered
Notable
historical parties
and groups
Italics indicate a parliamentary group that acts as a party in the legislature, but does not contest elections
Categories: