Sir Charles Tupper.
Publié le 10/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
campaign, Macdonald asked him to become minister of finance.
He was then sent to Washington, D.C., as leader of the Canadian delegation to settle a fisheries disputewith the United States.
A treaty was worked out and signed, but the U.S.
Senate refused to ratify it.
Tupper had already become a Knight Commander of St.
Michaeland St.
George in 1879, and he received the Knight Grand Cross of St.
Michael and St.
George in 1886.
For his services in Washington he was given the hereditary titleof baronet in 1888.
In 1888 Tupper resigned his ministry and returned to London as high commissioner.
Tupper again campaigned in the election of 1891.
When Macdonald died soon after the Conservative victory, Tupper was a likely successor.
At the age of 70, however,he was unwilling to give up the pleasures of London for leadership of a dwindling party.
John Abbott became the next prime minister, and Tupper remained highcommissioner.
VII PRIME MINISTER
When Sir John Thompson, Abbott's successor, died, the governor-general offered the post to Mackenzie Bowell.
Bowell accepted it.
When Bowell could not decide theManitoba schools question, seven of his cabinet ministers resigned in January 1896 and called for Tupper's help.
Although Bowell refused to resign at once, he agreedthat Tupper could lead the party in the elections in the summer.
Tupper returned, took the post of secretary of state in Bowell's cabinet, and tried to end the Manitobacrisis.
The Manitoba provincial government under Thomas Greenway had passed an act in 1890 that abolished funding for separate schools for the Roman Catholic minority inthe province.
The Roman Catholics had protested the act, and two Conservative federal governments had stood aside while the act's constitutionality was decided bythe courts.
Finally, it was decided in 1895 that, while Manitoba's act was legal, the federal government had the power to reverse it.
Tupper took the line that thedecision forced him to order the provincial government to set up separate schools.
In March 1896 a bill to restore the schools was introduced.
However, the Liberalsblocked it, and the bill was not passed before Parliament dissolved.
On April 27, Bowell formally resigned.
Tupper became prime minister on May 1 and called the election for June 23, an election that was fought mainly on the Manitobaissue.
During the campaign the Roman Catholic clergy allied themselves with the Conservatives and waged a bitter fight against the Liberals, who were led by a FrenchCatholic from Québec, Wilfrid Laurier.
Laurier took a moderate position, arguing that the Catholics could get better terms by federal negotiation with Manitoba than bycoercion.
Tupper counted on the Catholics obeying their clergy and on the British Canadians refusing to vote for a French Canadian.
He was proved wrong.
The Liberalswon 49 out of 65 seats in Québec.
In the rest of Canada they did about as well as the Conservatives, even in Nova Scotia.
VIII OPPOSITION ONCE MORE
Tupper, always an optimist, had been so sure of victory that he had not filled several important patronage posts.
These posts were dispensed to loyal party members orothers with political ties, usually to ensure a party's presence on a cabinet even if they were not the majority party.
He tried to fill these posts before he resigned, butthe British governor-general refused to ratify his appointments.
Although the governor-general's action was probably unconstitutional, most Canadians thought he wasright to refuse.
Tupper resigned as prime minister on July 8, but he remained the Conservative leader.
The main issue during the next four years was the question of Canadian participation in the Boer War (1899-1902), the fight in South Africa between the British andSouth Africans of Dutch heritage.
Laurier decided to equip volunteer regiments.
British Canadians thought he should do far more, but in Québec he was losing votes tonationalists who thought Canada should not be involved at all.
In the election of 1900, Tupper tried to win support from both sides.
He even went so far as to say inQuébec that Laurier was too British to suit him and in Toronto that he was not British enough.
These tactics were too weak for a period of prosperity and economicboom.
The Liberals lost only a few seats, whereas Tupper lost his own.
Tupper retired from leadership of the party shortly after the election.
His last years were spent in England, where even at the age of 90 he was consulted by Canadians.He published his memoirs, Recollections of Sixty Years in Canada, in 1914 and died in 1915.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
All rights reserved..
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Sir Charles Tupper - biography.
- Sir Charles Tupper - Canadian History.
- GRANDISON (L') [The History of sir Charles Grandison]. (résumé)
- Wheatstone (sir Charles), 1802-1875, né à Gloucester, physicien anglais.
- Stanford (sir Charles Villiers), 1852-1924, né à Dublin, compositeur irlandais.