Sir Robert Borden - Canadian History.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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of the British Empire, Laurier proposed creating a Canadian navy that in case of war could be incorporated into the British navy.
The plan was opposed by theConservatives, who thought that Canada should simply provide ships for the British navy.
The Québec nationalists also opposed the plan because they did not wantCanada either to participate in the British navy or to have a navy of its own.
At the last moment before election day in 1911 it looked as if the Liberals might win.
The government negotiated a free trade agreement with the United States, andthe Congress of the United States approved it.
At first, the agreement was well received, but it soon came under attack.
Sir Clifford Sifton, a Liberal who had becomeLaurier's enemy, spoke against the agreement, and many Canadian manufacturers were against it.
The most powerful attacks were the emotional ones that the treatywas disloyal to Britain.
The effect of these attacks was magnified by Americans such as U.S.
Representative Champ Clark, who suggested in a speech that free tradewas a prelude to the annexation of Canada by the United States.
When the proposal was presented to Parliament for ratification, the Conservatives delayed it.
Lauriertook the decision to a popular vote.
The results were disastrous for him.
The Conservatives came back to power with a large majority.
III PRIME MINISTER
Borden became the new prime minister on October 10, 1911.
However, many Conservatives thought that they had done more than Borden to bring about victory at thepolls.
They had to be given cabinet posts but even so they were dissatisfied, and several of them hoped to replace Borden.
It was also inevitable that Conservativemembers of the new Parliament should frequently differ with Borden on policy.
The new prime minister's first years of office were difficult.
A Cabinet
Borden's cabinet proved very troublesome.
The minister of militia and defense, Samuel Hughes, was an extreme imperialist.
Sir George Eulas Foster, the minister oftrade and commerce, was more responsible but also imperialistic.
Francis Cochrane, the minister of railways and canals, was so against the Grand Trunk Railway that hehad to be restrained by Borden from trying to abolish the project.
An immediate showdown in the cabinet was avoided, but not until 1916 could Borden rely on the loyalty of his colleagues.
Some of the cabinet members from Québecmade open attempts to force him out, but they were unsuccessful.
B Policies
Borden continued some policies of the Liberals, and he carried on the reform of the civil service by expanding the scheme of advancement based on merit as opposed totenure.
He even completed the transcontinental railway system, which he had previously attacked.
This continuance of many of Laurier's policies showed that Bordenwas equally committed to the task of nation-building in Canada.
However, Borden differed from Laurier on naval policy and made no attempt to implement Laurier's Naval Service Act of 1910.
Instead, Borden tried to formulate hisown naval bill.
He went to England in 1912 to discuss the question with the British.
His talks with First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill led to Borden'sintroduction of the Naval Aid Bill.
The bill provided that Canada should supply $35 million to buy three ships for the British navy, in return for being given a greater sayin imperial policy.
However, during the 1913 debate over the bill in the Canadian Parliament, Churchill bombarded Borden with letters declaring that only Britain couldbuild the new ships, that only Britons could staff them, and that the idea of a Canadian navy was ludicrous.
Consequently there followed two weeks of continuousdebate in Parliament.
Borden had to apply closure, a law that allows the cabinet to force a vote on a bill without debate, to get the bill through the House of Commons,although previously the Conservatives had attacked the Liberals for considering closure on the free trade agreement.
However, when the bill came to the Senate, thelargely Liberal body turned it down.
Borden could have called for a popular vote on the issue and probably could have won, but he was unwilling to risk losing power forthe British navy, and he let the matter drop.
C World War I
The calm period of Borden's administration ended in August 1914.
There was no question of Canada's not coming into the approaching European war on the side ofBritain.
At the start even the French Canadians were in favor of the war.
Borden had hurried back from holiday before the war broke out in order to reassure Britainthat Canada would make every sacrifice in its support.
When war was declared, a War Measures Act was passed that put most of Parliament's power into the hands ofthe cabinet.
The response of the Canadian people was immediate and great.
There were 30,000 volunteers in the first month of the war.
By the end of the war in 1918, more than600,000 people were in the armed forces out of a population of 7,500,000.
The war soon began to bring out the basic differences between French-speaking and English-speaking Canadians, and French Canada gradually became alienated by thegovernment's war efforts.
It was less interested in Europe and did not have the enthusiasm for the war that fired the rest of Canada.
Moreover, the defense minister,Hughes, was a Protestant Irishman.
He was contemptuous of the Catholic French Canadians, and his attitude prevailed in the army.
No attempt was made to formFrench-speaking regiments, although the army was fighting in France and many recruits from Québec did not speak English.
No opportunities for promotion wereoffered to French Canadians.
The fact that the number of French-speaking recruits was less than that of English-speaking recruits inspired resentment among extremeEnglish-speaking groups and was met with an answering anger from the French.
To Borden's credit, however, he refused to censor Bourassa's paper, Le Devoir, in spite of its continuing attacks on the government.
Borden had trouble abroad as well as at home.
He went to England in June 1915 and was disturbed by the lack of concern the British government seemed to feel aboutthe war.
Borden threatened to end Canada's war effort if the English did not display greater energy.
He was reassured by the British minister of munitions, David LloydGeorge, but Borden privately thought that it would be 18 months at least before anything could be accomplished.
He also had to insist that Canada be given completeinformation on war plans, and he demanded that his country be consulted about general policy in war operations.
D Further Domestic Crises
In 1916 and 1917 several new events accentuated tension between the French- and English-speaking Canadians.
The Ontario government passed a law making Englishthe compulsory first language in Ontario schools.
This outraged Québec, and a heated discussion took place in the federal Parliament.
Borden did not and probably couldnot act.
The Conservative Party was becoming progressively more nationalistic, as was shown by the passing in 1917 of the Military Voters Act and the WartimeElections Act, which had been written by Borden's young assistant, Arthur Meighen.
These bills, which only caused more problems, took the right to vote away fromconscientious objectors and anyone speaking German and gave it to servicemen abroad and to their wives, widows, and other female relatives, who until that time hadnot been allowed to vote.
In December 1916 Lloyd George, the new British prime minister, formed the Imperial War Cabinet to coordinate the war effort throughout the British Empire.
As Borden.
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