W. L. Mackenzie King. I INTRODUCTION W. L. Mackenzie King (1874-1950), tenth prime
Publié le 10/05/2013
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V SECOND TERM AS PRIME MINISTER
By the election of 1925 most of the rifts in the Liberal Party were healed.
Little had been achieved by King's government except for some tariff reduction and thereorganization of Canadian railroads, but no mistakes had been made.
The real issue of the election was the personalities of the party leaders, King and the brilliant butarrogant Conservative, Arthur Meighen.
The Conservatives swept English-speaking Canada, and they won 116 seats.
The Liberals won 101, and the Progressives 25.King himself was defeated in North York, and the result was a loss in his prestige as leader of the party.
However, King did not resign.
He determined to try to govern with the help of the Progressives.
He consulted with the British governor-general and asked for thechance to continue as prime minister, promising to resign in favor of Meighen if he could not get enough Progressive support for a majority.
A Customs Scandal
King succeeded in getting a majority vote based on the speech from the throne, the government's general statement of its plans at the opening of a new session ofParliament.
However, a scandal had been discovered in the customs department, and a committee studying the evidence handed in a critical report.
King's defense wasthat his government had already been making an inquiry into customs operations and that the Conservatives had received much of their information from governmentinvestigators.
This was true, but a preliminary vote showed that King had lost the support of the legislature.
King asked the governor-general to dissolve Parliament, buthis request was refused.
B Resignation
King immediately announced his resignation, and Meighen took over as prime minister.
However, he could not get a parliamentary majority to support his cabinet andhad to ask for a dissolution of Parliament.
This time the governor-general agreed.
In the election that followed, King argued that Britain, represented by the governor-general, had interfered in Canadian politics, first by refusing King's request for adissolution and then by granting a similar request by Meighen.
It was a technicality, but it succeeded.
Canadians distrusted outside dominance so much that they forgotthe customs scandal, and the Liberals gained a working majority in Parliament.
C Depression
During the next few years King had few problems, but this tranquil period ended in 1929.
King could not have prevented the Great Depression, the hard times of the1930s, but when it came, he did little to relieve it.
The new leader of the Conservative Party, Richard Bennett, recommended that federal aid be given to provincialunemployment programs.
King refused to agree and made an indiscreet statement implying that he was refusing because some provincial governments wereConservative.
This ensured King's defeat in the election of July 1930, and Bennett became prime minister.
A new scandal came to light at this time involving contributions of over $800,000 made by the Beauharnois Power Company to the Liberal Party.
King made a point ofnot knowing where the funds came from, and it was also noted that the Conservatives themselves had received $30,000 from the company.
The defense seemed weak,but the country as a whole judged King to be honest.
The scandal was largely forgotten as the depression deepened.
Bennett's measures to stop the worsening economic situation were unsuccessful, but the Liberals alsohad no effective remedy.
A new movement, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), an alliance of left-wing groups, was gaining strength.
King realized thatthe Liberals must also move to the left.
However, he could not move too fast and anger the conservatives in his own party.
His main proposal to deal with thedepression was a central bank controlled by the state.
VI RETURN TO OFFICE
In the 1935 election the Liberals campaigned by saying that Conservatives had stolen most of their new reforms from the Liberals, who were better able to operatethem.
The depression gave King his greatest Parliamentary majority up to that time, 171 seats out of 245.
After the election, King's first success was the reduction of trade barriers between Canada and the United States.
The agreement was followed by another in 1938 thatreduced tariffs between Great Britain, the United States, and Canada.
However, through most of the 1930s, Canada remained in the grip of the depression, the effectsof which were magnified by a drought in the Prairie provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.
When the economic situation improved somewhat in 1937 and1939, the Liberal government took credit.
A International Affairs
King was torn between a sentimental attachment to Britain and international cooperation, and an equally strong devotion to North American isolationism.
In addition,King refused to believe that there would be another war.
In 1937 King met German dictator Adolf Hitler and thought him a “simple sort of peasant” and no danger toanyone.
King kept Canada's military spending to a minimum.
Whatever was spent on Canadian defense was pushed through by the prime minister against theopposition of many of his colleagues.
King continued to hope for peace, but in 1939 as it became clear that war was inevitable, he remembered the problems of World War I and began the long struggle topreserve the nation's unity.
In a speech of March 30 he said that he still believed in peace, but that if Britain were attacked Canada would support Britain.
Kingreassured French Canadians that the unity of Canada was more important than saving Europe.
Most important, he pledged there would be no draft.
B World War II
On September 1, 1939, King learned that war was imminent, and when Parliament next met only three members spoke against Canada's entrance into the war.Lapointe's influence had carried almost all of the Québec members.
However, there was opposition outside Parliament.
The premier of Québec, Maurice Duplessis, dissolved his provincial legislature, hoping to get support from the publicfor Québec to secede from Canada and become independent.
If he had succeeded, the country's unity would have been irreparably damaged.
King wanted to conciliate,but Lapointe persuaded him that the battle with Duplessis should be fought openly.
The Liberals won the province, and the Duplessis government was turned out ofoffice..
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