In Nova Scotia Four Independent Labour Party (ILP) MLAs and one Farmer-Labour MLA (all but one from
Cape Breton) were elected to the
Nova Scotia House of Assembly in the
1920 general election. •
D. W. Morrison, ILP, (Cape Breton), 1920–1925 •
Arthur R. Richardson, Farmer-Labour, (Cape Breton), 1920–1925 •
Joseph Steele, ILP, (Cape Breton), 1920–1925 •
Arthur Forman Waye, ILP, (Cape Breton), 1920–1925 •
Archibald Terris, ILP, (Cumberland), 1920–1925, 1928–1933 The five joined with six
United Farmer MLAs to form the
official opposition in the legislature with United Farmer MLA
Daniel G. MacKenzie as leader. All the United Farmer and ILP MLAs were defeated in the
1925 general election, but one of them,
Archibald Terris, was elected in
1928 representing Cumberland County; he did not run for re-election in
1933. The
Nova Scotia Co-operative Commonwealth Federation began running candidates with the 1933 general election and became the New Democratic Party in 1961. In 1982 the
Cape Breton Labour Party was formed by MLA
Paul MacEwan after he was expelled from the NDP. It ran 14 candidates in the
1984 general election but MacEwan was the only candidate to win the seat. The party soon dissolved and MacEwan was re-elected in 1988 as an independent before joining the
Nova Scotia Liberal Party in 1990.
In Quebec A number of members of the
Legislative Assembly of Quebec were labelled
Parti ouvrier (Labour Party) from the
1890 election until the
1931 election. They represented predominantly labour-class neighbourhoods in
Montreal and
Quebec City and consisted of: •
Joseph Béland, MLA for the district of
Montréal n°1 from 1890 to 1892; •
Joseph-Alphonse Langlois, MLA for
Saint-Sauveur from 1909 to 1916; •
Aurèle Lacombe, MLA for
Montréal-Dorion from 1919 to 1923; •
Adélard Laurendeau, MLA for
Maisonneuve from 1919 to 1923; •
Joseph Gauthier, MLA for
Montréal-Sainte-Marie from 1921 to 1923; •
Pierre Bertrand, MLA for Saint-Sauveur from 1923 to 1927; •
William Tremblay, MLA for Maisonneuve from 1927 to 1931;
In Ontario •
Daniel John O'Donoghue was the first Labour candidate elected to a Canadian legislature when in 1874 he was elected to the
Ontario legislature as the candidate of the
Ottawa Trades Council. •
Allan Studholme was elected the first Labour
Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) in the
Ontario legislature in a 1906
by-election in
Hamilton East. He remained in office until his death in 1919. A number of Labour MLAs were elected in the
1919 provincial election which led to the formation of a
United Farmers of Ontario-Labour coalition government. Labour MLAs included: •
James Bertram Cunningham, Labour, Sault Ste Marie •
John Govenlock, Labour, Huron Centre, (1919) •
Frank Greenlaw, Labour, St. Catharines, (1919) •
George Grant Halcrow, Labour,
Hamilton East, (1919) •
Peter Heenan, Labour, Kenora, (1919, 1923, returned as Liberal 1934, 1937 see
Liberal-Labour)) •
Karl Homuth, Labour-UFO, Waterloo S., (1919, as Labour 1923, 1926, Conservative 1929, d. 1930) •
Morrison MacBride, Labour, Brantford (1919, 1923, returned as Independent 1934, Ind. Liberal 1937 d. 1938) •
Harry (Henry) Mills, Labour, Fort William, (1919) •
Walter Rollo, Labour, Hamilton W., (1919) Minister of Labour and leader of the Labour group in the legislature (1919–1923) •
Hugh Stevenson, Labour, London, (1919) •
Charles Swayze, Labour, Niagara Falls, (1919) •
Thomas Tooms, Labour, Peterborough W., (1919) The last Labour MLA elected to the legislature was
Earl Hutchinson who was elected in
Kenora in 1929 and re-elected in 1934. He agreed to resign shortly after his re-election to allow former Labour MLA Peter Heenan to seek the Kenora seat in a by-election so that he could be appointed to the provincial cabinet by the newly elected Liberal government of
Mitchell Hepburn. Hutchinson accepted an appointment by Hepburn to the post of vice-chairman of the
Workmen's Compensation Board shortly after leaving politics. The
Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation was formed in 1932 with the support of a number of Independent Labour Party clubs and won its first seat in the
1934 provincial election,
Samuel Lawrence in
Hamilton East. In 1944, two CCF MPPs,
Arthur Nelson Alles (
Essex North) and
Leslie Hancock (
Wellington South) left the CCF to sit as Independent Labour MPPs after the CCF rejected a proposal by the Communist
Labor-Progressive Party to form a CCF-Liberal-LPP coalition to oust the
Progressive Conservative government of
George Drew. The two did not run in the
1945 Ontario general election and Alles was succeeded in Essex North by
Alexander Parent, running as a
Liberal-Labour candidate with the support of both the Liberal Party and the LPP. Parent initially joined the Liberal caucus but left in January 1946 in order to sit as a "straight Labor representative", caucusing with Labor-Progressive MPPs
J.B. Salsberg and
A. A. MacLeod.
In Manitoba • Reverend
A. E. Smith was a
Dominion Labour Party (DLP)
MLA for the Brandon district from 1920 to 1922. In 1925 he joined the
Communist Party of Canada and was a prominent party figure in Ontario until his death. •
Fred Dixon was the DLP's leader in the early 1920s and a MLA for the district of
Winnipeg from 1914 to 1923. He was the leader of the eleven Labour MLAs elected in the 1920 Manitoba election. •
William Ivens was a DLP and then an
Independent Labour Party MLA for the district of
Winnipeg from
1920 to 1926. •
John Queen was an MLA for the district of
Winnipeg from 1921 to 1941 under various Labour labels. In 1920 he was elected as a candidate for the
Social Democratic Party of Canada. He went on to be leader of the ILP from 1923 to 1935. He joined the
Co-operative Commonwealth Federation party upon the ILP's affiliation to it in 1930s. He was also
Mayor of Winnipeg for much of the time from 1934 to 1942.
In Alberta •
Donald McNabb, elected from
Lethbridge in a 1908 by-election to become the first Labour MLA in Alberta. Defeated in the 1909 general election. •
Charles M. O'Brien,
Socialist Party of Canada MLA for
Rocky Mountain from 1909 to 1913. He received even more votes in 1913 but was not re-elected. •
Alex Ross, Labour MLA for Calgary from 1917 to 1926, elected in Calgary in 1917 (as a candidate for the
Alberta Labor Representation League), was re-elected as Dominion Labour Party candidate in 1921, was named to the provincial cabinet of the
United Farmers of Alberta government, when it was elected in 1921, as Minister of Public Works. Helped form the Alberta wing of the
Canadian Labour Party in 1922, was defeated in the 1926 general election. •
Philip Christophers, Labour MLA for Rocky Mountain, elected in 1921 and re-elected in 1926. •
William Johnston, Labour MLA for Medicine Hat from 1921 until 1926. •
Fred J. White, Labour MLA for Calgary from 1921 until 1935. elected to the legislature in 1921 for Calgary, re-elected in 1926 and 1930; leader of the Labour caucus in the Alberta legislature from 1926 to 1935; president of the Alberta Federation of Labour from 1926 to 1941 as well as a long-serving secretary of the Calgary Trades and Labour Council and a Labour alderman in Calgary until 1939. •
Andrew Smeaton, Labour MLA for
Lethbridge elected in 1926, re-elected in 1930 and defeated in 1935. •
Charles Lionel Gibbs, Labour MLA for Edmonton from 1926 to death in 1934. •
Robert Parkyn, Independent Labour MLA for Calgary from 1926 to 1930. •
Christopher Pattinson, Labour MLA for
Edson from 1926 until his defeat in the Social Credit landslide of 1935. •
Angus James Morrison, Labour MLA elected for
Edson in 1940 defeating
Joseph Unwin. Did not run for re-election. • See also The Rise and Fall of the Labour Party in Alberta, 1917-42 As well, Alberta Labour candidates, under the labels of the Dominion Labor Party and Canadian Labor Party, ran with some success at the civic level in Edmonton, Calgary, Medicine Hat, and Lethbridge and coal-mining towns, such as Drumheller and Blairmore (which even elected a Communist Party-dominated town council in the 1930s).
In British Columbia • Although there were no parties in the British Columbia legislature until 1903, some candidates declared for labour parties and leftist policies in the 1890s.
Robert Macpherson, running for the leftist Nationalist Party, won a seat in the
Vancouver City district in 1894 and 1898. As well,
George Ritchie Maxwell was elected Nationalist Party MP in 1900 for the riding of
Burrard. • In the
1898 election,
Ralph Smith was elected in the coal-mining riding of
South Nanaimo. Once the party system was introduced, Smith joined the
Liberal Party and was re-elected as a Liberal in the
1903 and then won a seat as MP in the
House of Commons of Canada in the
1904 and
1908 elections, but was defeated for his seat in the
1911. He returned to provincial politics and won his seat again as part of the province's first Liberal government in the wake of the
general election of 1916. He served as Finance Minister in that government until his death in 1917, and was succeeded by his wife,
Mary Ellen Smith, who won the resulting by-election and sat as an Independent Liberal, later becoming the first female cabinet minister in the British Empire. • Labour activist
Thomas Uphill was the MLA for Fernie from 1920 until 1960. Running as a Federated Labour Party candidate, he was successful in the
1920 British Columbia general election, and was re-elected as part of the Canadian Labour Party slate in
1924. He then ran and won as an Independent Labour or Labour candidate rather than join the
Co-operative Commonwealth Federation until his last victory in
1956. Uphill retired, undefeated, in 1960. From
1941 until
1952 the CCF unsuccessfully ran candidates against him. The CCF did not run candidates against Uphill in the
1953 election and 1956 elections. The
Labor-Progressive Party, with which Uphill had sympathies, never stood candidates against him. ==Parties ==