Establishment The Socialist Party of Canada was founded at the
Socialist Party of British Columbia's fourth annual convention on December 30–31, 1904. Delegates at the convention were urged to consider organizing the nucleus of a federal party, noting the acceptance of the platform with socialist parties and organizations in other provinces. Socialist organizations quickly approved the party formation, and the new party executive met for the first time on February 19, 1905. The party, which had a revolutionary
Marxist orientation, called for the overturn of the capitalist system through militant political action. Given this goal, compromise through
trade unionism and
limited political reforms was rejected.
Party manifesto and membership The party's manifesto, which went through five editions by 1920, was its most influential and widely read publication. The manifesto traced the history of class struggle and the exploitation of labour, concluding that: Out of these conditions has arisen the Socialist Party of Canada, the nucleus of the revolt of the slaves of Canada against capitalism. Its policy is to educate the slaves of Canada to an understanding of their position and organize them for concerted political action, to the end that they may wrest the powers of State from the hands of capital, and use them to strip the master class of its property rights in the means of production and to make these the collective property of the producers. The SPC platform similarly called for socialization of the means of production: Therefore, we call upon all workers to organise under the banner of the Socialist Party of Canada with the object of conquering the public powers, for the purpose of setting up and enforcing the economic program of the working class as follows: 1. The transformation, as rapidly as possible, of capitalist property in the means of wealth production (natural resources, factories, mills, railroads, etc.) into the collective property of the working class. 2. The organisation and management of industry by the working class. 3. The establishment, as speedily as possible, of production for use instead of production for profit. The SPC was structured as a network of local organizations, each conducting education and propaganda in their respective communities. Although a national convention was never held,
E.T. Kingsley was regarded as the movement's leader until about 1912. The foremost exponent of
Impossibilism, Kingsley called for a social revolution to redistribute wealth through political organization, education, and propaganda. While the party's platform was Marxist, its membership was diverse. Besides Marxists, there were social democrats, militant trade unionists, and left-leaning federations of Ukrainians, Finns, Letts, and Jews. Ultimately, the varying factions did not coalesce and schisms occurred, including such breakaway formations as the
Social Democratic Party of Canada and the
Socialist Party of North America. Nevertheless, the SPC was Canada's third largest political party until the outbreak of the First World War. It also enjoyed some success at the provincial electoral level, with SPC deputies and elected members sponsoring legislation that addressed health, safety and other worker concerns.
Provincial electoral participation The SPC was strongest in British Columbia where it won seats in the
province's legislature from 1903 to 1912. In the provincial election of 1907, the SPC garnered over 5,000 votes. The apex was the
1909 election, when it collected more than 11,000 votes — about 22 percent of the total votes cast in the seats contested consisted of committed SPC members who also played a role in stymying efforts to establish a rival labour party. In 1909, SPC member
Charlie O'Brien was elected to the Alberta legislature. A speech on socialism he gave in the Legislature was transcribed and published as
The Proletarian in Politics (1910). In the
1913 election, incumbent SPC MLA Charlie O'Brien and SPC members Alf Budden (author of "The Slave of the Farm"), Joe Knight, H.R. Burge, and Thomas Smith ran as candidates, all unsuccessfully. In the
1917 Alberta provincial campaign, Joe Knight, J. Reid, G. Paton, S.R. Keeling and H. Thomas ran as SPC candidates. None of them were elected. In Manitoba, the
Manitoba branch of the SPC was initially a rival to Winnipeg's reform labour groups. It may also have been responsible for the defeat of centrist labour candidate
Fred Dixon in the
election of 1910. The resulting backlash from trade unions weakened the SPC for years. In
1920, SPC activist
George Armstrong was elected by Winnipeg voters to serve in the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. However, he was defeated in 1922 due in part to opposition from Communist Party politicians.
World War I and its aftermath The SPC paid a heavy price for its opposition to Canadian entry into the world war including harassment and intimidation from government authorities. Individual members were also targeted, including
Ginger Goodwin, who died at the hands of police in 1918 while evading
conscription. In the fall of 1918
Western Clarion was banned by the federal government. On January 11, 1919, a new publication called
The Red Flag was launched by the SPC to work around the proscription of its predecessor. The ban was lifted in 1920. In the wake of the
Russian Revolution and the
Winnipeg General Strike, a number of the SPC's supporters became attracted to
Bolshevism and the ideas of
Lenin and
Trotsky. Others gravitated toward an evolutionary or gradualist socialist position. SPC members, notably George Armstrong and
William Pritchard, were among the strike leaders put on trial following the Winnipeg confrontation. In 1919, SPC members, including Pritchard, were instrumental in founding
One Big Union in Canada. In 1920, a split occurred when many of the party's members left to join the Federated Labour Party, which had been formed by the British Columbia Federation of Labour. Others joined the labour and independent labour parties that were being formed across the country. In 1921, most of the Marxist SPC members left to join the Workers Party, which was the public face of the nascent
Communist Party of Canada. In 1925, the Socialist Party of Canada formally disbanded. Many of the remaining members joined the
Independent Labour Party. ==Federal election results from 1904 to 1926==