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New Times, New Leadership Canada in the 1950’s. Leadership changed little in the early 1950’s MacKenzie King retired (1948) and Louis St. Laurent became.

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Presentation on theme: "New Times, New Leadership Canada in the 1950’s. Leadership changed little in the early 1950’s MacKenzie King retired (1948) and Louis St. Laurent became."— Presentation transcript:

1 New Times, New Leadership Canada in the 1950’s

2 Leadership changed little in the early 1950’s MacKenzie King retired (1948) and Louis St. Laurent became PM (1949) – Liberals still in power Things changed in the latter half of the decade – 1957: Diefenbaker (Progressive Conservative) defeated St. Laurent – 1958: snap election – “Dief” won largest majority in Canadian history New age of politics Media playing a larger role

3 Louis St. Laurent Provided key support to Mackenzie King during conscription crisis Won in 1949 and 1953 1957 election – Defeated by “Dief” – Resigned – Liberals new leader: Lester Pearson – “Dief”: saw himself as a Prairie populist; spoke for and listened to ordinary people

4 St. Laurent & Canadian autonomy Expanded federal welfare programs Protecting Canadian culture Gained more autonomy from Britain – Appointed 1 st Canadian-born Governor-General (Massey) – Made Supreme Court the highest court of appeals for Canadian cases – Negotiated w/ Britain to give Canadian Parliament the power to amend portions of the Constitution British North America (No. 2) Act

5 The addition of Newfoundland Until 1932: NF an independent, self-governing dominion During Great Depression: bankrupt – Britain set up special commission to govern it

6 1948 referendum – 3 options: – Continue to be governed by special commission (14%) – To be self-governing dominion w/in British empire (44.6%) – Join Canada (41%) No clear majority, another vote – Commission option dropped – 52%: join Canada March 31, 1949: officially part of Canada Joey Smallwood became first Premier

7 Resettlement in NF Hope that joining Canada would bring better health care, education, and employment opportunities 1954: Provincial g’ment “centralization” program – Offered compensation to people who wanted to move to larger centers – By 1959: 2,400 people had resettled Prosperity didn’t follow relocation Unemployment rate increased

8 Duplessis & Quebec Nationalism Premier from 1936-9 & 1944-59 Union Nationale Quebec nationalist Promoted idea of QB as distinctive society Introduced new flag Opposed growing powers of federal g’ment Roman Catholic Church main defender of QB culture

9 Encouraged foreign investment in QB – Guaranteed cheap labor Union activity discouraged/banned – Promised low taxes Bribery and corruption “Duplessis Orphans” – 1000’s of orphans in provincially financed orphanages falsely certified as mentally ill Moved to federally funded insane asylums For many Quebecois, Duplessis era seen as the “Great Darkness”


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