FACTOID # 182: China loses 2 million people per year.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

SEARCH ALL

FACTS & STATISTICS    Advanced view

Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 

 

(* = Graphable)

 

 


Encyclopedia > Cape Breton Labour Party

The Cape Breton Labour Party was a social democratic provincial political party in Nova Scotia, Canada that advocated separate provincial status for Cape Breton[1] , which is the northern part of the Province of Nova Scotia. Social democracy is a political ideology emerging in the late 19th and early 20th centuries from supporters of Marxism who believed that the transition to a socialist society could be achieved through democratic evolutionary rather than revolutionary means. ... Motto: Munit Haec et Altera Vincit (Latin: One defends and the other conquers) Official languages English, French (Canadian Gaelic) [] Capital Halifax Largest city Halifax Regional Municipality Lieutenant-Governor Mayann E. Francis Premier Rodney MacDonald (PC) Parliamentary representation  - House seats  - Senate seats 11 10 Area Total  - Land  - Water  (% of total)  Ranked... Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada NASA landsat photo of Cape Breton Island Cape Breton Island (French: île du Cap-Breton, Scottish Gaelic: Eilean Cheap Breatuinn, Míkmaq: Únamakika, simply: Cape Breton) is an island on the Atlantic coast of North America. ...


The party was founded by Paul MacEwan, who had been an NDP Member of the Nova Scotia Legislative Assembly for ten years, 1970 to 1980. Pasul MacEwan was a politician in Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada, and long-time member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. ...


MacEwan was first elected to the Nova Scotia House of Assembly October 13, 1970, and was re-elected in 1974 and 1978. In 1980, his longtime associate Jeremy Akerman resigned as party leader, after taking the party from being shut out of the Legislature completely in the 1960s to holding four seats in the House, all from industrial Cape Breton, after 1978. By 1980 Akerman was the most senior NDP provincial leader in Canada. The Nova Scotia House of Assembly is the legislative branch of the provincial government of Nova Scotia, located in Halifax. ...


When Akerman announced his pending retirement, MacEwan was asked what had caused this, and speculated that the reading recommendations of party executive Dennis Theman may have been part of the cause. Theman, in a published article, had recommended subscription to a Toronto paper "Forward for the NDP and Socialism," which MacEwan considered a Trotskyite publication.


A media uproar followed, in which it was held that MacEwan's words had amounted to calling Theman a Trotskyite. He was placed on trial by the provincial NDP executive, and expelled from the party, on seven disciplinary charges. None of these accused MacEwan of having called Theman any name, but rather accused MacEwan of creating a Cape Breton-mainland split within the party, as well as a party-caucus division.


MacEwan was neither present nor represented at his trial. An appeal of the expulsion to the provincial NDP council proved unsuccessful, despite MacEwan's claim that the motive propelling the expulsion was the fear by many Halifax NDPers that if he was left in the party as a member, he would seek the party leadership that Akerman had vacated.


MacEwan felt that beyond this the issue at stake was freedom of speech and that all party members should be free to express their opinions on anything done in the name of the party. The Theman reading recommendations had been published in the party newspaper, "The Nova Scotia New Democrat."


MacEwan put his case to his constituents, asking for their judgment on what had happened, in the 1981 provincial election. Running as an Independent, he polled 3,691 votes, to 173 polled by an official NDP candidate running against him. MacEwan considered this a mandate for the setting up of a rival party, if peace could not be made with the NDP.


The Cape Breton Labor Party was founded at a convention held in Glace Bay in the fall of 1982. MacEwan was elected its provincial leader. While at first the intent was to run candidates only on Cape Breton Island, due to the provisions of the Nova Scotia Elections Act, the party had to run candidates also in several mainland ridings to obtain recognition as a registered political party. The party's name was also changed to the Labor Party of Cape Breton and Nova Scotia at this time. In the end, a total of fourteen Labor candidates were run, eleven on Cape Breton and three on the mainland.


The 14 Labor candidates obtained a total of 8,322 votes. MacEwan was re-elected, with 3,832 votes to 674 for an official NDP candidate opposing him. He thus became the first, and so far the only, candidate sponsored by a fourth political party to gain a seat in the Legislature. Other Labor candidates were not elected, but managed to retain their deposits in the constituencies of Cape Breton East and Cape Breton Centre, while the NDP vote in those areas plunged to an all-time low in the same seats the party had held under Akerman. But the party's officials in Halifax remained unpersuaded that they had anything to gain to repair the rift.


The main issues in contention between the Labor Party and the NDP centered on how the party was to be run and in what direction. MacEwan maintained that freedom of speech was important in politics and that elected representatives should be free to represent their constituents as they best determined. The Halifax NDP, led by Alexa McDonough throughout this period, emphasized established party policy and expected MLAs to subscribe to this first before formulating their opinions on issues.


Much of the tussle was over geography, and whether Cape Breton, or downtown Halifax, should be in control of operations. The Halifax NDP claimed that the Labor Party was "separatist," but never identified how. There is no mention found advocating any constitutional change for Cape Breton Island in the advertising run by the Labor Party in the 1984 election. The party issued a multi-point election platform, but its contents were confined to such traditional Cape Breton issues as "proper" levels of government support for the coal and steel industries, a higher minimum wage, reform of Workers Compensation, and improvements to highways.


The dispute was accentuated by bad personal relations between MacEwan and the new NDP provincial leader, Alexa McDonough, each viewing the other as unworthy. MacEwan considered that McDonough had encouraged his expulsion from the NDP for political advantage, and had gained the NDP leadership by intrigue. Each was inclined to criticize the other publicly, McDonough depicting MacEwan as an unrepentant enemy of all the NDP stood for, while MacEwan described McDonough and her father, industrialist Lloyd Shaw, as seeking to use their wealth to try and prevent democracy in Nova Scotian politics.


After the 1984 election, MacEwan felt that the Labor Party could not continue, as insufficient funds had been raised to meet its minimum financial requirements. He ran in the next provincial election, held in 1988, as an Independent, and joined the Liberal Party in 1990.


After the Liberals formed the provincial government in 1993, Paul MacEwan was elected Speaker of the House, and served from 1993 to 1996. Afterwards he served for a time as Government House Leader, and was Chair of the Committee on Private and Local Bills. Later on, he served as Deputy Government House Leader and party Whip. When the Liberals lost power in 1999, he continued to serve as Whip, Deputy House Leader, and critic for the Department of Labor and Workers Compensation Board. He was noted for constituency service more than anything else, and took on additional Workers Compensation and Canada Pension Plan appeals almost continuously over his years in politics.


MacEwan suffered two cerebral aneurysms in 2001, and declined to seek re-election at the 2003 provincial election on grounds of health. He resigned from the Assembly after 33 years of continuous service under three different party labels and as an independent, having won nine consecutive elections, and giving the longest continuous service of anyone in the history of the Nova Scotia Legislature. Riding map of Nova Scotia showing winning parties and their popular vote. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Cape Breton Island at AllExperts (2662 words)
Cape Breton Island is part of the province of Nova Scotia, Canada, although physically separated from the peninsular Nova Scotian mainland by the Strait of Canso, it is artificially connected to the mainland by the Canso Causeway.
Cape Breton Island is now joined to the mainland by the Canso Causeway, completed in 1955, enabling direct road and rail traffic to and from the island, but requiring marine traffic to pass through the Canso Canal at the eastern end of the causeway.
According to the Census of Canada, the population of Cape Breton Island in 2001 was 147,454, a -6.8% decline from 158,260 in 1996.
Nova Scotia labour response to Crisis 1984 (15083 words)
Industrial Cape Breton may be a mine for labour historians, but the more recent record of the labour movement in the province has strayed a considerable distance from this tradition.
Here the major contradiction, as with the labour movement as a whole, is between the sectional interests of the individual unions and the general interests of the movement as a whole.
It was a stunning defeat for the labour movement in the province and a dismal end to the Common Front which had appeared in 1972 to represent a significantly new social movement.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms, 1022, m