Mel Hurtig

Mel Hurtig
Born (1932-06-24) June 24, 1932
Edmonton, Alberta
Occupation publisher, author, political activist
Awards Order of Canada

Mel Hurtig, OC (born June 24, 1932) is a Canadian publisher, author, political activist and former political candidate. He was born and raised in Edmonton, Alberta and is the former president of the Edmonton Art Gallery. He has written several books critical of the Canadian government and its various policies.

Businessman, Publisher and Author

In 1956 he opened a book store which later grew into one of the largest retail book operations in Canada, with three locations. His stores featured staging of plays, readings of poetry, and encouraged social interaction, and even permitting drinking coffee.

After selling his stores in 1972, he established Hurtig Publishers. In 1980, he started work on The Canadian Encyclopedia, spending $12 million on a comprehensive national encyclopedia first published in 1985.[1]

In September 1990, Hurtig published the five-volume Junior Encyclopedia of Canada, the first encyclopedia for young Canadians. He sold the company to McClelland & Stewart in May 1991.[2]

Politics

After supporting Pierre Trudeau's bid for Liberal leadership, he ran as a Liberal in the federal riding of Edmonton West, in 1972 and finished second to longtime incumbent Marcel Lambert.[2]

In 1973, he broke with the party and joined with other nationalists including Walter Gordon, Jack McClelland, and Claude Ryan to establish the Committee for an Independent Canada (CIC) which lobbied against foreign ownership and cultural imperialism. He served as Chair for the first year.

In 1985, Hurtig established the Council of Canadians, another nationalist organization, five years after the demise of the CIC.[2] The primary purpose of this organization was to lobby against a perceived rising tide of support for free trade. He would leave in 1992 but the council survives to this day.[3]

In 1992, Hurtig was elected leader of the National Party of Canada and led it in the 1993 federal election. He ran in the riding of Edmonton Northwest, but with 4507 votes and 12.8% of the popular vote, finished a distant third to Anne McLellan. It was nonetheless the best showing of the National Party candidates in that election.[2]

Electoral record

Canadian federal election, 1972: Edmonton West
Party Candidate Votes
Progressive ConservativeMarcel Lambert 29,876
LiberalMel Hurtig 21,040
New DemocraticJohn Packer 6,770
Social CreditDonald H. McLeod 1,419
Canadian federal election, 1993: Edmonton Northwest
Party Candidate Votes
LiberalAnne McLellan 12,599
ReformRichard Kayler 12,587
NationalMel Hurtig 4,507
Progressive ConservativeMurray Dorin 3,485
New DemocraticStephanie Michaels 1,671
Natural LawRic Johnsen 186
GreenRoger Swan 119
No affiliationHeide Zeeper 41

Recognition

Selected works

References

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