William Irvine (Canadian politician)

William Irvine

William Irvine (April 19, 1885 – October 26, 1962) was a Canadian politician, journalist and clergyman. He served in the Canadian House of Commons on three different occasions, as a representative of Labour, the United Farmers of Alberta and the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation. During the 1920s, he was active in the Ginger Group of radical Members of Parliament (MPs).

Early life

Irvine was born at Gletness in Shetland, Scotland, one of twelve siblings in a working-class family.[1] He became a Christian Socialist in his youth, and worked as a Methodist lay preacher. He moved to Canada in 1907 after being recruited for ministerial work by James Woodsworth, the father of future CCF leader J.S. Woodsworth.[2]

Irvine was a follower of the social gospel, and rejected Biblical literalism. He refused to sign the Articles of Faith when ordained as a Methodist minister, claiming that he accepted the ethical but not the supernatural aspects of Christian belief. He was nonetheless accepted into the ministry, and was stationed at Emo in Northern Ontario in 1914. Irvine was accused of heresy the following year by a more conservative church elder, and, while acquitted of the charge, chose to resign his commission. He left the Methodists, and accepted a call to lead the Unitarian Church in Calgary, Alberta in early 1916.[3]

In addition to his work as a Unitarian minister, Irvine became politically active after moving to Alberta. He helped establish an Alberta branch of the radical agrarian Non-Partisan League (NPL) in December 1916, and was an NPL representative at the creation of the Alberta Labor Representation League (LRL) in April 1917. Irvine himself stood as an LRL candidate in the 1917 provincial election, but was defeated in Calgary.[4] He also founded the Nutcracker newspaper in 1916, and oversaw its later transformations to the Alberta Non-Partisan and the Western Independent.[5]

Political career

First campaigns

He unsuccessfully campaigned for the Canadian House of Commons in 1917, as a Labour candidate opposing Robert Borden's Unionist government in the Conscription Crisis election of 1917. His platform overlapped with that of the Alberta Non-Partisan League, which he had helped found. While not a pacifist, Irvine denounced war profiteering and called for the "conscription of wealth" rather than of men.[6] He was accused of holding pro-German sympathies. He was unsuccessful in the election, and, in addition, lost his funding from the American Unitarian Association in Boston. Still supported by his local congregation, he set up his own "People's Church" in Calgary in 1919 as part of the Labour church movement.[7] In the same year, he helped establish the Alberta wing of the Dominion Labor Party.[8]

Irvine briefly moved to New Brunswick in 1920, and became a prominent supporter of that province's United Farmers movement during a federal by-election.[9] After returning to Calgary, he helped convince the United Farmers of Alberta (UFA) to enter political life. The UFA had previously been divided between members who supported direct political action, and others such as Henry Wise Wood who wanted to remain an agrarian pressure group. The former position was accepted following a series of public debates between Irvine and Wood at UFA meetings, though Wood was successful in restricting the UFA's membership to farmers. Irvine's first book, Farmers in Politics (1920), endorsed the UFA policies of economic co-operation and group government.[10]

Member of Parliament, 1920s

He was first elected to the House of Commons in the 1921 federal election as a Dominion Labour Party candidate in Calgary East. Three Labour MPs were elected in 1921, and Irvine became close political and personal friends with Winnipeg North Centre MP J. S. Woodsworth. The two of them launched an investigation into Social Credit, and even brought Social Credit theorist Major C.H. Douglas to Ottawa to speak on monetary reform. Defeated in 1925, Irvine was returned for the rural Alberta riding of Wetaskiwin in 1926 as a United Farmers candidate. Despite the change in his party affiliation, he remained a leading ally of Woodsworth and of farmer-labour co-operation. His second book, Co-operative Government, was published in 1929.

In the late 1920s, Irvine introduced an early bill favouring the abolition of capital punishment in Canada.[11]

The embryonic meeting at which several radical MPs decided to found the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation was held in Irvine's parliamentary office.[12] Irvine attended the founding of the CCF in Calgary in 1932 and helped bring the UFA into the CCF in early 1933 and the parliamentary caucus into the CCF for the 1935 election. He was personally defeated (as were all of the UFA's MPs in that election), losing to a Social Credit candidate. He attempted to re-enter parliament later that year through a by-election in Assiniboia, Saskatchewan but was defeated by former Saskatchewan Premier James Garfield Gardiner.

Irvine was interested in social credit monetary theories, believing that monetary reform was an important part of bringing a Co-operative Commonwealth into effect. But he was not a follower of the Social Credit Party, which formed in Alberta under William Aberhart.[13][lower-alpha 1]

Irvine remained active in the CCF, becoming the Alberta CCF's first president, and was returned to parliament again in the 1945 election for the British Columbia riding of Cariboo.[14] He served in the CCF caucus for four years, and was defeated in 1949 when the opposition united behind Liberal candidate George Matheson Murray. Irvine made three attempts to return to parliament in the 1950s, but was unsuccessful.

References

Notes

  1. Irvine had a very low opinion of Aberhart's ideology and political ambitions.[13]

Citations

  1. Mardiros (1979), p. 6.
  2. Mardiros (1979), pp. 9–11.
  3. Mardiros (1979), pp. 19–21, 26–27.
  4. Mardiros (1979), pp. 56–60.
  5. Mardiros (1979), pp. 41, 62, 76.
  6. Mardiros (1979), pp. 45–47, 64.
  7. Mardiros (1979), p. 67.
  8. Mardiros (1979), p. 78.
  9. Mardiros (1979), p. 81.
  10. Mardiros (1979), pp. 87–90, 102.
  11. Mardiros (1979), p. 130.
  12. McNaught (2001), pp. 259–260.
  13. 1 2 Mardiros (1979), p. 144.
  14. "William (Bill) Irvine and The Social Gospel: Advocate of the Synergies of Socialism and the Social Gospel of Jesus". Saskatoon: Unitarian Congregation of Saskatchewan. 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-05-27. Retrieved 2012-05-27.

Bibliography

  • Mardiros, Anthony (1979). The Life of a Prairie Radical. Toronto: J. Lorimer. ISBN 978-0888622372. 
  • McNaught, Kenneth; With a new introduction by Allen Mills (2001). A Prophet in Politics: A Biography of J. S. Woodsworth (reprint ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-3555-8.  Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)

External links

Parliament of Canada
Preceded by
Daniel Lee Redman
Member of Parliament for East Calgary
1921–1925
Succeeded by
Fred Davis
Preceded by
Stanley Tobin
Member of Parliament for Wetaskiwin
1926–1935
Succeeded by
Norman Jaques
Preceded by
James Gray Turgeon
Member of Parliament for Cariboo
19451949
Succeeded by
George Matheson Murray
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