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Dominion Labour Party (Manitoba)

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312: 324: 33: 336: 220:. Strictly speaking, not all of these figures were elected as Dominion Labour Party candidates: Smith, though a member of the DLP, campaigned under the banner of the "Brandon Labour Party". The DLP, however, provided the basic framework around which the provincial campaign was based. Dixon was the unquestioned leader of the labour group in the legislature. 192:
of 1919 radicalized labour politics in Manitoba, and the DLP soon emerged as a much stronger force than the province's earlier labour parties had been. In the provincial election of 1920, the party formed an electoral alliance with the
185:. In the years after its formation, the DLP would set up other branches in cities throughout the Canadian prairies. It never had a strong central organization, and was more of a network than an organized movement. 156:
and members of the Winnipeg Trades and Labour Congress (TLC) created the first branch of the Dominion Labour Party in Canada. The DLP was an ideological successor to various other reformist labour groups in
235:. Dixon, who had previously been neutral, was the leader of the late 1920 walkout. Most other labour parliamentarians also left the DLP for the ILP, with Smith as the only prominent exception. 170: 231:. When AFL supporters nominated an opponent of the General Strike as a DLP municipal candidate in Winnipeg, many others walked out and formed the rival 17: 356: 50: 381: 97: 366: 69: 232: 76: 386: 251: 83: 288: 257: 361: 65: 205:, and eight other Labour MLAs were elected throughout the province (along with one Socialist and one Social Democrat). 178: 376: 371: 198: 166: 116: 54: 90: 224: 238:
The ILP subsequently became the dominant labour party in Manitoba. The DLP aligned itself with the new
302: 217: 194: 189: 182: 43: 228: 239: 8: 202: 158: 284: 340: 201:
and a party representing returning ex-soldiers. Dixon easily topped the polled in
328: 278: 350: 316: 209: 153: 242:, and soon ceased to exist in the province as an independent organization. 174: 142: 323: 254:(history of the DLP in relation to other early Canadian labour parties) 213: 162: 32: 146: 138: 335: 145:. The party enjoyed its greatest success in the province of 300: 223:
Late in 1920, the DLP split between followers of the
141:in 1918 in opposition to Canadian participation in 57:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 348: 280:Canadian Marxists and the Search for a Third Way 283:. McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 42. 169:. The Winnipeg local included such figures as 165:and actively cooperated with members of the 117:Learn how and when to remove this message 357:Provincial political parties in Manitoba 276: 252:Labour candidates and parties in Canada 14: 349: 212:, then serving a prison sentence, and 382:Political parties established in 1918 258:List of political parties in Manitoba 66:"Dominion Labour Party" Manitoba 55:adding citations to reliable sources 26: 367:Defunct political parties in Canada 24: 18:Dominion Labour Party (in Manitoba) 179:Member of the Legislative Assembly 25: 398: 167:Social Democratic Party of Canada 334: 322: 310: 31: 387:1918 establishments in Manitoba 208:Among the new Labour MLAs were 42:needs additional citations for 270: 13: 1: 263: 225:American Federation of Labor 7: 362:Socialist parties in Canada 245: 10: 403: 161:, but was more explicitly 218:Communist Party of Canada 195:Socialist Party of Canada 377:Labour parties in Canada 372:Labour history of Canada 277:Campbell, Peter (2000). 233:Independent Labour Party 190:Winnipeg General Strike 240:Canadian Labour Party 131:Dominion Labour Party 51:improve this article 216:, who later joined 290:978-0-7735-6783-2 127: 126: 119: 101: 16:(Redirected from 394: 339: 338: 327: 326: 315: 314: 313: 306: 295: 294: 274: 214:A. E. Smith 199:Social Democrats 137:) was formed in 122: 115: 111: 108: 102: 100: 59: 35: 27: 21: 402: 401: 397: 396: 395: 393: 392: 391: 347: 346: 345: 333: 321: 311: 309: 301: 299: 298: 291: 275: 271: 266: 248: 152:In March 1918, 123: 112: 106: 103: 60: 58: 48: 36: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 400: 390: 389: 384: 379: 374: 369: 364: 359: 344: 343: 331: 319: 297: 296: 289: 268: 267: 265: 262: 261: 260: 255: 247: 244: 125: 124: 39: 37: 30: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 399: 388: 385: 383: 380: 378: 375: 373: 370: 368: 365: 363: 360: 358: 355: 354: 352: 342: 337: 332: 330: 325: 320: 318: 308: 307: 304: 292: 286: 282: 281: 273: 269: 259: 256: 253: 250: 249: 243: 241: 236: 234: 230: 229:One Big Union 226: 221: 219: 215: 211: 210:William Ivens 206: 204: 200: 196: 191: 186: 184: 180: 176: 172: 168: 164: 160: 155: 154:Arthur Puttee 150: 148: 144: 140: 136: 132: 121: 118: 110: 107:February 2024 99: 96: 92: 89: 85: 82: 78: 75: 71: 68: –  67: 63: 62:Find sources: 56: 52: 46: 45: 40:This article 38: 34: 29: 28: 19: 279: 272: 237: 222: 207: 187: 175:Fred Tipping 171:Harry Veitch 151: 134: 130: 128: 113: 104: 94: 87: 80: 73: 61: 49:Please help 44:verification 41: 143:World War I 351:Categories 264:References 183:Fred Dixon 77:newspapers 341:Socialism 163:socialist 329:Politics 246:See also 227:and the 203:Winnipeg 159:Winnipeg 147:Manitoba 303:Portals 91:scholar 317:Canada 287:  197:, the 181:(MLA) 177:, and 139:Canada 93:  86:  79:  72:  64:  98:JSTOR 84:books 285:ISBN 188:The 129:The 70:news 135:DLP 53:by 353:: 173:, 149:. 305:: 293:. 133:( 120:) 114:( 109:) 105:( 95:· 88:· 81:· 74:· 47:. 20:)

Index

Dominion Labour Party (in Manitoba)

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"Dominion Labour Party" Manitoba
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Canada
World War I
Manitoba
Arthur Puttee
Winnipeg
socialist
Social Democratic Party of Canada
Harry Veitch
Fred Tipping
Member of the Legislative Assembly
Fred Dixon
Winnipeg General Strike
Socialist Party of Canada
Social Democrats
Winnipeg
William Ivens
A. E. Smith
Communist Party of Canada

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