Everything about John Bracken totally explained
John Bracken,
PC (
June 22,
1883-
March 18,
1969) was an agronomist,
Premier of
Manitoba (
1922-
1943) and leader of the
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (
1942-
1948).
Bracken was born in
Ellisville, Ontario, and was educated at the Ontario Agricultural College. He was professor of
animal husbandry at the
University of Saskatchewan from
1910 to
1920 when he became President of the Manitoba Agricultural College.
The
United Farmers of Manitoba (UFM) won the provincial election of 1922 but didn't have a leader, so they asked Bracken to head the party and become
Premier of Manitoba. (A similar situation had occurred with
Ernest C. Drury when the
United Farmers of Ontario won the
1919 election in that province.)
Bracken was a political outsider, and gave the UFM the professional grounding it needed. The United Farmers generally rejected the partisanship of the
Liberal and
Conservative parties, and favoured government policies based on independence and principles of business management. Bracken accepted the UFM's request, and won a deferred election in the northern riding of
The Pas. The UFM governed as the
Progressive Party of Manitoba, and Bracken served as Manitoba's Premier for over twenty years.
Bracken's government was in most respects conservative and cautious. It was dominated by rural interests, who controlled the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba through an outmoded system of representation. Labour didn't fare well under Bracken's leadership; the Premier had little sympathy for the leaders of the
Winnipeg General Strike, and once fired a number of government workers to show his independence from organized labour.
In keeping with the UFM's "anti-party" philosophy, Bracken favoured non-partisan government. In
1931, his Progressives formed an alliance with the
Manitoba Liberal Party, and the two parties eventually merged into one. In
1940, Bracken formed a wartime coalition government that included the
Conservative,
Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) and
Social Credit parties.
When Bracken left provincial politics in
1943, there were only 5 opposition
Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) in a 57-member parliament. His coalition remained intact until
1950, although the CCF left in
1943.
Bracken held several cabinet portfolios in addition to the office of Premier. He served as:
- Minister of Education from August 8, 1922 to December 3, 1923,
- Provincial Lands Commissioner and Railway Commissioner from August 10, 1922 to December 3, 1923,
- Minister of Agriculture from December 3, 1923 to January 12, 1925,
- Provincial Treasurer from January 18, 1925 to May 27, 1932,
- Minister of Public Utilities from April 29, 1927 to April 19, 1928,
- Minister of Mines and Natural Resources from April 19, 1928 to October 25, 1930,
- Provincial Secretary from May 10, 1935 to November 28, 1939,
- Railway Commissioner (again) from May 10, 1935 to November 4, 1940,
- Minister of Agriculture (again) from April 28, 1936 to September 21, 1936,
- Minister of the Manitoba Power Commission from June 3, 1936 to November 4, 1940, and
- Minister of Dominion-Provincial Relations from November 22, 1939 to November 4, 1940.
Despite having co-operated with the Liberals at the provincial level, Bracken was asked by a number of senior federal Conservatives (including
Arthur Meighen) to take over the leadership of the weak national
Conservative Party in
1942. He agreed to seek the party's leadership on the condition that it change its name to the
Progressive Conservative Party. He was elected leader at the party's 1942
leadership convention. Bracken stepped down as Manitoba premier shortly thereafter, and was succeeded by
Stuart S. Garson.
Bracken didn't seek a seat in the
House of Commons until the
1945 Canadian election, which the Progressive Conservatives lost. Bracken became
Leader of the Opposition and remained leader of the Tories until he was pushed to resign in 1948.
It has been argued, with some credibility, that Bracken never succeeded in impressing his personal authority over the national PC organization. As a western populist, he was distrusted by the party's eastern establishment. There are reports that some senior Conservatives wanted him removed as leader as early as
1944.
Bracken lost his
riding to Liberal James Matthews in the
1949 federal election, and didn't return to political life thereafter.
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