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The Honourable Major
James William Coldwell, PC , CC (December 2, 1888–August
25, 1974), usually known as M.J., was a Canadian socialist
politician, and leader of the Co-operative Commonwealth
Federation party from 1942 to 1960. Major was his first
name, not a military title.
Coldwell was born in
England. He moved to Canada in 1910 and became a school
administrator in Regina, Saskatchewan. He became known
nationally as a leader of teacher's associations from
1924 until 1934. He was elected to the city council
in Regina and developed links with labour and farmers
organizations.
When the Saskatchewan
Farmer-Labour Party was formed in 1932, Coldwell was
chosen to be its first leader. The party fought the
1934 provincial election under Coldwell's leadership,
and won five seats in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan,
making it the official opposition to the Liberal government.
Coldwell was defeated in his election bid. After the
election, the party affiliated itself with the Co-operative
Commonwealth Federation, and became the Saskatchewan
CCF.
In the 1935 federal
election, Coldwell was elected to the House of Commons
as Member of Parliament (MP) for the riding of Rosetown-Biggar.
He split with CCF leader J.S. Woodsworth when World
War II broke out in 1939. Woodsworth, a pacifist, opposed
the war effort, while Coldwell and the rest of the CCF
caucus supported the war. When Woodsworth resigned as
CCF leader in 1942, shortly before his death, Coldwell
was unanimously elected the party's new leader. He lead
the party through five general elections.
Coldwell had a moderating
influence on party policy, and in 1956, the party passed
the Winnipeg Declaration as a statement of party principles
to replace the more radical Regina Manifesto. After
an upsurge of support for the party immediately after
World War II, the party embarked on a long decline during
the Cold War.
In the 1958 election,
Coldwell lost his seat, and the party was reduced to
a rump of eight MPs. Coldwell retired as party leader
in 1960.
He was unenthusiastic
about the movement to merge the CCF with the Canadian
Labour Congress and create a "New Party",
but he joined the New Democratic Party at its founding,
and remained an elder statesman in the party until his
death in 1974.
In 1967, he was
made a Companion of the Order of Canada. In 1964 he
became a member of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada.
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