Politics | The Canadian Encyclopedia

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  • Speech

    Wilfrid Laurier: Speech in Defence of Louis Riel, 1874

    The 1869 Métis uprising in Red River had deeply divided Canadians along religious and linguistic lines. Five years later, the election of Louis Riel as a member of Parliament (MP) prompted a debate about whether the House of Commons should allow Riel to take up his seat there. Wilfrid Laurier — by this time a federal MP in the new Liberal government of Alexander Mackenzie — stood firmly on Riel’s side. Laurier had little personal sympathy for Riel. Politically, however, he used Riel and the Métis cause as a way of staking out the moderation and pragmatism that would become a hallmark his career. On 15 April 1874, he issued this stirring defence of Riel in the House of Commons.

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    https://d3d0lqu00lnqvz.cloudfront.net/media/media/5580e54c-eb45-47b4-a8ce-b0f8b5895615.jpg Wilfrid Laurier: Speech in Defence of Louis Riel, 1874
  • Speech

    Wilfrid Laurier: Speech on Political Liberalism, 1877

    By 1877, Wilfrid Laurier was a rising political star in Québec, although his profile outside his native province was not yet established. On 26 June 1877, Laurier spoke to members of Le Club Canadien in Québec City on the risky topic of liberalism — deemed a radical threat at the time to Québec’s conservative elites and to the Roman Catholic Church. Laurier disarmed such fears by stating clearly what Liberals held dear: political freedom, respect for the Crown, the continuance of Canada’s democratic institutions and religious tolerance. The speech was a master stroke. Overnight, Laurier created space in Québec for the Liberal Party and became, for the first time, a national figure.

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    https://d3d0lqu00lnqvz.cloudfront.net/media/media/2e3d031c-76d9-49d8-80ab-47043facdef5.jpg Wilfrid Laurier: Speech on Political Liberalism, 1877
  • Speech

    Wilfrid Laurier: “The Sunny Way” Speech, 1895

    The Manitoba Schools Question involved a struggle over the rights of francophones in Manitoba to receive an education in their mother tongue and their religion, constitutional rights that had been revoked by the provincial government of Thomas Greenway in 1890. Wilfrid Laurier’s solution to the problem followed what he called the “sunny way” — the way of negotiation, diplomacy and compromise — rather than forced legislation. He first used the term 8 October 1895, when he was leader of the opposition, in a speech he delivered in Ontario. The sunny way is a reference to one of Aesop’s Fables, in which the wind and the sun compete to see who can motivate a man to remove his jacket. The sun shines down, pleasantly and patiently, and the wind blows with bluster. The sun ultimately wins the day, proving that patience and enticement are more effective than force and coercion. After coming to power in 1896, Laurier settled the Manitoba Schools Question with sunny ways — but the politically expedient settlement his government achieved came at a steep price: the sacrificing of French language minority rights in Manitoba.

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    https://d3d0lqu00lnqvz.cloudfront.net/media/media/1cc2c9fb-ee33-4441-bef5-039b0b6e287a.jpg Wilfrid Laurier: “The Sunny Way” Speech, 1895
  • Article

    Yukon and Confederation

    Yukon entered Confederation in 1898, after a gold rush boom led Canada to create a second northern territory out of the Northwest Territories (NWT).

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    https://d3d0lqu00lnqvz.cloudfront.net/media/quizzes/CC-Voting-Rights-in-Canada-1.jpg Voting Rights in Canada: A Select Timeline