Arnold Webster

Arnold Alexander Webster (9 March 1899 – 27 July 1979) was a Canadian politician and served as Leader of the Opposition and leader of the BC Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (now known as the British Columbia NDP). He returned to politics as a Member of Parliament for the federal New Democratic Party in the 1960s.[1]

Arnold Alexander Webster
Member of Parliament
for Vancouver Kingsway
In office
September 1962  September 1965
Personal details
Born(1899-03-09)9 March 1899
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Died27 July 1979(1979-07-27) (aged 80)
Political partyCo-operative Commonwealth Federation

Biography

Webster was born in Vancouver and raised in Agassiz, B.C. After obtaining a Master of Arts from the University of British Columbia and a Bachelor of Pedagogy at the University of Toronto[2] he became a teacher and later a principal in Vancouver.[1]

Webster joined the CCF in 1932 and became president of the British Columbia section of the party.[1] He ran for a seat in the House of Commons of Canada on behalf of the CCF in 1935, 1940, 1945 and 1949 but was unsuccessful.[3] In 1953, he was elected leader of the BC CCF succeeding Harold Winch and was elected Member of the Legislative Assembly for Vancouver East in the 1953 general election[1] becoming Leader of the Opposition. He left politics in 1956 but returned in the 1962 federal election to run for the New Democratic Party and was elected to the House of Commons of Canada from Vancouver Kingsway. He was re-elected in 1963 but did not run again in the 1965 federal election.[3]

During his term as Leader of the Opposition in British Columbia, Webster urged the adoption of a provincial bill of rights. In his political career he also opposed the testing and stockpiling of nuclear weapons.[2]

In 1955, Webster married Daisy de Jong who went on to serve in the British Columbia assembly.[4]

gollark: We could use Lua. Lua is very easy to sandbox.
gollark: Why did states happen in the *first* place if they aren't good and there's a stable alternative?
gollark: > Collectivization will take place naturally as soon as state coercion is over, the workers themselveswill own their workplaces as the capitalists will no longer have any control over them. This iswhat happened during the Spanish Revolution of 1936, during which workers and farmers seized andmanaged the means of production collectively. For those capitalists who had a good attitude towardsworkers before the revolution, there was also a place - they joined the horizontal labor collectivesUm. This seems optimistic.
gollark: > "Legally anyone can start their own business. Just launch a company!”. These words oftenmentioned by the fans of capitalism are very easy to counter, because they have a huge flaw. Namely,if everyone started a company, who would work for all these companiesThis is a bizarre objection. At the somewhat extreme end, stuff *could* probably still work fine if the majority of people were contracted out for work instead of acting as employees directly.
gollark: The hierarchical direct democracy thing it describes doesn't seem like a very complete or effective coordination mechanism, and it seems like it could easily create unfreedom.

References

  1. "Webster, Arnold Alexander". UBC Special Collections. Archived from the original on February 15, 2008. Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  2. Hansard, Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, July 30, 1979 Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  3. Arnold Webster – Parliament of Canada biography
  4. Webster, Daisy. "The challenges of home economics" (PDF). BC Teachers' Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 13, 2012. Retrieved January 22, 2012.
Preceded by
Harold Winch
Leader of the BC Co-operative Commonwealth Federation
19531956
Succeeded by
Robert Strachan
Preceded by
Harold Winch
Leader of the Opposition
in the British Columbia Legislature

19531956
Succeeded by
Robert Strachan
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