- Joseph Tweed Shaw
Joseph Tweed Shaw (
August 30 ,1883 —July 12 ,1944 ) was a Canadian politician. He served in theCanadian House of Commons from 1921 to 1925 as an independentMember of Parliament (MP), and later became leader of theAlberta Liberal Party .Shaw was born at Port Arthur in
Northern Ontario , and received his early education in Calgary,Alberta . He later received aBachelor of Laws degree from theUniversity of Michigan , and returned to Alberta to work as a barrister. He served in theCanadian Expeditionary Force duringWorld War I from 1916 to 1918. In religion, he was aPresbyterian .He was elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the 1921 federal election, defeating future Conservative
Prime Minister Richard Bennett by twelve votes inCalgary West . Shaw is usually considered to have been a Labour candidate but he actually ran as an independent, supported by both theUnited Farmers of Alberta (UFA) and the Alberta branch of theDominion Labour Party (DLP).ref|Ind He attended a Progressive Party convention in 1922 and may have been a candidate for that party's leadership, but he reaffirmed his independence from all parties in 1923.ref|Prog During his time in parliament, Shaw was associated with the Ginger Group of radical Labour and Progressive representatives.ref|GGShaw sought re-election in 1925 as an independent candidate, and this time received unofficial support from the
Liberal Party of Canada . He lost to Bennett in a rematch of 1921, and subsequently became affiliated with the Alberta Liberal Party. OnApril 21 ,1926 , he was chosen without opposition as leader of the provincial party. From his new position, he attacked Alberta's UFA ministry as the government of a class rather than of all the people.ref|Lib A provincial election was called for June, and Shaw led his party to a disappointing 7 seats of out 61. He was personally elected in Bow Valley by a single vote, and served as an opposition member for the next four years.Shaw never served as Leader of the Opposition in the legislature, after a Speaker's ruling that divided the Official Opposition funding between all the party leaders. He did not seek re-election in 1930. He attempted a return to the House of Commons in the 1935 federal election, but was defeated in
Calgary East . He also campaigned for the "Independent Movement" (a fusion of Liberals and Progressive Conservatives) in the 1940 provincial election, but again failed to win a seat. He died four years later.Notes and sources
# Anthony Mardiros, "William Irvine: The Life of a Prairie Radical", (Toronto: J. Lorimer, 1979), p. 112. The Canadian parliamentary website lists him as a Labour MP, but this is an error.
# William L. Morton, "The Progressive Party in Canada", (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1950), p. 182.
# Mardiros, p. 173.
# Mardiros, p. 168.
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