Paul MacEwan

Paul MacEwan

Infobox President
name = Paul MacEwan
small

caption =
residence = Whitney Pier, Nova Scotia
term_start = October, 1970
term_end = August, 2003
predecessor = Percy 'Pinky' Gaum
successor = Gordie Gosse
party = Liberal, NDP, Cape Breton Labour Party, Independent

Paul MacEwan was a politician in Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada, and long-time member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly.

A teacher, MacEwan was elected first as a candidate of the social democratic Nova Scotia New Democratic Party in the 1970 provincial election. He ran in Cape Breton Nova, a heavily blue collar riding that was home to the SYSCO steel plant and many coal miners. During his first term as MLA, MacEwan would write "Miners and Steelworkers: Labour in Cape Breton", a history of union activities and political activism in the area, published in 1976. He is also the author of "Confederation and the Maritimes" which came out later in 1976, and "The Akerman Years," published in 1980.

MacEwan was closely associated with the work of Jeremy Akerman, who served as Leader of the Nova Scotia NDP from 1968 to 1980. Akerman had won the party leadership by four votes in 1968, at a convention at which MacEwan persuaded eight youth delegates previously uncommitted, to support Alkerman. He and Akerman were the first two NDP MLAs elected in the history of Nova Scotia, in the provincial election of October 13, 1970, which saw the PCs defeated after fourteen years in power, and replaced by the Liberals headed by Gerald Regan. During the years of Akerman and MacEwan, the NDP advanced by one seat in each election contested, and had four MLAs elected by 1978.

MacEwan was expelled from the Nova Scotia NDP in 1980, shortly after Akerman resigned the party leadership. This action by the provincial executive followed his criticism of party executive member Dennis Theman for having written an article advocating the reading of "Forward for the NDP and Socialism," a publication MacEwan considered Trotskyite. After MacEwan left the NDP, he established the Cape Breton Labour Party, which presented itself as a rival political party to the others participating in the 1984 provincial election. Main issue separating the Labor Party from the NDP was freedom of speech, which MacEwan maintained the NDP no longer practiced, as shown by their response to his criticism of Theman's reading recommendations.

The full name of the party was the Labor Party of Cape Breton and Nova Scotia and the party ran three candidates on the Nova Scotian mainland in addition to the eleven seats on Cape Breton Island.

MacEwan was the only one of the party's fourteen candidates to win election in the 1984 provincial election. The Labor Party was the only fourth political party in Nova Scotian history to actually elect someone to the Legislature. Following the 1984 election, however, the party had to cease operations, due to lack of sufficient revenue to carry on its operations.

MacEwan was re-elected as an Independent in 1988. After this election, he contested, and won unanimously, the Liberal nomination in Cape Breton Nova, whereupon he was admitted to the Liberal caucus early in 1990. When the Liberals formed the government of Nova Scotia in 1993, he was unanimously elected Speaker of the House, and served in this role until late in 1996. He subsequently served as Government House Leader, Chair of the Committee on Private and Local Bills, Deputy Government House Leader, and Caucus Whip. After the Liberals lost power in 1999, he continued to serve as their Deputy House Leader and Whip, and was critic for the Department of Labor and the Workers Compensation Board.

MacEwan suffered two cerebral aneurisms in 2001 and 2002. He retired in 2003, having won nine elections in a row, and having served continuously for 33 years in the Nova Scotia Legislature, the longest record of continuous service ever provided by any MLA.

MacEwan was elected three times as an NDPer, 1970, 1974, and 1978 ; then, in 1981, as an Independent; in 1984, on the Labor Party ticket ; in 1988, again as an Independent ; and in 1993, 1998, and 1999, as a Liberal. He obtained 80 per cent of the vote cast in 1993 and over fifty per cent in both 1998 and 1999. MacEwan's riding was often considered the safest riding in the province, no matter what banner he ran under.


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