- William Thomas White
Sir William Thomas White, KCMG, PC (
November 13 1866 –February 11 1955 ) was a Canadian politician and Cabinet minister.White worked as a reporter for the "Toronto Evening Telegram" in 1890, and subsequently worked for Toronto's Assessment Department. He received a
Bachelor of Arts degree from theUniversity of Toronto in 1895, and a law degree fromOsgoode Law School in 1899. White did not practice law after his graduation, but instead worked as a Managing Director for the National Trust Company, Ltd., becoming its Vice-President in 1911. National Trust was incorporated in 1898 by SenatorGeorge Albertus Cox andEdward Rogers Wood . National Trust Company, Ltd. became part ofBank of Nova Scotia as Scotia Trust in 1997.White was initially a Liberal party member, but his views diverged from the party's policies on some key matters. He was a supporter of British
imperialism , and joinedClifford Sifton and other Liberals in signing an anti - reciprocity manifesto in 1911.Although he had few allies in the Conservative Party, White was respected by party leader
Robert Borden , who recognized that White's presence would bring some disaffected Liberals to the party. After winning the general election of 1911, Borden appointed White as his Minister of Finance. White did not hold a seat in theCanadian House of Commons at the time, and in fact had never campaigned for public office before. Nevertheless, he was elected by acclamation in aby-election in the easternOntario riding ofLeeds , after another ConservativeMember of Parliament (MP) was convinced to resign.White was responsible for managing Canada's finances during
World War I . His approach was conservative, and he was reluctant to interfere with private enterprise or even to raise taxes in the early period of the war. Although he eventually brought in some reforms (including fixed profit margins and regulated food supplies), he continued to reject fundamental changes in the nation's finances. One exception was the introduction in 1917 of anincome tax of 4% on all income of single men over $2,000; for Canadians with annual incomes of more than $6,000, the tax rate ranged from 2 to 25 per cent. Though it was intended as a temporary war measure and despite White's recommendation that "a year or two after the war is over, the measure should be reviewed by the minister of finance of the day, with a view of judging whether it is suitable to the conditions which then prevail," income tax became a permanent feature of Canadian life.In 1919, he approved the use of naval warships to suppress post-war labour radicalism in
British Columbia .White served as Finance Minister until
August 1 ,1919 . From November 1918 to May 1919, he also served as ActingPrime Minister while Borden was inEurope . Several members of Borden's Unionist government (a wartime coalition of the Conservative Party and some Liberals) called on White to replace Borden as Prime Minister in 1920, but he declined.In the 1920 New Year Honours, as a reward for his service as Acting Prime Minister, White was appointed to the
Imperial Privy Council , [LondonGazette |issue=31712 |date=30 December 1919 |startpage=2 |supp=yes] allowing him to use the honorific "The Right Honourable". He remained a Member of Parliament until the 1921 election when he retired from politics. Later in the year, he published a pamphlet entitled "The Story of Canada's War Finances", defending his management of the wartime economy.White did not consider himself as a "career politician". His tenure as Finance Minister was very stressful, and he seems to have welcomed the opportunity to leave political life after the war's end. There is no indication that he entertained a return to politics in later years.
Footnotes
External links
* [http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/key/bio.asp?lang=E&query=15354&s=M Biography from the "Library of Parliament"]
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