- Mary Walker-Sawka
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Mary Walker-Sawka (born c. 1916)[1] was the first woman ever to seek the leadership of a major political party in Canada. She was a surprise last-minute candidate at the 1967 leadership convention of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, a centre-right party that formed the official opposition in the Canadian House of Commons at the time. She was a movie producer and freelance writer.[citation needed] The convention had been called after a revolt by party members against the leadership of John Diefenbaker. The party was badly divided between supporters and opponents of the former prime minister.[citation needed]
Walker-Sawka said that she was a Diefenbaker supporter, but was running because she felt she could “add a few things” to Diefenbaker’s program. She gave a short speech setting out her ideas for PC party policy:
- Canada should withdraw from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD);
- Canada should closely supervise its foreign aid programs to ensure that aid does not end up on the black market;
- all houses more than 20 or 30 years old should be torn down and re-built;
- Old Age Security payments should be increased to $100 per month;
- the education system should be modernized, and at least six languages should be taught in schools;
- the 11% federal sales tax should be eliminated.
When she was nominated at the convention, she had no seconder. Some time passed before a female George Hees delegate seconded Walker-Sawka's nomination in order to save her the embarrassment. She called upon the women of the party to stand with her. She won only two votes on the first ballot, and was dropped from the ballot.[citation needed]
The Toronto Star newspaper reported that she gave a concise speech laying out her ideas on various issues. The Globe and Mail newspaper, on the other hand, reported that she "looked like a housewife who had mistakenly wandered on stage while looking for a bingo game". Walker-Sawka stated that as head of a film production company, she had never had time to be a housewife.[citation needed]
References
- ^ "Diefenbaker Blasts Party's Policy on '2-Nation' Canada", Chicago Tribune, September 9, 1967
- Toronto Star and Globe and Mail newspapers, August-September 1967.
Categories:- 1910s births
- Canadian film producers
- Canadian women in federal politics
- Progressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership candidates
- Possibly living people
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