- Robert Connell
Robert Connell (1871-1957) was a clergyman and politician in
British Columbia . He was the first leader of theCo-operative Commonwealth Federation inBritish Columbia (now theBritish Columbia New Democratic Party ).Raised in
Glasgow, Scotland , Connell worked for a shipping company before coming to Canada at the age of 17Price, Christine, [http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/retrieve/3732/etd2380.pdf "A Very Conservative Radical": Reverend Robert Connell's encounter with Marxism in the BC CCF] , Simon Fraser University MA Thesis, 2006] After seven years working in various jobs he moved to Calgary to train to become aChurch of England minister. He was ordained apriest in 1896 and moved toVictoria, British Columbia in 1901 after several years of mission work inAlberta . He served as a vicar in various parishes (including two years inCalifornia ) before retiring from the pulpit in 1923.Connell was also involved with education occasionally teaching art at a private boy's school and botany at Victoria High School. He also wrote a weekly column on nature and geology for the "Victoria Daily Times" and later the "Victoria Daily Colonist".
In 1932, Connell joined the
League for Social Reconstruction and also joined the BC Reconstructionist Party formed by some supporters of the LSR in British Columbia. The short-lived party quickly joined the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation after it was formed in August of the same year.Connell agreed to run for the provincial legislature as a CCF candidate in the 1933 provincial election, the new party won seven seats, including Connell's Victoria City riding. With the collapse of the governing Conservative Party, which was in such disarray it decided not to run any candidates, and the election of a Liberal government the CCF found itself as the
official opposition in the British Columbia legislature. Leaderless, the party caucus met and agreed to appoint Connell as Leader of the Opposition.Connell was a fervent believer of the
social gospel movement. He was a moderate when compared to many more radical members of the party, including a majority of the party executive and much of the caucus, many who came to the CCF from the Socialist Party of Canada. The SPC which had co-founded the CCF in BC and remained in existence as a distinct entity. Connell urged co-operation with the Liberals and Conservatives on certain issues and was criticized by CCFers such as T. Guy Sheppard for refusing to call for ageneral strike against the Liberal government of "Duff" Pattullo. He also was the target of criticism for his opposition to class-based politics in the pages of the SPC's newspaper, "The BC Clarion".Tensions between Connell and the left-wing of the party emerged publicly when he stood up in the
legislature to denounce the radical language of fellow CCF MPErnest Winch who had given a speech on the merits ofcommunism . At the 1936 party convention, Connell survived a vote of non-confidence in his leadership by a margin of 138-76. Connell's leadership again came under fire when he publicly opposed a resolution in favour of socializing banking and credit several weeks after it was approved. In July 1936, he issued a statement to the party executive and to the media revoking his support for the party platform approved by the convention three weeks earlier. The policy disagreement, which came to be known as the "Connell Affair" brought to a head a conflict in the party between moderates such as Connell and "revolution ary" Marxists such as Winch. Connell was expelled from the party in August and he promptly formed a new political party, the "Social Constructives" with three fellow MLAs from the CCF's 7 personcaucus - Jack Price, R.B. Swailes and Ernest Bakewell. Also joining Connell was Victor Midgely, former leader of the One Big Union, and Bill Pritchard, editor and owner of "The Commonwealth". Pritchard's defection left the BC CCF without a party newspaper. [Howard, Irene, "The Struggle for Social Justice in British Columbia: Helena Gutteridge", UBC Press, 1992, page 183-184]With four MLAs in Connell's new "Social Constructive" caucus versus three remaining in the CCF, Connell was able to retain his position as Leader of the Official Opposition for the remainder of the life of the legislature.
The "Social Constructives" stood 14 candidates (out of a possible 48) in the 1937 general election but failed to win any seats. The party received 8,086 votes to the CCF's 119,400.
With the end of his political career, Connell returned to spiritual work becoming
Archdeacon ofComox in 1940.References
External links
* [http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/retrieve/3732/etd2380.pdf "A Very Conservative Radical": Reverend Robert Connell's encounter with Marxism in the BC CCF] by Christine Price, Simon Fraser University MA Thesis, 2006
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