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- Q4969766 subject Q13289838.
- Q4969766 subject Q8370268.
- Q4969766 subject Q8770899.
- Q4969766 abstract "The British Columbia Social Constructive Party (also known as the Social Constructives and the B.C. Reconstructive Party) was formed in 1936 by a breakaway from the British Columbia Co-operative Commonwealth Federation after Reverend Robert Connell was expelled from the party over doctrinal differences. Connell had been leader of the CCF until his expulsion. Three other MLAs of the seven person CCF caucus, Jack Price, R.B. Swailes and Ernest Bakewell, left the party and joined Connell to form the Social Constructives. The four member caucus, having one more MLA than the CCF, was large enough to allow Connell to remain Leader of the Opposition in the British Columbia Legislative Assembly. Other defectors included Victor Midgely, former leader of the One Big Union, and Bill Pritchard, editor and owner of the BC CCF's newspaper, The Commonwealth. The party worked closely with Rolf Wallgren Bruhn an Independent MLA who had formerly been a Conservative. Bruhn helped write the new party's platform and conducted a speaking tour with Connell during the 1937 general election but declined to join the party and stood for re-election as an Independent though with the Constructives' endorsement.Connell was expelled for publicly rejecting the party platform adopted by the BC CCF at its 1936 convention as too radical for calling for the socialization of banking and credit. The new party ran on a moderate left of centre program standing between the governing Liberal Party of British Columbia and the CCF. The new party lacked the organizational strength of either the CCF or the Liberals and was unable to field candidates in even one-third of the province's electoral districts. The party also refused to hold nominating conventions for candidates in order to prevent groups from taking over the party. Instead, individuals were invited to stand as candidates and then appointed. In the context of the Great Depression, the party's platform of moderate reformism proved unable to distinguish itself from a Liberal Party that was leaning left and using the slogan of "socialized capitalism".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. Disappointed with the results, Connell came to the conclusion that change was not possible through a third party but only through working within mainstream parties.".
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q1323479.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q13289838.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q16006484.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q16009692.
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- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q4969803.
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- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q7343061.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q751892.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q8370268.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q8698.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q8770899.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q878445.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q919043.
- Q4969766 wikiPageWikiLink Q919052.
- Q4969766 comment "The British Columbia Social Constructive Party (also known as the Social Constructives and the B.C. Reconstructive Party) was formed in 1936 by a breakaway from the British Columbia Co-operative Commonwealth Federation after Reverend Robert Connell was expelled from the party over doctrinal differences. Connell had been leader of the CCF until his expulsion. Three other MLAs of the seven person CCF caucus, Jack Price, R.B.".
- Q4969766 label "British Columbia Social Constructive Party".