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Maurice Le Noblet Duplessis

Duplessis campaigning in the 1952 election.

In office
August 17, 1936 â€“ October 25, 1939
Preceded by Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
Succeeded by Adelard Godbout
In office
August 8, 1944 â€“ September 7, 1959
Preceded by Adelard Godbout
Succeeded by Paul Sauvé

Born April 20, 1890(1890-04-20)
Trois-Rivières, Quebec
Died September 7, 1959 (aged 69)
Schefferville, Quebec
Political party Union Nationale
Profession Lawyer
Religion Roman Catholic

Maurice Le Noblet Duplessis (20 April 1890 – 7 September 1959) served as the premier of the Canadian province of Quebec from 1936 to 1939 and 1944 to 1959. A founder and leader of the highly conservative Union Nationale party, he rose to power after exposing the misconduct and patronage of Liberal Premier Louis-Alexandre Taschereau.

His reign is often referred to in Quebec as La Grande Noirceur ("The Great Darkness"), especially due to the prevalent corruption and for the scandal surrounding the Duplessis Orphans. During the time, the Liberal opposition was unsuccessful in challenging Duplessis' power. Duplessis championed rural areas, provincial rights, anti-Communism and opposed the trade unions.

Contents

Early life

Born in Trois-Rivières and son of local politician Nérée Le Noblet Duplessis, Duplessis studied at the Séminaire Saint-Joseph de Trois-Rivières, obtained a law degree from Université Laval's Montréal branch (later renamed Université de Montréal) and was admitted to the Barreau du Quebec in 1913. He returned to his home town to practice law until running for public office. He was a life-long bachelor.

Political career

Duplessis in 1938

He first won a seat as a Conservative Party of Quebec candidate in the 1927 Quebec election. In the 1931 election, Duplessis was reelected in his seat, but Conservative leader Camillien Houde lost both the election and his own seat. The Conservative caucus chose C.E. Gault to be interim leader of the Opposition but, after Houde resigned as party leader in 1932, Duplessis won the leadership of the party during the 1933 convention over the only other candidate, Onésime Gagnon.

Two weeks before the 1935 provincial election, he engineered a coalition with Paul Gouin's Action libérale nationale (ALN), a party of dissident reform Liberals and nationalists who had quit the governing Parti libéral du Québec. While he lost that election, Duplessis was soon able to exploit a patronage scandal involving the family of Premier Louis-Alexandre Taschereau to force Taschereau's resignation.

Gouin withdrew his support from Duplessis on June 18, 1936, but most members of the ALN caucus sided with Duplessis and joined with his Conservative caucus to formally merge into the Union Nationale party. Duplessis and the UN won the August 1936 election in a landslide, putting an end to thirty-nine consecutive years of Liberal rule. Duplessis's first government was defeated in the 1939 election, a snap election called by the premier in hopes of exploiting the issue of Canadian participation in World War II.

Duplessis returned as premier in the 1944 election, and held power without serious opposition for the next fifteen years, until his death, winning elections in 1948, 1952 and 1956. He became known simply as le Chef ("the boss").

He was elected to five terms of office in all, the last four of them consecutive. Duplessis remains the last Quebec premier to have won three or more consecutive majority governments. After him, no political party in Quebec elections at the provincial level had managed to win more than two terms of office in a row until the December 2008 victory of Jean Charest's Liberal party, its third consecutive win.

Policies

Duplessis favoured rural areas over city development and introduced various agricultural credits during his first term. He was also noted for meagre investment in social services. Duplessis also opposed military conscription and Canadian involvement in World War II. The Union Nationale often had the active support of the Roman Catholic Church in its political campaigns and employed the slogan Le ciel est bleu; l'enfer est rouge: The sky/heaven is blue (UN); Hell is red (Liberal).[1]

Death and legacy

Duplessis died in office in Schefferville, Quebec, on September 7, 1959. After his death, Quebec society was caught in the Quiet Revolution (Révolution tranquille), a swift socio-cultural change away from his conservative policies toward a highly secular, socially liberal welfare state. Many of these major changes occurred when the Liberals regained power in 1960 under Jean Lesage.

Most of his surviving relatives have not handed down the "Duplessis" name to their children, although one of his nieces, Berthe Brunet-Dufresne, has taken it upon herself to rehabilitate her uncle.

Duplessis has not been without his defenders. Conrad Black's 1977 encomium, Duplessis, painted a sympathetic portrait of the man as a transitional figure towards modernism, and the victim of partisan attack and personal malady (Black revealed, for instance, that Duplessis suffered from hypospadias).[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://projetscours.fsa.ulaval.ca/gie-64375/Canada-religion/fr_politique.htm
  2. ^ Conrad Black, Duplessis, (McLelland & Stewart, 1977)

External links

Reference works

  • Conrad Black, Duplessis, ISBN 0-7710-1530-5, McClelland & Stewart, Toronto, 1977.
  • Jacques Rouillard, Le syndicalisme Québécois, Boreal, Montreal, 2004
  • CSN-CSQ, Histoire du mouvement ouvrier au Quebec, 2001
  • Jones, R. (1983). Duplessis and the union nationale administration. Ottawa: Canadian Historical Association.
  • Laporte, P. (1960). The true face of duplessis. Montreal: Harvest House Limited.
  • Paulin, M. (2002). Maurice duplessis: Powerbroker, politician. Montreal: XYZ Publishing.
National Assembly of Quebec
Preceded by
Louis-Philippe Mercier (Liberal)
MLA, District of Trois-Rivières
1927–1959
Succeeded by
Yves Gabias (Union Nationale)
Government offices
Preceded by
Adélard Godbout (Liberal)
Premier of Quebec
1936-1939
Succeeded by
Adélard Godbout (Liberal)
Preceded by
Adélard Godbout (Liberal)
Premier of Quebec
1944-1959
Succeeded by
Paul Sauvé (Union Nationale)
Party political offices
Preceded by
Camillien Houde
Leader of the Quebec Conservative Party
1933-1936*
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
none
Leader of the Union Nationale
1935-1959
Succeeded by
Paul Sauvé
Political offices
Preceded by
Charles Ernest Gault (Conservative)
Leader of the Opposition in Quebec
1932-1936
Succeeded by
T.-D. Bouchard (Liberal)
Preceded by
T.-D. Bouchard (Liberal)
Leader of the Opposition in Quebec
1939-1944
Succeeded by
Adélard Godbout (Liberal)

*The Union Nationale was founded as an alliance in 1935 with Duplessis as leader. In 1936 the UN formally became a unitary political party with the Quebec Conservative Party dissolving into it.


Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

Maurice Duplessis (born April 20, 1890, Trois-Rivières, Québec, Canada; died September 7, 1959, Schefferville, Québec, Canada); controversial Premier of Québec from 1936 to 1940 and 1944 to 1959.

Contents

Sourced

  • Less than fifteen cents to the province and more than twenty-five cents to Ottawa, this is far from being excessive!
    • Bill 43, Québec Legislative Assembly, January 14, 1954
  • This is about an admitted attempt, encouraged from outside, to challenge and break the State's authority. That is intolerable. Whoever deviates from this policy that I have established, privately or publicly, will be expelled from the Union Nationale.

Unsourced

  • The province’s [Québec's] strength lies in the depth of its religious feeling... It must be the citadel of Christian civilization in Canada and even the entire North American continent.
  • Let us remain attached to the land... In the country, there are stability, common sense and strong religious convictions.
  • Hundreds of millions in capital has been invested to develop our resources. Let me repeat: American capital, English capital, French capital: Welcome!
  • Refers to the party colours of the Unione Nationale and the Liberals.
  • The bishops eat out of my hand.
  • Education is like alcohol; some people can't take it.
  • You know, elections are not won with prayers.
  • As long as I can keep the Jesuits scrapping with the Dominicans, I can get on with the business of the province.
  • Two weeks ago, I pointed out that the Provincial Government had the firm intention to take the most rigorous and efficient measures possible to get rid of those who under the names of Jehovah's Witnesses, distribute circulars which in my opinion, are not only injurious for Quebec and its population, but which are of a very libellous and seditious character. The propaganda of the Jehovah's Witnesses cannot be tolerated and there are more than 400 of them now before the courts in Montreal, Quebec, Trois-Rivières and other centers.
  • I kiss his [the priest's] ring and he kisses my a***.

Quotations about Maurice Duplessis

  • The period leaves no one indifferent. And that was our goal. We present the facts. It's up to the public to decide.
    • Stephane Filion, a co-ordinator of a celebration in his hometown of the 40th anniversary of Duplessis' death.
  • The saying goes that after the death of every great man there's a long period of ingratitude. I find Maurice Duplessis's period is lasting pretty long.
    • Bureau-Dufresne, surviving relative of Duplessis.
  • Over the last 40 years, talking about Duplessis has become like talking about the devil himself.
    • Jean-Marc Beaudoin, columnist at the Trois-Rivières daily Le Nouvelliste, in 1999.
  • If I never read a business page, my admiration for him would be complete.
    • Robert Fulford, commenting on Conrad Black's biography of Duplessis.
  • Before Duplessis died, we’d all go to church and make our sign [of the cross], and a year later we didn’t go to Mass any more. So we looked for another set of values, one that was all-enveloping, like the Church.

External links

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