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13 Tag Results for Politician
Sir Robert Laird Borden
After Borden suspended Laurier's naval program, the Senate retaliated by defeating his Naval Aid Bill. Two months later, the war began.
John Diefenbaker
He was injured in a training accident and never served in a combat role during the war.
Sir Wilfird Laurier
At the age of 54, Wilfrid Laurier became prime minister of Canada, the first French Canadian to hold this office since confederation.
Arthur Meighen
Meighen oversaw one of the government's main initiatives: a program to assist financially those veterans who wished to become farmers.
Winona Margaret Flett
Winona was one of eight women to be invited to occupy seats on the floor of the Legislative Assembly.
Laura Elizabeth McCully
What separated McCully from most suffragists was her ardent belief that women should have the right to serve in an auxiliary military force.
Sir Samuel Hughes
In the beginning, Sam Hughes had a very good war.
John Morison Gibson
Gibson’s philosophy of public service had always been voluntarism, so it was with some reluctance that he accepted conscription.
William John Hanna
He introduced the Ontario Temperance Act, which closed all bars, clubs, and liquor shops for the duration of World War I.
Sir Albert Edward Kemp
Under Kemp's leadership the commission shifted expenditure away from what was good for the party to what was good for the war effort.
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