“The CCF Is Not a ‘Class’ Party”: Labour, Politics, and Their Unification at the Lakehead, 1944-1963
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Duplessis, Nicholas James (Author)
Title
“The CCF Is Not a ‘Class’ Party”: Labour, Politics, and Their Unification at the Lakehead, 1944-1963
Abstract
This study analyzes the new sophistication of the organized labour movement and labour’s relationship to politics in a period of rapid change for the Lakehead. ““The CCF is not a Class Party”” argues that, between 1944 and 1963, the organized labour movement and the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) at the Lakehead underwent parallel structural developments against the backdrop of conservative social forces in the postwar period that, by the end of the 1950s, necessitated a merger of the two formally distinct entities. The amalgamation of labour and politics, resulting in the formation of the New Democratic Party (NDP), is best examined through the political career of Douglas Fisher, who first represented the CCF and, later, the NDP in Port Arthur. The debate surrounding the ‘New Party’ idea in the late 1950s at the Lakehead is reflective of the uneasy relationship between labour and politics that had formed throughout the postwar period.
Type
M.A., History
University
Lakehead University
Place
Thunder Bay, Ont.
Date
2020
# of Pages
147 pages
Language
English
Short Title
“The Ccf Is Not a ‘Class’ Party”
Library Catalog
Google Scholar
Citation
Duplessis, N. J. (2020). “The CCF Is Not a ‘Class’ Party”: Labour, Politics, and Their Unification at the Lakehead, 1944-1963 [M.A., History, Lakehead University]. https://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/4618
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