|
Golden Summer | European Powder
Keg | Sarajavo |
Canada Goes to War |
Building an Army |
Union Government |
Women get the
Vote | Canada
Divided | Conscription
Act | Nationalism |
The Home Front |
Victory |
Aftermath
The suffragette movement struggled in
Canada as it did in other countries and it was only
because of political expediency during the First World
War that a breakthrough was made.
Women in Ontario were
granted the right to vote in municipal elections in 1884
and provincially in Manitoba in 1916. In Federal
elections the resistance to the vote only crumbled when
the Conservatives determined that they had an issue
which could be used to gain the women's vole for their
party. When the
First World War began the Conservative of Robert Borden
decided to ask Wilfred Laurier and his party to support
them for the sake f winning the war. As the war ground
on and the issue of conscription began to become a
device to fill the ranks of the faltering Canadian
military units, by Borden, the unity of the country
began to split along French and English lines.
Borden formed a union
government with support from English Canadian Liberal
MP's who also supported the idea of conscription. The
Conservatives had been elected in 1911 and their mandate
extended with the support of the Liberals but as
conscription came to the fore, Laurier refused to allow
any additional extensions of Parliament without an
election. Borden
realized that a large number of women in the country who
had sons or brothers fighting already, supported
conscription and if faced with a choice between the
Liberals who opposed it and the Conservatives who were
in favour of it, they would vote Conservatives (or
Unionist).
The Conservatives
passed a Bill referred to as the Military Voters Act
which gave the vote to just the bloc that would support
them, the military wives and sisters and when election
day came the Conservatives did indeed gain the major of
the new women's vote and won the election. After the
limited franchise was extended it was difficult to make
the argument against all women voting and in 1919
the "Act to Confer the Electoral Franchise upon Women"
was passed. All of the provinces followed in quick order
except for Quebec which did not give women he vote until
1940. |