John McDowell (Manitoba politician)
John McDowell (born
September 16,
1894 at
Greenock in
Inverclyde,
Scotland; died
June 10,
1980) was a politician in
Manitoba,
Canada. He served in the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a
Progressive Conservative from
1945 to
1958.
McDowell came to Canada with his family in
1895, and was educated in
Toronto,
Ontario. He worked as a grain dealer, and was president of McDowell Grain Co. Ltd and Ridgewood Development Co. Ltd. He was also on the board of governors of the
Winnipeg Grain Exchange.
He was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the
1945 provincial election, in the constituency of
Iberville. At the time, Manitoba was governed by a coalition ministry of
Liberal-Progressives and Progressive Conservatives. McDowell ran as an Independent Progressive Conservative supporting the coalition, and defeated Liberal-Progressive W.D. Lawrence by over 400 votes.
He resigned his seat in
1949 to run for the
Canadian House of Commons as a
Progressive Conservative. He finished third in the riding of
Selkirk in the
federal election of 1949, behind
William Bryce of the
social-democratic Cooperative Commonwealth Federation and
Liberal Laurier Regnier.
No by-election was called for Iberville, and the seat remained vacant until the
1949 provincial election, held several months after the federal campaign. McDowell ran to succeed himself, and won re-election as an Independent Progressive Conservative opposing the coalition.
In
1949, McDowell and
George Hastings formed the
Manitoba Democratic Movement as a pressure group within the Progressive Conservative Party. Not a formal political party, the MDM called for the Progressive Conservatives to leave the coalition government and supplant the CCF as the province's primary opposition. Hastings was concerned that the CCF could form government if no other alternatives were presented to the electorate.
Following pressure from the MDM and other groups, the Progressive Conservatives left the coalition in
1950, and McDowell rejoined the official party caucus in opposition. He was re-elected in the
1953 provincial election, defeating Liberal-Progressive
C.H. Jarvis by 195 votes.
McDowell was on the right-wing of the Progressive Conservatives, and was considered a reactionary even by other members of his party. Extremely proud of his position on the grain commission, he opposed the
Canadian Wheat Board as unwarranted government interference in the marketplace. During a
1953 legislative debate on the issue, he made the following statement: "Why, if
Communism ever came to this county - and I pray God it won't - they won't have to change a thing in this act, only the penalties. Instead, you'll be shot in the morning, that's all!" (
Winnipeg Free Press, 17 March 1953).
He was a forceful debater, and once described the CCF as "a demoralized race, fighting with the wind, soon to be gone with the wind".
He was a prominent supporter of
Errick Willis in the party's
1954 leadership convention, and opposed
Dufferin Roblin's leadership of the Manitoba Progressive Conservative Party. When Roblin's government enacted progressive legislation in 1958, McDowell dismissed the party as the "Progressive Conservative Commonwealth Federation". McDowell himself declined to be a candidate in the 1958 election.
He came out of political retirement to run in the
federal election of 1968, opposing Roblin as an Independent Conservative in
Winnipeg South Centre. He received only 632 votes, but may have taken some satisfaction in Roblin's loss to Liberal
E.B. Osler.