Errick French Willis | |
|---|---|
| 15th Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba | |
| In office January 15, 1960 – November 1, 1965 | |
| Monarch | Elizabeth II |
| Governor General | Georges Vanier |
| Premier | Duff Roblin |
| Preceded by | John Stewart McDiarmid |
| Succeeded by | Richard Spink Bowles |
| Member of Parliament forSouris | |
| In office July 28, 1930 – October 14, 1935 | |
| Preceded by | James Steedsman |
| Succeeded by | George William McDonald |
| Member of theLegislative Assembly of Manitoba forDeloraine | |
| In office July 27, 1936 – October 15, 1945 | |
| Preceded by | Hugh McKenzie |
| Succeeded by | James O. Argue |
| Member of theLegislative Assembly of Manitoba forTurtle Mountain | |
| In office October 15, 1945 – November 26, 1959 | |
| Preceded by | Alexander Welch |
| Succeeded by | Edward Dow |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1896-03-21)March 21, 1896 Boissevain, Manitoba, Canada |
| Died | January 9, 1967(1967-01-09) (aged 70) Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada |
| Political party | Conservative |
| Other political affiliations | Conservative |
| Relations | R.G. Willis (father) |
| Alma mater | University of Toronto University of Manitoba |
| Occupation | Lawyer and Farmer |
| Profession | Politician |
| Olympic medal record | ||
|---|---|---|
| Men'sCurling | ||
| 1932 Lake Placid | Curling (demonstration) | |
Errick French Willis (March 21, 1896 – January 9, 1967) was a politician inManitoba, Canada. He served as leader of the province'sConservative Party between 1936 and 1954,[1] and was responsible for beginning and ending the party's alliance with theLiberal-Progressive Party.[2] He also served as Manitoba's15thLieutenant Governor between 1960 and 1965.[1]
Willis was born inBoissevain, Manitoba.[1] He was the son ofR.G. Willis, himself the leader of the Conservative Party from 1919 to 1920.[2]
The younger Willis received aBA from theUniversity of Toronto, anMA from theUniversity of Manitoba and anLL.B from theUniversity of Manitoba. He subsequently worked as a barrister and farmer, and was involved in localmasonic organizations. Willis married Louise Isabel Trimble Willis.[3]
Willis began his political career at the federal level. He was aConservative, but used the label "Progressive-Conservative" inSouris in theelection of 1926, and was defeated by a straightProgressive candidate. He won the riding in the1930 election, again having contested it as a "Progressive-Conservative" and served for five years as a backbench supporter ofR.B. Bennett's Conservative government.[1] In 1932, outside politics, Willis was a member of the Canadian curling team that won a gold medal in thecurling event at the 1932 Winter Olympics.[3]
He was defeated in the1935 election,[1] losing by three votes to the Liberal candidate.
Willis was acclaimed as leader of the provincialConservative Party on June 9, 1936, replacingW. Sanford Evans. He was elected for the riding ofDeloraine in a provincial election held later in the year.[4]
The election of 1936 was very close, withJohn Bracken's Liberal-Progressives winning 23 seats in theLegislative Assembly of Manitoba and Willis's Conservatives winning 16. Another 16 seats were won by smaller parties. There were rumours of a Bracken-Willis coalition after the election, but this plan was rejected by the Conservative leader.[2]
After the start ofWorld War II, the idea of an all-party coalition was revived by Bracken's government. The Conservatives,Social Credit and theCooperative Commonwealth Federation joined Bracken's Liberal-Progressives in a "non-partisan government", meant to demonstrate the united resolve of the province. Willis was sworn in asMinister of Public Works on November 4, 1940. When CCF leaderSeymour Farmer resigned in 1942, Willis also becameMinister of Labour, holding this position until 1944.[4]
The coalition was generally advantageous to the Conservative Party, which was renamed the Progressive Conservative (PC) Party in the mid-1940s. Its ministers were allowed a fair degree of autonomy, and were fully integrated into the province's governing structure, unlike the CCF and Social Credit ministers, who were marginalized. The party maintained an identity separate from the Liberal-Progressives throughout this period. In a 1946 manifesto, its members pledged to support an increase in old-agepensions, a decrease intariff rates, and further transportation openings to the province's north. Willis, supported by the Liberal-Progressives, was re-elected by acclamation in 1941, 1945 and 1949.[4]
There were some Progressive Conservatives who opposed the coalition, particularly after Liberal-ProgressiveMember of the Legislative Assembly (MLA)Douglas Campbell became the province's premier in 1948. The Conservatives had nominated Willis to be premier, but Campbell defeated him in a vote among coalition MLAs. Campbell's philosophy of "minimal government" was rejected by the more progressive figures in the PC ranks, the most vocal of whom wasDufferin Roblin (grandson of former Premier SirRodmond Roblin). In 1949, Roblin was elected to the legislature forWinnipeg South as an anti-coalition Progressive Conservative.[2]
Under pressure from his party and disturbed by the Campbell government's inaction on various issues, Willis resigned from cabinet on August 19, 1950. At a party convention in October, the Progressive Conservatives voted 215 to 17 to leave the coalition. Willis, who also fended off a leadership challenge from George Hastings at the convention, once again became leader of the opposition.[2]
Willis was re-elected forTurtle Mountain in the provincial election of 1953,[4] but the provincial Progressive Conservative organization was weak, and Campbell's Liberal-Progressives won a decisive majority. MLAJ. Arthur Ross forced a leadership convention in 1954; at this convention, Roblin defeated Willis to become party leader.[2]
Willis continued as a member of the legislature after this loss. He was re-elected in 1958, and served in Roblin's minority government asMinister of Public Works,Minister of Agriculture andDeputy Premier. Re-elected again in 1959, he continued to serve in cabinet until January 15, 1960, when he was appointed as the province's lieutenant governor. He remained in this position until August 31, 1965.[4]
Willis died in Winnipeg[3] on January 9, 1967.[1]