{"id":3767,"date":"1985-01-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1985-01-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-66-no-1-jan-feb-1985-laurier-the-only-man\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:44:32","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:44:32","slug":"vol-66-no-1-jan-feb-1985-laurier-the-only-man","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-66-no-1-jan-feb-1985-laurier-the-only-man\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 66, No. 1 &#8211; Jan.\/Feb. 1985 &#8211; Laurier: The Only Man"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Wilfrid Laurier gave his body and                     soul to the reconciliation of Canadians, but his life seemed                     to end in failure. Only now can we measure his greatness,                     and give thanks that he lived in our midst&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>                  <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2022\/08\/jafe1985_01.gif\" alt=\"image\" width=\"156\" height=\"200\" hspace=\"5\" vspace=\"5\" align=\"right\"><\/p>\n<p>The Old Chief was dead. &#8220;The place of Sir John Macdonald                     in this country was so large and so absorbing that it is almost                     impossible to conceive that the political life of this country                     &#8211; the fate of this country &#8211; could continue without him,&#8221;                     Opposition Leader Wilfrid Laurier told a grieving House of                     Commons. On that June day in 1891, no one could have foreseen                     that the Liberal Laurier would go down in history as the true                     successor to the Conservative Macdonald.<\/p>\n<p>Schoolchildren today learn of Macdonald and Laurier almost                     in the same breath, as if one had passed on the task of building                     a nation to the other. Time has blurred the differences in                     policy and approach between them, and the five-year extension                     of Tory rule after Macdonald&#8217;s death figures only as a brief                     interlude in which the high hopes held for Confederation were                     cruelly dashed.<\/p>\n<p>We can see in historical hindsight that Laurier was the                     only man present capable of holding the nation-in-the-making                     together almost in defiance of its own nature. Those with                     no belief in destiny may be given pause by the confluence                     of circumstances that gave Canada, more or less in a row,                     two leaders uniquely qualified to meet the crucial challenges                     of their times.<\/p>\n<p>It has been said that nations get the leadership they deserve,                     but the all-male electorate of the fractious collection of                     former British colonies that made up Canada in the 1890s could                     not be said to have deserved a Laurier. He was everything                     most of them were not: tolerant while they were bigoted, cosmopolitan                     while they were parochial, conciliatory while they were confrontationist.<\/p>\n<p>There was always something romantic and poetic about Laurier,                     qualities which he hardly shared with the majority of his                     rough-hewn contemporary countrymen. And indeed his career                     started out romantically enough as a fiery radical lawyer                     fresh out of the McGill Law School in Montreal. Born in 1841                     in the Laurentian village of St.-Lin, he had been educated                     in both French and English. His first venture into public                     affairs was to join the <em>Rouges<\/em>, a libertarian movement                     which fed on mystical memories of the 1837 Papineau rebellion.<\/p>\n<p>When, in the mid-1860s, the authoritarian Roman Catholic                     hierarchy in Quebec clashed with the <em>Rouges <\/em>on a question                     of intellectual freedom, Laurier was among the first to take                     to the political barricades. He addressed anti-clerical rallies,                     winning a reputation as a thrilling orator.<\/p>\n<p>But, to complete the picture of the romantic Gallic poet,                     he was suspected of having tuberculosis. He repaired to the                     salubrious mountain air of the Eastern Townships. His <em>Rouge                     <\/em>colleagues gave him the job of editing their newspaper                     from there.<\/p>\n<p>By that time they had taken up a new cause &#8211; opposing the                     federation of the present Maritime Provinces, Ontario and                     Quebec which was being negotiated. Towards the end of the                     anti-Confederation campaign, Laurier wrote an editorial containing                     a grim prediction: &#8220;From this moment there will be strife,                     division, war, anarchy; the weakest element, that is to say                     the French and Catholic element, will be dragged along and                     swallowed up by the strongest.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Laurier was to spend most of the rest of his days trying                     to prevent his own dire prophecy from coming true. At first,                     however, he greeted the coming of Confederation with apathetic                     resignation. He was then placidly practising law in the pretty                     Eastern Townships centre of Arthabaska. In 1868 he married                     a pretty dark-eyed Montreal music teacher named Zoe Lafontaine.<\/p>\n<p>But his genius for politics could not be denied for long.                     In 1871 the <em>Rouges <\/em>persuaded him to run successfully                     for a seat in the Quebec Legislature. Three years later he                     came to Ottawa as a Liberal Member of Parliament.<\/p>\n<h3>He persuaded Quebecers that voting                                       Liberal was not a sin<\/h3>\n<p>By then his fear that French-Canadians interests would be                     sunk in the sea of the English-speaking majority seemed rapidly                     on its way to realization. That was what had driven him into                     federal politics. His English-Canadian parliamentary colleagues                     did not share his view of Confederation as a pact between                     the two language groups; on the contrary, many of them saw                     it as a stick with which to beat the French culture in Canada                     out of existence. The place to protect French interests was                     at the seat of federal power.<\/p>\n<p>But Laurier was aware that any power he might personally                     exert on behalf of his people would have to emanate from his                     home province. He therefore set about building a solid base                     for the Liberal Party in a Quebec dominated by the Conservative                     <em>Bleus <\/em>with the active support of the Catholic Church.                     He confronted this mighty alliance head-on, insisting that                     churchmen had no right to intimidate their parishioners into                     voting against the Liberals. Huge crowds cheered him when                     he said that one could be a good Catholic and good Liberal                     at the same time.<\/p>\n<p>Back in Ottawa, Laurier&#8217;s analytic intelligence, personal                     magnetism and brilliance in debate brought him to be regarded                     as the strongest Quebec member in the Liberal Party. Recognizing                     him as their deadliest adversary, the Conservatives resorted                     to bribes, physical violence and threats of hellfire from                     the pulpits to defeat him in his riding in 1877. Liberal Prime                     Minister Alexander Mackenzie cleared a seat in Quebec East                     which Laurier won in a by-election. Mackenzie appointed him                     his Quebec lieutenant and Minister of Inland Revenue.<\/p>\n<p>After Macdonald&#8217;s Conservatives bounced back into power                     in 1878, he gave way to the languid indifference which had                     always formed part of his character. Throughout the story                     of Laurier we find an absence of ambition and a hesitancy                     to exercise his prodigious political gifts. It was with marked                     reluctance that he answered his party&#8217;s call to its leadership                     in 1887. He argued that for the Liberals to choose a French                     Roman Catholic to carry their banner was a mistake.<\/p>\n<p>So it appeared. The fact that the mainly-English Liberal                     caucus insisted that he was &#8220;the only man&#8221; is testimony to                     the greatness they detected in him. It was a singularly bold                     move for them to make. Simple arithmetic dictated that if                     they were ever to regain power, they must appeal to the English                     majority. And English-French relations had seldom been worse                     &#8211; the hanging of Louis Riel two years previously had the language                     groups glaring in outright hatred at each other.<\/p>\n<h3>&#8220;More British than the king,                     more Catholic                   than the pope&#8221;<\/h3>\n<p>Not the least of the many ironies in Laurier&#8217;s career was                     that the issue which propelled him into the Prime Minister&#8217;s                     office in 1896 was a manifestation of English hostility to                     the French presence in Canada. Manitoba had abolished French                     Catholic schools. When the federal Conservative government                     prepared legislation to reinstate French education, the provincial                     government refused to obey it. In the election that ensued,                     Laurier said he saw no hope of the Federal authority running                     the educational system in Manitoba.<\/p>\n<p>He characteristically promised to deal with the dispute                     through conciliation. Though he was denounced as the anti-Christ                     by the Quebec clergy, he carried the country with a handsome                     majority, including his native province. By making Liberalism                     respectable, he had broken the Church&#8217;s stranglehold on politics                     in Quebec.<\/p>\n<p>He set out to govern a country &#8220;part of whose people are                     more British than the king and part more Catholic than the                     pope,&#8221; as the historian Arthur Lower put it. His first move                     was to devise a compromise whereby instruction in French and                     Catholicism was given in Manitoba public schools.<\/p>\n<p>His long (15-year) tenure in office began with sunny portents.                     The late 1890s and early 1900s are often referred to as a                     golden era, and Laurier&#8217;s first few years as Canada&#8217;s leader                     were quite literally tinged with gold. The stampede to the                     Klondike was on, contributing to a strong recovery. Another                     golden-hued bonanza was being reaped in Western Canada in                     the form of wheat.<\/p>\n<p>Grain-growing on the northern plains had always been plagued                     by the cold climate. Now farmers were planting a new strain                     of wheat which was not only frost-resistant but of the finest                     quality ever grown. The demand for the product on world markets                     doubled and redoubled; still, tens of millions of acres of                     potential productive Canadian soil went unoccupied. Laurier&#8217;s                     Minister of the Interior, Clifford Sifton, mounted an intensive                     campaign to populate the West.<\/p>\n<p>It falls to few political leaders to bring about a fundamental                     change in their countries. But a completely different Canada                     did emerge from Laurier&#8217;s regime. His government brought in                     millions of immigrants from the Slavic, Germanic and Scandanavian                     regions of Europe. As the Europeans poured into the West,                     the old FrenchBritish make-up of Canada was altered forever;                     Canadian multiculturalism was born.<\/p>\n<p>The development was directly in line with Laurier&#8217;s social                     vision. As a French-Canadian he was acutely aware that Canadians                     could never be a uniform nationality. There would be no melting                     pot on this side of the U.S. border. Instead there would be                     Laurier&#8217;s image of a great cathedral constructed of diverse                     materials: &#8220;I want the marble to remain the marble; the granite                     to remain the granite; the oak to remain the oak; and out                     of all these elements I would build a nation great among the                     nations of the world.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The new markets created by the filling-up of the West brought                     prosperity to Central Canada as manufacturing flourished under                     the protection of the tariff barriers earlier erected by the                     Conservatives. Laurier was a free trader at heart, but he                     saw no reason to interfere with a good thing. He did, however,                     pass legislation which had the effect of offering a trade                     preference to Great Britain. The measure brought him popularity                     in the mother country.<\/p>\n<p>He accepted a knighthood and spoke feelingly about Canada&#8217;s                     attachment to the empire. Yet when British ministers broached                     the idea of an Empire unified in foreign policy, defence and                     trade, he firmly turned them down.<\/p>\n<p>His next task was to equip Canada to take advantage of its                     new-found riches. The single transcontinental railway line                     could not be expected to handle all the traffic in grain and                     other natural resources which was welling up in the West.                     Laurier presided over the building of two more transcontinental                     lines which spread their tentacles throughout the prairies                     and into Northern Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia. The                     detailed map of Canada, with all its dots, lines and squiggles,                     assumed its present shape.<\/p>\n<p>The railways came to be known as Laurier&#8217;s folly. Far too                     much trackage was built, and the two transcontinentals subsequently                     had to be rationalized into the Canadian National system at                     vast public expense. Laurier&#8217;s excesses were usually excesses                     of hope, including his saying to the effect that the twentieth                     century would belong to Canada. In that, he overestimated                     his compatriots. Greatness comes only to mature societies,                     and Canadians were still acting like headstrong children.<\/p>\n<p>Laurier found himself in the role of the wise and dignified                     paterfamilias intervening to put down flare-ups in a quarrelsome                     family. He had to use all his skills as a statesman to prevent                     the major linguistic groups from flying at each other&#8217;s throats.<\/p>\n<p>Assailed by ultra-nationalistic Quebecers on one side and                     ultra-imperialistic Anglophones on the other, he framed ingenious                     compromises on such issues as participation in the Boer war                     and imperial naval defence. These carried the bonus of giving                     Canada a greater degree of independence. But one issue proved                     beyond his formidable powers of conciliation: the language                     of instruction in provincial schools.<\/p>\n<p>Even as Canada took a long step towards nationhood with                     the creation of Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1905, the old                     dispute reared up as ugly as ever. Laurier had to back down                     on a promise that the provinces would have separate Catholic                     schools when it became clear to him that it would only add                     to religious intolerance if the federal government tried to                     enforce its will on the majority of provincial voters. His                     former protege, Henri Bourassa, spoke for many French-Canadians                     when he called this a betrayal of the right to their own language                     and religion.<\/p>\n<h3>&#8220;Faith is better than doubt and love                   is better than hate&#8221;<\/h3>\n<p>Bourassa formed a bizarre alliance with the right-wing Quebec                     <em>Bleus <\/em>and the Ontario Tories to defeat Laurier in the                     1911 election. The issues were whether Canada would build                     its own navy and whether it should negotiate a free trade                     agreement with the United States. Laurier was damned as a                     lackey to the British by the nationalists of Quebec and as                     a traitor to the empire by the ultra-imperialists of Ontario.                     A few years later he was accused of selling Canada&#8217;s soul                     to French-Canadian interests when, as Opposition Leader, he                     honoured a pledge to oppose conscription during the First                     World War.<\/p>\n<p>Many of his senior English-speaking colleagues deserted                     him over the conscription issue, joining the coalition Unionist                     government under Sir Robert Borden. The election results in                     1917 placed him in a position which he had spent most of his                     life trying to avoid, as the leader of a party based almost                     wholly in French Quebec. Always a frail man, he was both sick                     in body and sick at heart at his rejection by his English-speaking                     supporters. In his utter disillusionment he could well have                     abandoned his pan-Canadian ideals and become the nagging voice                     of Quebec disaffection.<\/p>\n<p>But he continued to cling to his personal credo. In a speech                     in the closing days of his life, he enumerated all the problems                     of race, religion and conflicting loyalties that hung on the                     country. He added: &#8220;Let me tell you that for the solution                     of these problems you have a safe guide, an unfailing light                     if you remember that faith is better than doubt and love is                     better than hate.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>He died at the age of 77 in February 1919, and the newspapers                     counted his achievements. It was an impressive list, but not                     nearly as impressive as it looks now. We can see that he set                     Canada on the road to full independence, that he filled in                     the map of the country, that he founded a political dynasty,                     that he put a multicultural stamp on our society. At the time,                     though, his life appeared to have ended in failure. He may                     have thought so himself at his last breath.<\/p>\n<p>He had talked about his dying hour a few years earlier.                     &#8220;I cannot hope that I shall see much of the development which                     the future has in store for my country,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but whenever                     my eyes shall close to the light it is my wish &#8211; nay my hope                     &#8211; that they shall close on a Canada united in its elements,                     united in every particular, every element cherishing the tradition                     of its past, and all united in cherishing still more hope                     for the future.&#8221; That this was not to be was because Sir Wilfrid                     Laurier was so far ahead of his times.<\/p>\n<p>He could not even now close his eyes on the united Canada                     of his dreams. But he could see a Canada in which the last                     thing that matters about a candidate is whether he is Protestant                     or Catholic; a Canada which takes orders from no other authority;                     a Canada which, for the most part, respects the cultural individuality                     of its racial constituents. So the torments and sorrows of                     this gentle and generous soul were not wasted. His hopes for                     future generations have been partially fulfilled, and, God                     willing, Canadians may live up to his leadership yet.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[72],"class_list":["post-3767","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-72"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 66, No. 1 - Jan.\/Feb. 1985 - Laurier: The Only Man - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-66-no-1-jan-feb-1985-laurier-the-only-man\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 66, No. 1 - Jan.\/Feb. 1985 - Laurier: The Only Man - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Wilfrid Laurier gave his body and soul to the reconciliation of Canadians, but his life seemed to end in failure. 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