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Politics in Newfoundland (1971)

af S J R Noel

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Alone among the present provinces of Canada, Newfoundland remained politically separate until 1949, and until 1933 maintained its political independence as a self-governing dominion, constitutionally the equal of Canada itself. At that time, however, facing financial collapse, it became the first country to surrender dominion status. Its parliamentary government was replaced by a British-appointed commission which ruled the island without any vestige of representative democracy for fifteen years.This is the first comprehensive examination of the turbulent politics which characterized the rise and fall of the Dominion of Newfoundland, and in which the present-day politics of the province have their genesis. For, contrary to what is often assumed, politics in the island did not begin anew with confederation, but grew out of an existing political culture from roots which survived the long hiatus of commission rule.Professor Noel examines politics in Newfoundland in the twentieth century, paying particular attention to the role of political parties (including the emergence of the radical Fishermen’s Protective Union movement) and to the effects of international economic forces and diplomatic entanglements upon domestic affairs. He also studies the administration of the Commission of Government, and processes of social and political change in the post-confederation period. Contemporary politics on the island of Newfoundland cannot be fully understood without an appreciation of the evolution of its political institutions.… (mere)
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Even Newfoundlanders admit their politics were Byzantine.

This was largely the result of the peculiar circumstances of the country. (For a country -- a self-governing dominion of the British crown -- was what Newfoundland was for most of the period of this book.) A very high fraction of the population was concentrated in the only decent-sized town, the city of St. John's. The rest was scattered in the outports all around Newfoundland's rugged, irregular coast. Because the population was so small and so scattered, and the interior of the island so poor, there was no communication between the outports except by sea. No roads, no telegraph, not even any interior settlements. And, because the outports were so small (most of them just a few houses on rocks), there were few schools or other effects of civilization.

Throw in a population strongly divided between Irish Catholics and English Protestants, and you have a political stew with a lot of poison in the pot. And, what's more, there was no way for anyone outside St. John's to know what was going on at any given time.

And St. John's -- the metropolis, the sophisticated city, the place with the amenities -- had even more influence over the countryside than in most areas, because of the nature of Newfoundland's economy. Almost the only products the island had were fish and seals. These required merchants to sell them overseas -- and merchants to supply the capital to build the ships to catch the cod and the "harps" (harp seals). So the merchants of St. John's controlled the economy at all levels -- and took advantage of that control. The politicians, knowing that they were campaigning to people who had little knowledge of economics and little way to gather news anyway, promised bread and circuses -- and provided little except patronage jobs that bankrupted the treasury. (Anyone who thinks that Greece was the first country to get itself into extreme trouble by borrowing too much should read the history of Newfoundland.)

All that is by way of background: It's why Newfoundland politics is so hard to understand. I've read several histories of the island, and none of them helped much. Why, even in Newfoundland, would the people elect a flat-out crook like Richard Squires? And, having gotten rid of him, why in the name of every sealing steamer ever floated would they let him return to office?

This is the first book I've read that (mostly) makes sense of it, and in clear, straightforward language that is easily read. I feel as if this book told me more than every other Newfoundland history I've read combined.

It's old now -- almost half a century old. Newfoundland today is nothing like the Newfoundland of the book -- for one thing, it was written before the great oil boom of recent decades; you'll find no mention (e.g.) of the Ocean Ranger. The book ends with Joey Smallwood still in power -- the man who talked Newfoundland into joining Canada, and was rewarded with more than twenty years of sole rule that any tin pot dictator would have been proud of. It won't really tell you much about Newfoundland today. But if you want to know what made Newfoundland the place it is -- beautiful, rather poor, independent-minded, not quite sure who it is -- I know of no better book. ( )
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This book is a study of the political life of Newfoundland in the twentieth century.
The island of Newfoundland is a far more 'northern' place than its location on the globe would seem to suggest.
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Alone among the present provinces of Canada, Newfoundland remained politically separate until 1949, and until 1933 maintained its political independence as a self-governing dominion, constitutionally the equal of Canada itself. At that time, however, facing financial collapse, it became the first country to surrender dominion status. Its parliamentary government was replaced by a British-appointed commission which ruled the island without any vestige of representative democracy for fifteen years.This is the first comprehensive examination of the turbulent politics which characterized the rise and fall of the Dominion of Newfoundland, and in which the present-day politics of the province have their genesis. For, contrary to what is often assumed, politics in the island did not begin anew with confederation, but grew out of an existing political culture from roots which survived the long hiatus of commission rule.Professor Noel examines politics in Newfoundland in the twentieth century, paying particular attention to the role of political parties (including the emergence of the radical Fishermen’s Protective Union movement) and to the effects of international economic forces and diplomatic entanglements upon domestic affairs. He also studies the administration of the Commission of Government, and processes of social and political change in the post-confederation period. Contemporary politics on the island of Newfoundland cannot be fully understood without an appreciation of the evolution of its political institutions.

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