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a Biographies of Prominent Quebec
Historical Figures
Adélard Godbout
Claude Bélanger,
Department of History,
Marianopolis College
Godbout was born on September 24, 1892, in the Lower St. Lawrence region.
He was the thirteenth child of a family that was to contain, eventually,
18 children. While political folklore was to present Godbout as a “son of
the land”, one of the few premiers of Quebec that did not hail from the
legal profession, and thus an outsider, the reality is somewhat more
complex. True, his father was a farmer, and his son was to follow his
footsteps by becoming an agronomist and something of a “gentleman farmer”.
However, it should also be pointed out that his father had been a member
of the National Assembly; so had one of his uncles. Politics was thus in
the family, and so was the Liberal Party.
Godbout studied at the Séminaire de Rimouski, where he obtained his B.A.,
at the Ecole d’agriculture de Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatière, and at the Amherst
Agricultural College in the USA. He also spent about two years at “Le
Grand Séminaire” to become a priest. He would have left because of poor
health. In any case, in a province where agriculturalism was very strong
among the traditional elite, he had the right formation. He became
professor of agriculture at Ste-Anne and occupied the post between 1918 to
1930. As well, he was appointed agronomist for the department of
agriculture, a post he held between 1922 and 1925.
In 1929, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly to represent the
district of L’Islet. He stood as a Liberal, as his father had done
previously. He was to be re-elected by this district in 1931, 1935, 1939
and 1944. He was defeated in 1936 and was out of the National Assembly
between 1936-1939. On November 27, 1930, he was appointed Minister of
Agriculture in the Taschereau government. He held this position until June
of 1936. As a Minister of the Crown, Godbout kept a low profile but
nevertheless was noticed for his dedication for work, his sense of duty,
his seriousness and, in a government increasingly challenged for its
ineptness and corruption, for his moral rectitude and his honesty. That is
why he was called to replace Taschereau as the Prime Minister of the
province in June of 1936; he held this position until his defeat in the
elections of August 1936.
The attempt of the Liberal Party to keep in power by eliminating those
most associated with the corruption of the Taschereau regime did not work;
hence the Godbout government was not elected in 1936 and Godbout went down
personally to defeat. Many thought that his political career was finished
and that, as such, he would not rate more than a footnote in the annals of
Quebec History. However, such was not to be the case.
Between 1936 and 1939 Quebec was governed by Maurice Duplessis. If there
is dispute over the nature and appropriateness of the Duplessis
administration between 1944 and 1959 such is not the case for his first
term of office. Of course, Duplessis was unable to do very much about the
Great Depression and the means put at his disposal hardly were sufficient
to make a dent in the great socio-economic upheaval that was taking place.
Yet, Duplessis so thoroughly, and rapidly, turn against everything he had
said he stood for that he soon became the subject of contempt and in large
numbers Quebecers turned against him. Furthermore, his administration was
marked by the same corruption that had characterised the Taschereau
regime. The reforms he implemented, such as they were, hardly made a dent
in the problems confronting so many of his electors. He turned his back on
the great nationalist-reformist policies that were demanded by an
increasing proportion of voters in Quebec. As the war got closer, looming
with the twin issues of participation and conscription, Duplessis thought
he was given the opportunity to salvage his political career.
Soon after the federal government of Mackenzie King had declared war on
Germany, Duplessis called a provincial election, ostensibly so that a
strong mandate could be given to him to oppose the evils of centralisation
and conscription that would inevitably come with war. In the view of
Duplessis, he was the protector of the province against these evils.
Sensing the challenge to their credibility and position, the federal
ministers from Quebec [Lapointe, Cardin and Power] all threatened to
resign unless the Duplessis regime was defeated at the polls.
The circumstances of the elections of 1939 were to weight heavily on the
political fortune of Adélard Godbout. He became a bit player when,
otherwise, he should have had a central role. When he won by a landslide
[54.1% of the vote to 39.1% for the Union Nationale; 70 seats to the UN’s
15], everyone knew that he owed it to his federal counterparts. Throughout
the whole of the war, he was hampered by this knowledge and he found it
very difficult to shake the image of subservience to Ottawa, a capital sin
in a province where provincial autonomy was a national dogma. He rarely
ever dared challenge his federal allies partly because he owed his
election to them and was seen as being of little consequence by them.
Closely associated with the federal Liberals, whose presence in power in
Ottawa was essential for the well being of Quebec during the war, Godbout
was blamed for every false move they made simply because he could not
distance himself from them. As the federal liberals did things that were
inevitably unpopular in Quebec [raise taxes, implement conscription], and
given that Quebecers could not turn against them as the Conservative
alternative would have been worse in their eyes, then to Godbout was
transferred the animosity of the electors.
However, Godbout did not merely act as he did, co-operating fully with the
federal authorities, because of personal weakness of character, or because
he owed the federal liberals his election. He also acted out of genuine
concern for the people of Quebec in wishing to spare them the intolerant
attacks to which the province had been incessantly subjected in the latter
part of the First World War. Nobody would be justified in attacking the
moral character of the people of Quebec, and believe them to be any less
loyal than their compatriots from the other provinces, if they so clearly
and plainly saw the Government of Quebec co-operate so strongly in the
pursuit of the war. If for nothing else, Godbout would earn our respect
for that. He did what needed to be done, even when it was unpopular to do
so. As such, he stands in the long tradition of Quebec leaders of the past
who knew that co-operation was the only way to make the Canadian
confederation work and who made the necessary compromises to ensure la
survivance. Such was the legacy of LaFontaine, Cartier, Chapleau, Laurier
and Lapointe who were all confronted with similar problems before.
So he co-operated fully: he agreed to the constitutional transfer of
unemployment insurance to federal jurisdiction in 1940; he acquiesced to
the wartime tax rental agreement that striped the provinces of fiscal
autonomy; he recommended to vote yes in the plebiscite of 1942 over
conscription; he refused to condemn the federal government when it
introduced conscription in Bill 80 and in 1944; he made repeated
references to the need for agreement and co-operation.
Although he did what he felt needed to be done, and did it for the most
part for elevated reasons, his subservience was duly noted in Quebec and
deeply resented. In the end, it was to be partly his undoing. However much
the people of Quebec may have understood the necessity of the position he
took on issues, they nevertheless resented it and blamed him for it. All
understood that he had gone too far when he said that if his leader, Mr.
King, asked him to wax the boots of soldiers, because it would help the
war effort, he would do it. The notion of the premier of the province of
Quebec waxing the boots of soldiers was appalling, as was demeaning in the
extreme the idea that the Premier of Quebec had “a leader” and that the
leader was in Ottawa... Elections in Quebec are not won with this kind of
sentiments.
Otherwise, his administration was remarkable. The prosperity generated by
the war provided the opportunity to achieve a great deal. However, when
compared with other provinces at the same time, or with the Duplessis
regime in the equally prosperous post war period, few measure up to the
accomplishments of his administration.
In 1940, and against the expressed wishes of the seemingly powerful Roman
Catholic hierarchy, he granted the right to vote to women. Quebec was the
last province to do so in Canada and it was evidently long overdue. But it
took a considerable dose of courage to confront and defeat the opposition.
Again in 1943, he clashed with the conservative Church authorities in
instituting compulsory education for the children up to age 14. Many in
the Church feared that such a measure was only the prelude to neutral
“godless” schools and that the Church would soon loose control of the
schools and other social institutions in Quebec. To the Church, their
control of these institutions was essential to the pillar of survival that
faith was. To oppose compulsory education was to protect the nation. On
the contrary, Godbout saw clearly that the future prosperity of the
province, and the improved prospects of its population, passed inevitably
through educational reform.
On less debatable grounds he instituted free education in the primary
schools of Quebec. Henceforth, tuition fees were abolished for grades 1-7
and textbooks were distributed free of charge. Large sums of money were
found to complete the campus of the University of Montreal on top of Mount
Royal. Designed and started in the 1920’s to house the largest French
speaking university outside of France, the University had fallen on hard
times during the Great Depression and the buildings remained unfinished,
and largely abandoned, throughout the Depression. A more poignant symbol
of the poverty of Quebec society, and the lack of priority of education,
could hardly be found than in this shell of a University. It took a
premier committed fully to education to complete the work.
Godbout’s accomplishments in economic terms were no less favourable.
Throughout the 1930’s, the nationalists had clamoured for steps to be
taken against the “trusts” that strangled the province economically and so
evidently disregarded the welfare of the people. Chief among these trusts
was the “electricity trust”. Once the province had been partitioned
between various power companies, each of which was given the monopoly of
production and distribution over a region. Cost of electricity was high,
and few of these companies served the interest of the province well. There
had been widespread demand for the nationalisation of these power
companies during the Great Depression and the Action Libérale Nationale
had made it an important part of its platform to achieve it. In
significant part, it was his support, and promise, for nationalisation of
power companies that had brought Duplessis to office in 1936. He had not
carried it out, as he had not done most things he had promised to do.
In 1944, the Godbout government
nationalised the Beauharnois Light and Heat Power Company, one of the
largest in the province and servicing Montreal. With it, Godbout created
Hydro Quebec.
To the new state company, all of
the ungranted water reserves of the province were ceded. Thus,
the future belonged to Hydro-Quebec.
It should be noted that Duplessis made no
further additions to Hydro-Quebec and that the network remained
largely in private hands until the nationalisation of the Quiet Revolution
period.
As well, Godbout created an economic
council to advise the provincial government on development strategies.
In 1944, the government issued a new Labour Code that affirmed, without
question, the rights of workers to collective bargaining and to
unionisation. The code was said to be one of the most advanced in North
America.
Thus, there was much to put to the credit of the Godbout government when
it faced electors in 1944. Godbout had provided good and honest
government, a rare occurrence in those days. The reforms made by his
government would rank it as one of the three most progressive governments
of Quebec history [the others being the Lesage Quiet Revolution government
and the first term in office of Levesque’s Parti Québécois]. Yet, the
government was defeated in the provincial elections of 1944.
Three reasons especially explain the defeat of the Godbout government:
The first was addressed earlier. By identifying himself too closely with
the federal Liberals, by not upholding sufficiently the principles of
provincial autonomy and, in general, by supporting the war effort to the
point of accepting conscription, Godbout undermined his position in Quebec
and lost the support of the nationalist faction in the province. He
appeared weak and subservient when the province expects its political
leaders to be strong minded and independent. In this respect, he suffered
from a weak image that he could never quite overcome.
Still, given his legislative record, he could have survived if he had
received the complete support of the progressive faction in the province.
However, for the most part, the progressives were also the nationalists;
this tendency remained significant until the recent past. Class
consciousness and national consciousness often went hand in hand in Quebec
from the time of the Great Depression. In 1944, for a variety of reasons,
the progressives generally supported the Bloc Populaire Canadien. This
party received 14.4% of the votes in 1944 and gained 4 seats in the
Legislative Assembly [incidentally, the Liberal Party received about 15%
fewer votes in 1944 than it had had in 1939; this should not be treated as
a coincidence]. The division of the votes between three parties, and the
siphoning of the progressive votes from the Liberal Party to the Bloc
Populaire made it possible for the Union Nationale to win the election
even though it obtained a smaller percentage of the vote in the elections
of 1944 than it had received in 1939 when it went down to a crushing
defeat [the UN won with 38% of the votes in 1944 while it had lost with
39.1% in 1939].
The third main reason for the defeat of the Godbout government is related
to the Canadian electoral system. It rests on district elections, each of
which elects a member of the Assembly. The party that elects a majority of
candidates immediately will form the government. Most of the time this
reflects the will of the people. But, sometimes, that is not the case. A
first complicating element may be that the electoral map does not
represent adequately the distribution of population. Until the Quiet
Revolution, the rural districts of Quebec elected a disproportion of
members when compared to their actual share of the total population. By
contrast, the large urban areas were significantly underrepresented. If a
party performed very well in rural areas, but not so well in the larger
urban areas, it could still win the election. Such was the case in 1944,
and such will remain the case under the Duplessis regime between 1944 and
1959. Duplessis made it a policy to continue to industrialise the province
but without ever forgetting to cater to the rural areas and rural
traditions. Except for efforts at rural electrification, pale efforts when
compared to the achievements of Duplessis on this score, the Godbout
government was focused more on the problems of the cities than those of
the rural areas. This is surprising, given that Godbout was an agronomist.
The second complicating element in the electoral system is that it does
not matter how large a majority in a riding one has, all you ever win is
one seat at a time. A party could win half a dozen seats, each with a
majority of one vote, thus winning six seats and loose one seat by 25,000
votes. The party with the one seat has actually won a greater share of the
votes than its opponent; yet it has lost 6 of the seven seats and thus has
lost the elections. This happens rarely but it happened in 1944 [and again
in 1966 and in 1998] in Quebec. Godbout’s Liberals received 39.4% of the
votes to the Union Nationale’s 38%. Yet the UN won 48 seats and the
Liberals 37. This result was compounded by the presence of third parties
and in all three cases when it happened in Quebec history, third parties
were part of the scene.
Defeated, Godbout settled in his position as Leader of the Opposition
between 1944 and 1948. He was no match for Duplessis and did not
particularly distinguish himself. He lost even more in 1948 when Duplessis
was clever enough to gain the support of the nationalists and boost his
percentage of the votes to 51.2%. Soon after the elections, Godbout
resigned. He died in 1956.
Godbout has literally disappeared from the collective memory of Quebecers.
Even Taschereau, who left politics under a cloud of accusations, has been
honoured with monuments and boulevards. Duplessis has become something of
a folk hero (or a devilish creature according to some); in any case he is
not forgotten. But Godbout has disappeared altogether. In a province with
a motto “Je me souviens” [I remember] this is rather surprising.
http://www2.marianopolis.edu/quebechistory/bios/godbout.htm
© 2003 Claude Bélanger, Marianopolis College
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Godbout, Joseph-Adélard
Godbout,
Joseph-Adélard, agronomist,
professor, Premier of Québec (born at St-Éloi, Qué 24 Sept
1892; decease at Montréal 18 Sept 1956).
After its classical studies to the high
school of Rimouski, its brilliant Laval University studies in agronomy,
who hired him after his studied as teacher. It perfects himself by a
stage at the Amherst Massachusetts Agricultural College,
then devotes itself to the teaching (1918-1930).
He was educated at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatière and the Massachusetts
Agricultural College and taught agriculture at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatière
1918-30. Elected Liberal MNA for L'Islet in 1929, he was minister of
agriculture in the L.A. TASCHEREAU administration 1930-36.
Its professional preoccupations bring it
to manage the annual exposition of horses to Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière,
to play the role of agronomist in THE islet and to counsel farmers for the
formation of race flocks. It participates equally to local political
life, in particular when his father becomes representative (1921-1923).
The Prime Minister and boss of the liberal Party Louis-Alexandre
TASCHEREAU appreciates the young politician and the does to elect
representative of THE islet in 1929.
The following year, Godbout becomes
minister of farming. To 38 years, it is the youngest member of the
office. After the general election of 1931, the ministerial party
declines and, in 1934, of young eminent liberals are founded a new party,
the NATIONAL LIBERAL action. They succeed to elect 26 representatives in
1935 and the session was disastrous for the liberals. Scandals were pull
out. In June, Taschereau resigned. Godbout was elected unanimously chief
of the Quebec Liberal Party.
He became premier in August 1936 upon the unexpected resignation of
Taschereau under the violent attacks of the new Union Nationale leader
Maurice DUPLESSIS. His party was defeated in the 1936 elections,
but despite his own defeat he remained Liberal Party leader by the
assistance of federal Liberal minister Ernest LAPOINTE.
DUPLESSIS wins nevertheless the
elections of the summer 1936. Godbout, undoes in his county, consecrates
the years 1936-1939 to reorganize his party. Of his side, Duplessis
alienates itself the unionized workers and provokes the discords in his
party while not realizing certain promises concerning the electricity.
His administration was prodigal. Duplessis himself
lived riotously (he was a lusty and somewhat alcoholic bachelor in these
times, and never did marry), and he blundered
disastrously in September 1939 by calling a snap election on the issue of
participation in the war effort.
In power, Godbout will accomplish a
impressive mark in the Quebec History.
First,
despite the open opposition of the
cardinal Villeneuve, it grants the
vote right and of éligibilité to the women, rights that they claimed
since 20 years and that they exercised on the federal scene and in the
other provinces.
Second,
Godbout attacks itself equally to the problem of the school attendance.
A law on the obligatory instruction threatened
to raise the opposition of the Catholic clergy.
Also, his government fit obstacle to this danger by an investigation
which demonstrated the massive school drop out the fourth primary year.
In front of this position, the clergy
accepted that the Quebec government legislation concerning the
obligatory school attendance, until the age of 14 years.
Third,
another problem puts itself with the unionized workers:
The employers are not held to
negotiate with the majority union.
Also, in 1943, in the papeteries of the Price
Brothers to Kénogami and Alma, the Catholic frustrated unions release a
general strike on this problem.
An investigation commission instituted by
Godbout concludes to the absence of liberty union.
The government orders to the
employers to negotiate with the majority union.
The fourth one was:
Since more than ten years, apostles of
the municipalize the electricity and create of a State country hydro
electric to deplore notably the high tariffs, the deficient
electrical network for the rural regions and the French-speaking absence
of the superior businesses frameworks.
As early as 1940, Godbout denounces the
position.
In 1944, after a study, Godbout nationalize the
powerful Montreal Light Heat and Power and his affiliate, the
Beauharnois Power. Godbout
creates the hydro-québec, to manage these businesses and votes ten
millions of dollars for the rural electrical network. That provokes a
derision attack by the Quebec financial English-speaking. The state
business grows and builds more hydro electric central for his electrical
network.
On time
QUIET REVOLUTION,
in 1960, hydro Quebec was worth a billion dollars.
In its relations with Ottawa, Godbout permit to
the federal one to amend the constitution and to establish the worker
insurance claimed by the unionized ones since the beginning of the
century and suggested by the Commission of the social matters of Quebec
at first of the years 30.
Godbout did not strongly oppose the
military CONSCRIPTION imposed in 1944 following a Canada-wide
referendum. Despite some socially progressive bills, including one
granting women the right to vote in Québec provincial elections (1940),
Godbout's party was defeated in 1944; he lost his own seat in 1948.
The next year, he was made senator for
Montarville.
Author DANIEL LATOUCHE (Corrected by a "Godbout Parent")
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