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Laurent Desjardins

Laurent Louis "Larry" Desjardins (March 15, 1923 – February 7, 2012[1]) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served as a member of the Manitoba legislature for most of the period from 1959 to 1988,[2] and was a cabinet minister under New Democratic Premiers Edward Schreyer and Howard Pawley.[3]

Laurent Desjardins
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba for St. Boniface
In office
1959–1973
Preceded byRoger Teillet
Succeeded byJ. Paul Marion
In office
1974–1988
Preceded byJ. Paul Marion
Succeeded byNeil Gaudry
Personal details
BornMarch 15, 1923
St. Boniface, Manitoba
DiedFebruary 7, 2012(2012-02-07) (aged 88)
Winnipeg, Manitoba
NationalityCanadian
Political partyProvincial:
Liberal-Progressive/Liberal (1959-1969)
Independent (1969-1971)
Manitoba NDP (1971-1988)
Federal: Liberal

Early life Edit

The son of Joseph A. Desjardins and Valentine Desautels,[4] Desjardins was educated at St. Boniface College, St. Paul's College and the Cincinnati College of Embalming. Desjardins played professional football with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. He was general manager of the St. Boniface Jr. Canadians and was a scout for the Montreal Canadiens. He was inducted into Manitoba’s sports hall of fame in 1990. He served in the Canadian navy during World War II.[3] He worked as a funeral director, and was the President and Managing Director of Chapels, Ltd. He also joined the Knights of Columbus and the Canadian Council of Christian and Jews during the early years of his career.[5] In 1944, he married Bernice McGuire.[4]

Desjardins began his political career at the municipal level, serving as an alderman on the St. Boniface City Council from 1951 to 1954, and also serving on the St. Boniface Hospital Board for a number of years.[5]

Provincial career Edit

In the Manitoba general election of 1959, he was elected to the Manitoba legislature in the riding of St. Boniface as a Liberal-Progressive. This was the year of Progressive Conservative Premier Dufferin Roblin's first majority win, and Desjardins joined ten other Liberal-Progressives in the official opposition.[6]

In 1961, Desjardins emerged as one of the leading parliamentary supporters of government funding for private and denominational schools. A Roman Catholic and a native French-speaker, Desjardins regarded such funding as necessary for redressing anti-francophone legislation that had been pursued by previous Manitoba governments in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The Roblin government took some steps on this front, but the issue was still unresolved by the 1970s.

Despite the Roblin government's popularity, Desjardins had little difficulty being returned in the elections of 1962 and 1966 (the Liberal-Progressives had changed their name to the Manitoba Liberal Party in 1961). In the 1969 election, Desjardins faced stronger than usual competition from his New Democratic opponent, Kam Gajdosik, but won by 4210 votes to 2656.

Crossing the floor Edit

The 1969 election was a watershed in Manitoba politics, and resulted in a dramatic shift in Desjardins' career. Under Edward Schreyer's leadership, the social-democratic NDP moved from third to first place, winning 28 seats out of 57 in the assembly. This was one short of a majority, and there was initial uncertainty as to which party or parties would form government. There was some consideration of an "anti-socialist coalition", which would have brought together all parties except the NDP under the leadership of former Liberal leader Gildas Molgat. This, however, did not occur. The impasse was ended when Desjardins announced that he would offer parliamentary support to the NDP, and change his party affiliation to Liberal-Democrat.

Desjardins' change of affiliation was significant, and on some levels surprising. He had previously been known as an opponent of socialism, and the Franco-Manitoban community had not traditionally been supportive of the New Democratic Party before this time. Nevertheless, Desjardins formed an alliance with Schreyer (himself a centrist New Democrat), on the understanding that he would be able to continue to work in favour of denominational school funding on the government side.

In order to make sure this move was supported by his constituents, Desjardins organized a vote of confidence on this decision on July 8. Had he lost this vote, Desjardins would have resigned as MLA, and would have run as a Liberal-Democrat candidate in a subsequent by-election. About 1000 people showed up at the Louis Riel School gymnasium for the vote of confidence, and Desjardins received a standing ovation when he arrived in the hall. The vast majority of the attendees gave their support to Desjardins, with only 13 people opposing him.[7] Desjardins became Schreyer's legislative assistant in 1969, and formally joined the New Democratic Party in 1971.

On December 1, 1971, Desjardins was appointed Minister of Tourism, Recreation and Cultural Affairs.[6] In July 1972, his efforts in support of denominational schools were dealt a setback when a government-sponsored bill to permit funding was defeated by a free vote in the legislature. (The Schreyer government did, however, make administrative agreements with certain private schools to provide them with access to public monies.)

Defeat and return Edit

Given the lack of historical francophone support for the NDP in Manitoba, it was unclear if Desjardins would be re-elected in the provincial election of 1973, and his riding was targeted by a right-wing "citizen's" group in the recently amalgamated city of Winnipeg (which included St. Boniface). This group convinced the Progressive Conservative Party to withdraw their candidate in St. Boniface to provide a single "anti-socialist" alternative to the NDP.

Desjardins' sole opponent in June 1973 was Liberal candidate J. Paul Marion. Following a very close race, Marion was declared the winner by a single vote (4301 to 4300). This result was disputed, however, and was subsequently overturned by the Controverted Elections Act. In December 1974, Desjardins defeated Marion in a by-election[6] by over 600 votes.

Later career Edit

In 1973, Schreyer's New Democrats were re-elected, winning their first majority government. Desjardins had resigned from cabinet on January 28, 1974, during the ongoing controversy concerning the St. Boniface results, but that December 23, he was re-admitted to cabinet as Minister of Health and Social Development. On January 8, 1975, he was also given responsibility for the Manitoba Lotteries Act.[6]

Desjardins was easily re-elected in the 1977 election, although Schreyer's New Democrats were defeated provincially by the Progressive Conservatives under Sterling Lyon. Desjardins sat as a member of the opposition for the next four years.

The New Democrats returned to power in the 1981 provincial election under the leadership of Howard Pawley, and Desjardins was personally re-elected without difficulty. He was re-appointed to cabinet on November 30, 1981, serving as Minister of Health and Minister of Recreation and Sport, with responsibility for the Lotteries and Gaming Control Act. He was re-designated as Minister of Health with responsibility for Minister responsible for Sport, the Fitness and Amateur Sport Act, and the Boxing and Wrestling Commission Act and the Manitoba Lotteries Foundation Act.[6]

During the 1980s, Desjardins was a prominent supporter of Howard Pawley's efforts to expand and entrench French-language services in Manitoba.

On January 30, 1985, Desjardins was shifted to the Ministry of Urban Affairs. He was again re-elected without difficulty in the 1986 provincial election, and on April 17, 1986, he was reappointed Minister of Health and Sport (once again holding responsibility for the Boxing and Wrestling Commission Act and the Fitness and Amateur Sport Act).[6]

Desjardins's work for the interest of sport in Manitoba was recognized with his induction into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame as a Multi-sport Builder in 1990.[8]

Retirement Edit

Desjardins resigned from his cabinet positions on February 10, 1988, after a Supreme Court ruling that provinces could not restrict a woman's right to abortion,[3] and announced that he would be leaving the legislature to take a job in the private sector. His seat was not formally declared vacant, but he stopped attending sessions of the legislature after this period. He then served as head of the Manitoba Health Organization until 1990.[1]

Ironically, just as Desjardins had helped bring the NDP into government in 1969, his decision to leave the legislature in 1988 played a major role in the party's unexpected fall from power. In his absence, the legislature was almost evenly divided between government and opposition members; as such, NDP backbencher Jim Walding's decision to vote against his government's budget was enough to defeat the Pawley ministry in the House.[3] The NDP lost the subsequent 1988 Manitoba general election, and did not return to power until 1999.

During his time in the legislature, Desjardins was known as a personable figure; fellow New Democratic cabinet minister Russell Doern once called him a "Rabelasian character". He was regarded as cautious and pragmatic, and was often more supportive of small-business interests than others in the New Democratic Party. Desjardins was a member of the federal Liberal Party for most, if not all of time in the provincial NDP. This practice is no longer possible; the federal NDP is now integrated with its provincial and territorial branches. He openly supported former Liberal MLA Lloyd Axworthy's successful bid to enter the House of Commons of Canada in 1979.[3]

During the 1990s, Desjardins led a policy review group which studied Manitoba's lotteries system, and argued against the expansion of Manitoba's casino economy. In 2002, he wrote an open letter on health-care reform, arguing that money alone would not resolve the problems within the system. In March 2003, he participated in a discussion on health-care funding at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, in which he argued that Canada's provinces should be permitted to enact user fees and expand the role of the private sector in health-care provision. He served as first president of the Western Canada Lottery Foundation.[9]

Desjardins died at the Victoria Hospital in Winnipeg following a fall; he was 88 years old.[1]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c "L'ancien ministre provincial Laurent Desjardins est mort à l'âge de 88 ans | Manitoba" (in French). Radio-Canada.ca. Retrieved 2012-03-04.
  2. ^ Hebert, Raymond M. (2005). Manitoba's French-Language Crisis: A Cautionary Tale. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-7735-2790-4. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e Alan Hustak (1923-03-15). "globeandmail.com: Gentle giant of Manitoba politics championed French-language rights". V1.theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved 2012-03-04.
  4. ^ a b Normandin, Pierre G (1965). Canadian Parliamentary Guide.
  5. ^ a b "Laurent Louis "Larry" Desjardins (1923-2012)". Memorable Manitobans. Manitoba Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-10-13.
  6. ^ a b c d e f . Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. Archived from the original on 2014-03-30.
  7. ^ "Desjardins is supported in NDP move". The Globe and Mail. July 9, 1969. p. 1.
  8. ^ "Laurent "Larry" Desjardins". Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame - Honoured members database. Sport Manitoba. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  9. ^ . Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 2013-10-14. Retrieved 2013-10-13.

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Laurent Louis Larry Desjardins March 15 1923 February 7 2012 1 was a politician in Manitoba Canada He served as a member of the Manitoba legislature for most of the period from 1959 to 1988 2 and was a cabinet minister under New Democratic Premiers Edward Schreyer and Howard Pawley 3 Laurent DesjardinsMember of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba for St BonifaceIn office 1959 1973Preceded byRoger TeilletSucceeded byJ Paul MarionIn office 1974 1988Preceded byJ Paul MarionSucceeded byNeil GaudryPersonal detailsBornMarch 15 1923St Boniface ManitobaDiedFebruary 7 2012 2012 02 07 aged 88 Winnipeg ManitobaNationalityCanadianPolitical partyProvincial Liberal Progressive Liberal 1959 1969 Independent 1969 1971 Manitoba NDP 1971 1988 Federal Liberal Contents 1 Early life 2 Provincial career 2 1 Crossing the floor 2 2 Defeat and return 2 3 Later career 2 4 Retirement 3 ReferencesEarly life EditThe son of Joseph A Desjardins and Valentine Desautels 4 Desjardins was educated at St Boniface College St Paul s College and the Cincinnati College of Embalming Desjardins played professional football with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers He was general manager of the St Boniface Jr Canadians and was a scout for the Montreal Canadiens He was inducted into Manitoba s sports hall of fame in 1990 He served in the Canadian navy during World War II 3 He worked as a funeral director and was the President and Managing Director of Chapels Ltd He also joined the Knights of Columbus and the Canadian Council of Christian and Jews during the early years of his career 5 In 1944 he married Bernice McGuire 4 Desjardins began his political career at the municipal level serving as an alderman on the St Boniface City Council from 1951 to 1954 and also serving on the St Boniface Hospital Board for a number of years 5 Provincial career EditIn the Manitoba general election of 1959 he was elected to the Manitoba legislature in the riding of St Boniface as a Liberal Progressive This was the year of Progressive Conservative Premier Dufferin Roblin s first majority win and Desjardins joined ten other Liberal Progressives in the official opposition 6 In 1961 Desjardins emerged as one of the leading parliamentary supporters of government funding for private and denominational schools A Roman Catholic and a native French speaker Desjardins regarded such funding as necessary for redressing anti francophone legislation that had been pursued by previous Manitoba governments in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries The Roblin government took some steps on this front but the issue was still unresolved by the 1970s Despite the Roblin government s popularity Desjardins had little difficulty being returned in the elections of 1962 and 1966 the Liberal Progressives had changed their name to the Manitoba Liberal Party in 1961 In the 1969 election Desjardins faced stronger than usual competition from his New Democratic opponent Kam Gajdosik but won by 4210 votes to 2656 Crossing the floor Edit The 1969 election was a watershed in Manitoba politics and resulted in a dramatic shift in Desjardins career Under Edward Schreyer s leadership the social democratic NDP moved from third to first place winning 28 seats out of 57 in the assembly This was one short of a majority and there was initial uncertainty as to which party or parties would form government There was some consideration of an anti socialist coalition which would have brought together all parties except the NDP under the leadership of former Liberal leader Gildas Molgat This however did not occur The impasse was ended when Desjardins announced that he would offer parliamentary support to the NDP and change his party affiliation to Liberal Democrat Desjardins change of affiliation was significant and on some levels surprising He had previously been known as an opponent of socialism and the Franco Manitoban community had not traditionally been supportive of the New Democratic Party before this time Nevertheless Desjardins formed an alliance with Schreyer himself a centrist New Democrat on the understanding that he would be able to continue to work in favour of denominational school funding on the government side In order to make sure this move was supported by his constituents Desjardins organized a vote of confidence on this decision on July 8 Had he lost this vote Desjardins would have resigned as MLA and would have run as a Liberal Democrat candidate in a subsequent by election About 1000 people showed up at the Louis Riel School gymnasium for the vote of confidence and Desjardins received a standing ovation when he arrived in the hall The vast majority of the attendees gave their support to Desjardins with only 13 people opposing him 7 Desjardins became Schreyer s legislative assistant in 1969 and formally joined the New Democratic Party in 1971 On December 1 1971 Desjardins was appointed Minister of Tourism Recreation and Cultural Affairs 6 In July 1972 his efforts in support of denominational schools were dealt a setback when a government sponsored bill to permit funding was defeated by a free vote in the legislature The Schreyer government did however make administrative agreements with certain private schools to provide them with access to public monies Defeat and return Edit Given the lack of historical francophone support for the NDP in Manitoba it was unclear if Desjardins would be re elected in the provincial election of 1973 and his riding was targeted by a right wing citizen s group in the recently amalgamated city of Winnipeg which included St Boniface This group convinced the Progressive Conservative Party to withdraw their candidate in St Boniface to provide a single anti socialist alternative to the NDP Desjardins sole opponent in June 1973 was Liberal candidate J Paul Marion Following a very close race Marion was declared the winner by a single vote 4301 to 4300 This result was disputed however and was subsequently overturned by the Controverted Elections Act In December 1974 Desjardins defeated Marion in a by election 6 by over 600 votes Later career Edit In 1973 Schreyer s New Democrats were re elected winning their first majority government Desjardins had resigned from cabinet on January 28 1974 during the ongoing controversy concerning the St Boniface results but that December 23 he was re admitted to cabinet as Minister of Health and Social Development On January 8 1975 he was also given responsibility for the Manitoba Lotteries Act 6 Desjardins was easily re elected in the 1977 election although Schreyer s New Democrats were defeated provincially by the Progressive Conservatives under Sterling Lyon Desjardins sat as a member of the opposition for the next four years The New Democrats returned to power in the 1981 provincial election under the leadership of Howard Pawley and Desjardins was personally re elected without difficulty He was re appointed to cabinet on November 30 1981 serving as Minister of Health and Minister of Recreation and Sport with responsibility for the Lotteries and Gaming Control Act He was re designated as Minister of Health with responsibility for Minister responsible for Sport the Fitness and Amateur Sport Act and the Boxing and Wrestling Commission Act and the Manitoba Lotteries Foundation Act 6 During the 1980s Desjardins was a prominent supporter of Howard Pawley s efforts to expand and entrench French language services in Manitoba On January 30 1985 Desjardins was shifted to the Ministry of Urban Affairs He was again re elected without difficulty in the 1986 provincial election and on April 17 1986 he was reappointed Minister of Health and Sport once again holding responsibility for the Boxing and Wrestling Commission Act and the Fitness and Amateur Sport Act 6 Desjardins s work for the interest of sport in Manitoba was recognized with his induction into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame as a Multi sport Builder in 1990 8 Retirement Edit Desjardins resigned from his cabinet positions on February 10 1988 after a Supreme Court ruling that provinces could not restrict a woman s right to abortion 3 and announced that he would be leaving the legislature to take a job in the private sector His seat was not formally declared vacant but he stopped attending sessions of the legislature after this period He then served as head of the Manitoba Health Organization until 1990 1 Ironically just as Desjardins had helped bring the NDP into government in 1969 his decision to leave the legislature in 1988 played a major role in the party s unexpected fall from power In his absence the legislature was almost evenly divided between government and opposition members as such NDP backbencher Jim Walding s decision to vote against his government s budget was enough to defeat the Pawley ministry in the House 3 The NDP lost the subsequent 1988 Manitoba general election and did not return to power until 1999 During his time in the legislature Desjardins was known as a personable figure fellow New Democratic cabinet minister Russell Doern once called him a Rabelasian character He was regarded as cautious and pragmatic and was often more supportive of small business interests than others in the New Democratic Party Desjardins was a member of the federal Liberal Party for most if not all of time in the provincial NDP This practice is no longer possible the federal NDP is now integrated with its provincial and territorial branches He openly supported former Liberal MLA Lloyd Axworthy s successful bid to enter the House of Commons of Canada in 1979 3 During the 1990s Desjardins led a policy review group which studied Manitoba s lotteries system and argued against the expansion of Manitoba s casino economy In 2002 he wrote an open letter on health care reform arguing that money alone would not resolve the problems within the system In March 2003 he participated in a discussion on health care funding at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy in which he argued that Canada s provinces should be permitted to enact user fees and expand the role of the private sector in health care provision He served as first president of the Western Canada Lottery Foundation 9 Desjardins died at the Victoria Hospital in Winnipeg following a fall he was 88 years old 1 References Edit a b c L ancien ministre provincial Laurent Desjardins est mort a l age de 88 ans Manitoba in French Radio Canada ca Retrieved 2012 03 04 Hebert Raymond M 2005 Manitoba s French Language Crisis A Cautionary Tale McGill Queen s Press MQUP p 18 ISBN 978 0 7735 2790 4 Retrieved 10 April 2011 a b c d e Alan Hustak 1923 03 15 globeandmail com Gentle giant of Manitoba politics championed French language rights V1 theglobeandmail com Retrieved 2012 03 04 a b Normandin Pierre G 1965 Canadian Parliamentary Guide a b Laurent Louis Larry Desjardins 1923 2012 Memorable Manitobans Manitoba Historical Society Retrieved 2013 10 13 a b c d e f MLA Biographies Deceased Legislative Assembly of Manitoba Archived from the original on 2014 03 30 Desjardins is supported in NDP move The Globe and Mail July 9 1969 p 1 Laurent Larry Desjardins Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame Honoured members database Sport Manitoba Retrieved 12 November 2021 Larry Desjardins Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame Archived from the original on 2013 10 14 Retrieved 2013 10 13 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laurent Desjardins amp oldid 1174333345, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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