Leslie Morris

Leslie Tom Morris (October 10, 1904 – November 13, 1964) was a Welsh-Canadian politician, journalist and longtime member of the Communist Party of Canada and, its front group, the Labor-Progressive Party. He was leader of the Ontario Labor-Progressive Party in the 1940s and general secretary of the Communist Party of Canada from 1962 until his death in 1964.[2]

Leslie Morris
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Canada
In office
1962–1964
Preceded byTim Buck
Succeeded byWilliam Kashtan
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Ontario
In office
1945–1948
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byA.A. MacLeod
Personal details
Born
Leslie Tom Morris

(1904-10-10)October 10, 1904
Somerset, England
DiedNovember 13, 1964(1964-11-13) (aged 60)
Cause of deathCancer[1]
Political partyCommunist Party of Canada
Other political
affiliations
Labor-Progressive Party (1943–1959)
Communist Party of Ontario
Communist Party of Manitoba
OccupationPolitician

Life and career

Morris was born in Somerset, England, to a Welsh working-class family. He and his family immigrated to Canada in 1910. Morris returned to the UK in 1917 and lived in Wales and England while working in the steel, coal mining and railway industries. He returned to Canada in time to join the Communist Party of Canada at its founding convention held December 1921 in Guelph, Ontario.

He became a prominent figure in the party first as secretary of the Young Communist League of Canada from 1923 to 1924, and then as editor over the years of various Communist newspapers including The Worker, Daily Clarion, Daily Tribune and Canadian Tribune.

Morris supported Tim Buck and the supporters of Joseph Stalin in the party during the factional struggles and purges of the late 1920s and early 1930s.

He was a candidate for the House of Commons of Canada on several occasions, but never elected:

Morris also campaigned unsuccessfully for provincial office. In the Manitoba provincial election of 1932, he ran in the city of Winnipeg as a "United Front Workers" candidate (the Communist Party being under legal proscription at the time). At the time, the provincial constituency of Winnipeg elected ten members by the single transferable ballot system. Morris finished eighth on the first count, and came within 309 votes of winning the tenth seat on the final count. Had he won, he would have been the first Communist elected to a provincial legislature in Canada. Litterick would be elected in 1936 setting that record.)

Morris was a popular stump speaker for the party and toured the country speaking to left wing and labour audiences. From 1954 until 1957, he was the national organizer of the Labor-Progressive Party (as the Communist Party had been known since 1943) and, in 1962, he succeeded Tim Buck as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Canada (as it was again known) and held the position until his death two years later.

Electoral record

1963 Canadian federal election: Trinity
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalPaul Hellyer10,59553.87+6.85
Progressive ConservativeJohn Wasylenko5,17126.29+3.66
New DemocraticThomas Paton3,51217.86-0.43
CommunistLeslie Morris3911.99-0.21
Total valid votes 19,669
1962 Canadian federal election: Trinity
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalPaul Hellyer9,61547.02+3.13
Progressive ConservativeStanley Frolick6,12429.95-7.40
New DemocraticThomas Paton3,74018.29+3.67
CommunistLeslie Morris4492.20-1.94
IndependentPeter D'Agostino2951.44
Social CreditDavid E. Hartman2271.11
Total valid votes 20,450
1958 Canadian federal election: York South
Party Candidate Votes%±%
Progressive ConservativeWilliam George Beech22,98049.47+9.44
LiberalMarvin Gelber13,14128.29-1.16
Co-operative CommonwealthBill Sefton9,64320.76-8.19
Labor–ProgressiveLeslie Morris4270.92
Social CreditHarvey Jamieson2580.56-1.01
Total valid votes 46,449
Canadian federal by-election, September 8, 1954: York West
Party Candidate Votes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJohn B. Hamilton12,22845.3+3.8
LiberalRobert M. Campbell9,76836.2+1.4
Co-operative CommonwealthBruce William Evans4,71117.5-4.8
Labor–ProgressiveLeslie Tom Morris2821.0-0.4
Total valid votes 26,989
1940 Canadian federal election: Winnipeg North
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalCharles Stephen Booth13,01540.9+11.6
Co-operative CommonwealthAbraham Albert Heaps11,24935.3-6.8
CommunistLeslie Tom Morris5,31516.7-8.7
National GovernmentPercy Ellor2,2557.1
Total valid votes 31,834
1932 Manitoba General Election: Winnipeg
10 to be elected by Single Transferable Vote
Party Candidate First Count Status
ConservativeWilliam Sanford Evans13,507Elected
Independent Labour PartyJohn Queen9,302Elected
Liberal-ProgressiveWilliam James Major5,940Elected
Independent Labour PartySeymour Farmer5,053Elected
ConservativeJohn Thomas Haig4,432Elected
LiberalJohn Stewart McDiarmid3,540Elected
ConservativeHuntly Ketchen3,530Elected
United FrontLeslie Morris3,455Eliminated on the 24th count
Independent Labour PartyMarcus Hyman3,366Elected
LiberalRalph Maybank2,945Elected
Independent UkrainianC. Andrusyshen2,693Eliminated on the 21st count
Independent Labour PartyWilliam Ivens2,262Elected
ConservativeWilliam V. Tobias1,991Eliminated on the 20th count
ConservativeR.W.B. Swail1,951Eliminated on the 22nd count
LiberalEdward William Montgomery1,614Eliminated on the 19th count
Independent LabourJessie MacLennan1,600Eliminated on the 17th count
ConservativeJames Alexander Barry1,549Eliminated on the 24th count
IndependentF.W. Russell1,339Eliminated on the 16th count
United FrontJacob Penner1,106Eliminated on the 13th count
Independent Labour PartyV.B. Anderson1,061Eliminated on the 15th count
Independent Labour PartyBeatrice Brigden 894Eliminated on the 11th count
Socialist Party of ManitobaGeorge Armstrong848Eliminated on the 10th count
LiberalH.P.A. Hermanson688Eliminated on the 14th count
LiberalDuncan Cameron597Eliminated on the 8th count
LiberalJohn Y. Reid588Eliminated on 9th count
LiberalClarence G. Keith548Eliminated on 7th count
ConservativeD.M. Elcheshen314Eliminated on 5th count
LiberalW.J. Fulton182Eliminated on 4th count
IndependentThomas Gargan82Eliminated on 4th count

References

  1. Boyd, John. "A Noble Cause Betrayed ... but Hope Lives On". socialisthistory.ca. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
  2. Leslie Morris (1970). Look on Canada, now ...: selected writings of Leslie Morris, 1923/1964. Progress Books. ISBN 9780919396135.
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