Conscription• For the first three years of
the war, the Canadian government relied on volunteers to fight
• At the start of the war, most able bodied men rushed to volunteer to fight so that they could have the opportunity to travel overseas
Why Fewer Enlisted• From 1915-1917, Canadian
soldiers gained a high reputation within their alliance for courage and bravery
• As a result, they were often chosen for the toughest and most dangerous assignments during battles
After Vimy Ridge• In April 1917, Canadian soldiers had one of
their greatest military victories of all time defeating the Germans at Vimy Ridge
• That month over 10,000 Canadian soldiers were killed in battle but only 5,000 new recruits enlisted
• The volunteer system was no longer bringing in enough people to sustain the war effort
PM Borden Breaks His Promise
• At the start of the war, Prime Minister Robert Borden made a promise to the Canadian people not to introduce conscription
Conscription – a system to make able bodied men join the armed forces
• Because of the lack of recruits, Borden is forced to break that promise
Borden’s Plan• In order to break his promise, Prime Minister
Borden calls an election on the issue of conscription
• If he wins the election, he can prove that conscription is the ‘will of the Canadian people’
• The election becomes one of the fiercest and angriest in the history of Canada
People Against ConscriptionFrench Canadians• At the start of the war, many French
Canadians volunteered to fight overseas
• Sam Hughes hated Roman Catholics (many Quebecois were Catholic) so he made their lives difficult in training for the war
• French soldiers were forced to train in English
• Borden Fired Hughes in 1916 but it was too late to gain favour in Quebec
People Against Conscription
French Canadians• French Canadians did not have the same ties
to Europe and did not see it as their duty to protect Britain
• Most felt that it should be up to the individual person whether or not they decided to go to war
People Against Conscription
Western Canadians• Most people who settled in Western Canada
came to Canada to escape from the European wars
• In some of their homelands, the governments could force men into the army
• They thought they had escaped that in Canada
People Against Conscription
Farmers• They felt their part of
the war effort was to provide people with much-needed food
• Who will do the work if the men are at war?
What The Government Did• Prime Minister Borden asked the Leader of the
Opposition Wilfred Laurier to form a coalition or union government to present a unified front on conscription
• Laurier could not do this because even though he supported the war effort, he was against conscription
• Several Liberals joined the Conservatives to form the Unionist Party in favour of conscription
The Election of 1917• The Unionists won the Election of
1917– 153 seats for the Unionist Party– 82 seats for the Liberals
• Only 20 of the 82 seats the Liberals won came from outside of Quebec
• The results did not reflect the Canadian population
• Had the votes of soldiers and their families been omitted from the polls, nearly half of the population voted against conscription