Elmer Roper
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Elmer Ernest Roper (June 4, 1893 – November 12, 1994) was a Canadian businessman, trade unionist and politician. He was an elected member of the
Legislative Assembly of Alberta The Legislative Assembly of Alberta is the deliberative assembly of the province of Alberta, Canada. It sits in the Alberta Legislature Building in Edmonton. Since 2012 the Legislative Assembly has had 87 members, elected first past the post f ...
, 1942-1955, as a representative of the Alberta Co-operative Commonwealth Federation party in the city of Edmonton and also served as mayor of
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1959-1963.


Early life

Roper was born in Ingonish, Nova Scotia, the son of a sea captain. He was educated in
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, and moved west to
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in 1907. There he apprenticed as a printer and found work in the
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's press room. On June 15, 1914, he married Goldie C. Bell, with whom he had three daughters and one son and who predeceased him by weeks. He became involved in the labour movement as a young man. He joined the Pressman's Union. He was president of the Calgary Trades & Labour Council by 1916. His tenure in this position was short-lived, as he moved to Edmonton the following year to become the head of the '' Edmonton Bulletins press room. There he took a position of leadership in running the Edmonton District Labour Council (later the Edmonton Trades & Labour Council). Although not a backer of the One Big Union, he was involved in Edmonton's 1919 general strike, a sympathy strike with the
Winnipeg General Strike The Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 was one of the most famous and influential strikes in Canadian history. For six weeks, May 15 to June 26, more than 30,000 strikers brought economic activity to a standstill in Winnipeg, Manitoba, which at the ...
during the post-WWI Canadian Labour Revolt. In 1921 he left the ''Bulletin'' to found his own printing business, which he operated until his retirement. The same year, he made his first bid for elected office.


Early political career

In the 1921 provincial election, Roper ran as a Labour candidate in
Edmonton Edmonton is the capital city of the Provinces and territories of Canada, Canadian province of Alberta. It is situated on the North Saskatchewan River and is the centre of the Edmonton Metropolitan Region, which is surrounded by Central Alberta ...
. He was not elected. On the first count he came in thirteenth of twenty-six candidates. (Only five were elected in the Edmonton district.)Monto, Tom. Protest and Progress. Three Labour Radicals in Early Edmonton, Crang Publishing, Alhambra Books (Edmonton), p. 86 In 1922, Roper became secretary-treasurer of the Alberta Federation of Labour. He held the position for a decade. Roper edited the AF of L's official organ ''Alberta Labour News'' from 1921 to 1935 when he changed the newspaper's name to ''People's Weekly'' and made it the de facto house organ of the new Alberta Co-operative Commonwealth Federation with William Irvine as co-editor.Finkel, Alvin, "Alberta" in Heaps, Leo, ''Our Canada'', 1991 Roper ran for school trustee in Edmonton's 1924 municipal election. He finished fourth of seven candidates, in an election in which three members were elected using
single transferable voting The single transferable vote (STV) or proportional-ranked choice voting (P-RCV) is a multi-winner electoral system in which each voter casts a single vote in the form of a ranked ballot. Voters have the option to rank candidates, and their vo ...
. He tried again in the 1925 Edmonton municipal election, and this time was elected. He again came in fourth of seven candidates on the first count and was elected because he held this position and this time four seats were being filled. He was re-elected in
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but did not seek re-election at the expiration of his second term in 1929. Meanwhile he sought elected office at other levels. In the 1926 provincial election, he was again a Labour candidate in Edmonton. He was less successful on this occasion, finishing sixteenth of eighteen candidates on the first count - only five were being elected. He tried again in a 1931 by-election resulting from the death of Charles Weaver; he came in second of four candidates.
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Frederick C. Jamieson reclaimed the seat for Weaver's party. Roper's lone attempt at federal office took place in the 1935 election, when he ran for the newly formed
Co-operative Commonwealth Federation The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF; , FCC) was a federal democratic socialism, democratic socialistThe following sources describe the CCF as a democratic socialist political party: * * * * * * and social democracy, social-democ ...
paty in Edmonton East; he finished fourth of six candidates as William Samuel Hall took the riding for the Social Credit Party of Canada. Roper ran under the CCF banner in the 1940 election. He came in seventh of nineteen candidates on the first ballot and did not improve his position so was defeated once again. No CCF members were elected during that election but that was about to change.


CCF leader and MLA

On May 4, 1942 Conservative leader David Duggan died, and his Edmonton seat became vacant. Roper was nominated as the CCF's candidate in the ensuing by-election. The by-election was conducted using Alternative Voting and Roper, who was not the most-popular in the first round of counting, came out on top after vote transfers. CCF leader Chester Ronning, who had been elected in 1932, quickly stepped aside to hand the leadership to the party's sole MLA. Roper was leader of the CCF for thirteen years, but he did not have to sit as its lone MLA that long: after the 1944 election, he was joined in the legislature by Aylmer Liesemer of
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. Two seats were the largest caucus the CCF had during Roper's tenure as its leader. Both Liesemer and Roper were re-elected in the 1948 election. The party's share of the vote fell from 25% to 19%, but it was still due more than 10 MLAs. Roper did not add any new MLAs to his tiny caucus as Social Credit's stranglehold over the province remained intact. The CCF did elect a new MLA in the 1952 election - Willingdon's Nick Dushenski - but this gain was cancelled by Liesemer's defeat in the same election. Worse, the CCF's vote fell further, to 14%, and the Alberta Liberal Party doubled its seat count to four, making it the Official Opposition and leaving the CCF as the third party. Things then got worse for the CCF. In the 1955 election, the CCF's share of the vote was only 8% and the previously dormant Conservatives passed it in the seat count. Moreover, Roper himself lost his seat in Edmonton (although two other CCF MLAs were elected - Dushenki in Whitford) and Stanley Ruzycki in Vegreville). Roper placed third of thirty candidates on the first ballot in the election held using
Single transferable voting The single transferable vote (STV) or proportional-ranked choice voting (P-RCV) is a multi-winner electoral system in which each voter casts a single vote in the form of a ranked ballot. Voters have the option to rank candidates, and their vo ...
, but as Premier Ernest Manning's large number of surplus votes was redistributed to the city's other Social Credit candidates (and James Harper Prowse's only slightly smaller surplus was redistributed mostly to other Liberal candidates, Roper fell out of the top seven, where he needed to remain in order to be re-elected. Following the election, Roper relinquished the CCF leadership. He never again sought provincial office. In part this was due to the Manning government switching to First Past the post from the combined STV/Alternative Voting system it had been using. Roper later said he thought that Manning had abolished the STV system in Edmonton to keep Roper from ever getting a seat again. Certainly it worked to the degree that no CCF or NDP again took an Edmonton seat until 1982 - and the change to First Past The Post was likely the main cause of that pattern.


Municipal politics

Roper served as mayor of Edmonton, 1959-1963. In advance of the 1959 municipal election, the city's mayoralty was up for grabs. William Hawrelak had resigned in scandal, and the man that the Edmonton City Council had chosen to replace him, Frederick John Mitchell, had decided to return to his aldermanic post rather than contest the mayoral election. Roper chose to contest it, and defeated three candidates (most notably his former legislature colleague James Prowse). He was re-elected in the 1961 election, handily defeating alderman Ed Leger. He did not seek re-election at the conclusion of his second term. At the age of seventy, he was finished with politics.


Later life, death, and legacy

Elmer Roper retired to
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in 1975, and died there November 12, 1994, aged 101. His wife had died in August, just after the couple's eightieth anniversary, and he was survived by two daughters and a son, former Edmonton alderman G Lyall Roper. He had been made an honorary life member of the
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in 1928, and had received an honorary doctorate in laws from the
University of Alberta The University of Alberta (also known as U of A or UAlberta, ) is a public research university located in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. It was founded in 1908 by Alexander Cameron Rutherford, the first premier of Alberta, and Henry Marshall Tory, t ...
in 1959. Additionally, Roper Road and Roper Industrial, an Edmonton road and neighbourhood respectively, are named in his honour.


References


External links


Edmonton Public Library biography of Elmer RoperCity of Edmonton biography of Elmer Roper
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Edmonton District Labour Council's involvement in Edmonton electoral politicsAgenda of the City of Edmonton's Naming Committee, May 17 2006
{{DEFAULTSORT:Roper, Elmer 1893 births 1994 deaths Mayors of Edmonton Canadian men centenarians Alberta Co-operative Commonwealth Federation MLAs People from Victoria County, Nova Scotia Canadian printers Trade unionists from Alberta Leaders of the Alberta CCF/NDP Alberta New Democratic Party candidates in Alberta provincial elections 20th-century mayors of places in Alberta 20th-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta