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Page "People's Co-operative Commonwealth Federation" ¶ 2
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Herridge and riding
Herridge, however, came in third in his riding of Kindersley, Saskatchewan with 30 % of the vote and thus failed to win a seat in the Canadian House of Commons.
In the 1945 federal election, Herbert Wilfred Herridge, ran as a " People's CCF " candidate in the riding of Kootenay West.

Herridge and with
In the 1940 federal election, Socreds ran with supporters of William Duncan Herridge as New Democracy, but reverted to the Social Credit name in subsequent elections with the Social Credit Association of Canada being officially formed in 1944.
In 1939, Social Credit merged with the New Democracy movement led by former Conservative William Duncan Herridge.
His ideas were similar to those of the social credit movement, and in the 1940 election, the Social Credit Party of Canada joined with Herridge to run candidates jointly under the New Democracy umbrella.
In 1939 Social Credit merged into William Herridge's New Democracy movement with Herridge acknowledged as the new party's leader.
Herridge was a patent attorney by profession and had been a Liberal supporter but, being a personal friend of Governor General Byng, he broke with the Liberals in 1926 over the King-Byng Affair.
The two parties ran a joint slate in the 1940 election under the New Democracy banner with Herridge as the lead candidate.
Social Credit ran jointly with the New Democracy movement of William Duncan Herridge.

Herridge and CCF
Herridge had previously run for the CCF twice and had been a sitting CCF member of the British Columbia Legislative Assembly since 1941.
Herridge was officially listed as an " Independent CCF " candidate and Member of Parliament.

Herridge and .
With the exception of Lex Barker and Anita Ekberg, the credits are as unfamiliar as you'll find on the Robert Herridge Theater.
Following the lead of President Roosevelt's New Deal in the United States, Bennett, under the advice of William Duncan Herridge, who was both Canada's ambassador to the United States and Bennett's brother-in-law, the government eventually began to follow the Americans ' lead.
Unmarried, Bennett was survived by nephews William Herridge, Jr., and Robert Coats and by brother Ronald V. Bennett.
* September 18-William Duncan Herridge, politician and diplomat ( d. 1961 )
However, Herridge failed to win a seat in the 1940 election, and Blackmore continued as parliamentary leader.
New Democracy was a political party in Canada founded by William Duncan Herridge in 1939.
Herridge, a former Conservative party adviser who was Canada's Envoy to the United States from 1931-35 during the government of R. B. Bennett.
Herridge advocated monetary reform and government intervention in the economy as a means of fighting the Great Depression.
The experiment was unsuccessful as Herridge failed to win a seat, and the three New Democracy MPs elected were Social Creditors.
The lake and the property ( including neighbouring land belonging to William Duncan Herridge and Stanley Healey ) had been acquired by the Queen in Right of Canada in 1951, in order to build up preserves of natural areas around the capital.
However, Herridge failed to win a seat in the 1940 federal election and in the subsequent parliament Blackmore led the New Democracy MPs, all former Social Crediters, who had been elected.
William Duncan Herridge, PC, KC, MC, DSO ( September 18, 1887 – September 21, 1961 ) was a Canadian politician and diplomat.
He was the son of Reverend William T. Herridge, a former moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, and served in the Canadian Expeditionary Force during World War I in which he received a field promotion to the rank of Major and was awarded the Military Cross and the Distinguished Service Order.
Herridge was educated at Ottawa Collegiate Institute, the University of Toronto, where he was a member of The Kappa Alpha Society, and Osgoode Hall Law School.
While stationed in Washington, D. C., Herridge was impressed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his New Deal, and convinced Bennett to attempt to adopt similar policies in Canada for combatting the Great Depression.

won and riding
In February 1942, he won a by-election for Quebec East, Lapointe's old riding.
Similarly, John Turner replaced Pierre Trudeau as leader of the Liberal Party in 1984 and subsequently was appointed prime minister even though he did not hold a seat in the lower chamber of parliament ; Turner won a riding in the next election but the Liberal Party was swept from power.
It first entered Parliament in 1989 when Deborah Grey won a by-election in an Edmonton-area riding.
In the 1979 election, Sauvé won the riding of Laval-des-Rapides, but the Liberals lost their majority in the commons to the Progressive Conservative Party, and Sauvé thus lost her cabinet position.
Lionel Van Praag, Tommy Price and Freddie Williams all won World Championships whilst riding for Wembley.
On 13 October 1999, the BJP-led NDA riding on a wave of popularity, following victory in the Kargil war and the charisma of Vajpayee, won 303 seats.
Following the dissolution of parliament that saw his riding abolished, Hnatyshyn won a commons seat for the riding of Saskatoon West, for which he served as representative until he lost his position in the election of 1988.
Lévesque won his own seat in the riding of Taillon.
He won the Badminton Horse Trials in 1971 and 1972 riding Great Ovation, in 1974 on Colombus, and in 1981 on Lincoln.
The race and the single-cylinder class was won by Charles R. Collier riding a Matchless motor-cycle in 4 hours, 8 minutes and 8 seconds at an average race speed of 38. 21 mph.
Bourassa was first elected as a Member of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec ( MLA ) for the riding of Mercier in 1966, then won the Quebec Liberal Party leadership election on January 17, 1970.
Armstrong won his first Tour de France in 1999 aboard a Trek 5500, becoming the first American to win the Tour on an American team riding an American made bicycle.
Mr. Charest won his own riding of Sherbrooke with a majority of 907 votes.
Mr. Charest won his own riding of Sherbrooke with a majority of 2597 votes.
( PLQ: 48 seat, ADQ: 41 seats, PQ: 36 seats ) Mr. Charest won his own riding of Sherbrooke with a majority of 1332 votes.
He was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in the 1975 election for the riding of Surrey ( he would later represent Richmond after the 1986 election ), in which Social Credit won back power after a three-year hiatus.
He won a seat again in a 1969 by-election in the riding of Nanaimo — Cowichan — The Islands, following the death of Colin Cameron in 1968, and represented it until his retirement from electoral politics in 1979.
It first entered Parliament in 1989 when Deborah Grey won a by-election in an Edmonton-area riding.
Gilles Bisson won the riding for the NDP in 1990 and served first as MPP for Cochrane South from 1990 to 1999 and then as MPP for Timmins-James Bay, from 1999 to present.
This latter circumstance was addressed through the voluntary resignation of Donald MacBeth Kennedy, who had won the riding of Peace River for the UFA.
He won the election, defeating George Brown, the owner of the Toronto Globe, partially because Brown's well-known anti-Catholic views did not play well in a riding with a large number of Catholics.
In the saddle of a Benelli 175, Tonino won the title of Italian Champion in 1927, 1928 and 1930 riding the SOHC version, and in 1931 with the DOHC version.
It was his first professional race and he won the final heat by over A. C. Meixwell of Philadelphia and E. C. Bald, scratch rider representing Syracuse, New York, and riding a Barnes bicycle.
She won the riding of Saanich — Gulf Islands in coastal British Columbia.

0.799 seconds.