Honorific-Prefix: | The Honourable |
Roy Romanow | |
Office2: | Chair of the Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada |
Term Start2: | April 2001 |
Term End2: | November 2002 |
Primeminister2: | Jean Chrétien |
Order: | 12th |
Office: | Premier of Saskatchewan |
Term Start: | November 1, 1991 |
Term End: | February 8, 2001 |
Lieutenant Governor: | Sylvia Fedoruk Jack Wiebe Lynda Haverstock |
Predecessor: | Grant Devine |
Successor: | Lorne Calvert |
Office3: | Saskatchewan Leader of the Opposition |
Term Start3: | November 7, 1987 |
Term End3: | November 1, 1991 |
Predecessor3: | Allan Blakeney |
Successor3: | Grant Devine |
Office4: | 3rd Leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party |
Term Start4: | November 7, 1987 |
Term End4: | January 27, 2001 |
Predecessor4: | Allan Blakeney |
Successor4: | Lorne Calvert |
Office5: | Deputy Premier of Saskatchewan |
Term Start5: | June 30, 1971 |
Term End5: | May 8, 1982 |
Successor5: | Eric Berntson |
Premier5: | Allan Blakeney |
Office6: | Saskatchewan Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs |
Term Start6: | June 19, 1979 |
Term End6: | May 8, 1982 |
Predecessor6: | new office |
Successor6: | John Gary Lane |
Premier6: | Allan Blakeney |
Office7: | Attorney General of Saskatchewan |
Term Start7: | June 30, 1971 |
Term End7: | May 8, 1982 |
Predecessor7: | Darrel Verner Heald |
Successor7: | John Gary Lane |
Premier7: | Allan Blakeney |
Office8: | Provincial Secretary of Saskatchewan |
Term Start8: | June 30, 1971 |
Term End8: | May 12, 1972 |
Predecessor8: | Darrel Verner Heald |
Successor8: | Edwin Tchorzewski |
Premier8: | Allan Blakeney |
Office9: | Member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan |
Term Start9: | October 11, 1967 |
Term End9: | April 26, 1982 |
Predecessor9: | New Riding |
Successor9: | Jo-Ann Zazelenchuk |
Constituency9: | Saskatoon Riversdale |
Term Start10: | October 20, 1986 |
Term End10: | February 8, 2001 |
Predecessor10: | Jo-Ann Zazelenchuk |
Successor10: | Lorne Calvert |
Constituency10: | Saskatoon Riversdale |
Birth Name: | Roy John Romanow |
Birth Date: | 12 August 1939 |
Birth Place: | Saskatoon, Saskatchewan |
Party: | New Democratic Party |
Alma Mater: | University of Saskatchewan |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Roy John Romanow (born August 12, 1939) is a Canadian politician who served as the 12th premier of Saskatchewan from 1991 to 2001. He was the leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party from 1987 until his retirement in 2001. He was the Member of the Legislative Assembly for Saskatoon Riversdale from 1967 to 1982 and from 1986 to 2001.
Romanow played a prominent role in Allan Blakeney's NDP government from 1971 to 1982, particularly in negotiations over Patriation of the Canadian Constitution. He became the Leader of the Opposition in 1987 before leading the NDP to three consecutive election victories in the 1990s. His time as premier left a divisive legacy within Saskatchewan political history. When Romanow first took office, Saskatchewan was facing the prospect of bankruptcy. His fiscal management brought the province back to balanced finances by the middle of the decade. However, his embrace of Third Way neoliberal politics disillusioned many within the NDP. Moreover, the perception that his cuts to spending disproportionately impacted rural Saskatchewan deepened an already growing divide between urban and rural issues and voters in the province, which factored prominently into future elections.
Romanow was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, in 1939 to Tekla and Michael Romanow, who were Ukrainian immigrants from Ordiv—currently Chervonohrad Raion—Ukraine. His first language was Ukrainian.[1] [2]
He studied at the University of Saskatchewan, earning bachelor's degrees in Political science in 1960 and Law in 1964, while involving himself heavily in student politics—he served a year as president of the Students' Representative Council. Romanow then practiced law, articling with and joining Goldenburg, Taylor and Company in Saskatoon.[3] He married Eleanore Boykowich in 1967.
Romanow was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan as a member of the CCF-NDP in the 1967 provincial election in the riding of Saskatoon Riversdale; the election was won by Ross Thatcher's Liberals.[4] When Woodrow Lloyd resigned as party leader in 1970, the young Romanow entered the race to succeed him as leader of the NDP. Romanow was considered the most conservative of four candidates as he was joined by Allan Blakeney, a veteran civil servant and MLA in the governments of Lloyd and Tommy Douglas; Don Mitchell, an agrarian activist who represented the socialist Waffle faction of the party; and George Taylor, a labour candidate. Romanow led narrowly on the first and second ballots. The delegated election came down to a final ballot featuring Romanow and Blakeney, and Blakeney won with 54% of the vote.[5]
Romanow was re-elected in the 1971 provincial election, which resulted in a majority government for Blakeney and the NDP. Blakeney immediately offered his former leadership rival prominent cabinet posts—Romanow served as Attorney General and Deputy Premier for Blakeney's entire tenure as premier, from 1971 to 1982. This meant Romanow played a role in many of the key achievements of the NDP in this era, including the nationalization of the potash industry and battles with the federal government over resource rights and taxation, as well as Patriation of the Constitution.[6]
During the 1981 discussions over Patriation of the Constitution, federal Minister of Justice Jean Chrétien, Ontario Attorney General Roy McMurtry, Romanow, and Saskatchewan's director of constitutional law, John Whyte, worked out the final details of Canada's new constitutional provisions, resulting in the late-night Kitchen Accord.[7] Romanow objected strongly to any protections on private property in the new Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and none were included.
After three consecutive majority governments, Blakeney's NDP were swept from power in the 1982 election in a shocking upset by Grant Devine's Progressive Conservatives. Romanow himself was upset in Saskatoon Centre, losing to 23-year old PC candidate Jo-Ann Zazelenchuk by 19 votes.[8]
Romanow ran to reclaim his seat from Zazelenchuk in the 1986 election, and he won with nearly 70% of the vote. The NDP largely rebounded in 1986, narrowly winning the popular vote, but Devine's PCs secured a second majority government with a particularly strong performance in rural Saskatchewan.[9] The result led Blakeney, who had stayed on as Opposition leader after the loss in 1982, to resign as party leader. Romanow ran to succeed Blakeney, and with no challengers was acclaimed the new NDP leader—and leader of the Opposition—on November 7, 1987.
It became clear during the PCs second term that the province's finances were in dire straits. The PCs ran a succession of large budget deficits, which peaked in 1986–87 at $1.2 billion, rapidly increasing the provincial debt.[10] Devine used the fiscal situation as justification to pursue the privatization of a wide range of crown corporations—including PotashCorp, one of the key achievements of the Blakeney era—which engendered fierce opposition from the NDP. The situation came to a head in 1989 when the government moved to privatize SaskEnergy, the natural gas division of SaskPower; in response, Romanow led a legislative walk-out of the Opposition, effectively bringing government business to a halt. After 17 days, the government relented and ended the sell-off of SaskEnergy.[11] [12] When legislation to privatize PotashCorp was introduced later in 1989, the NDP, buoyed by its success with SaskEnergy, remained in the Legislature, ready to debate the legislation; however, the PCs enacted closure for the first time in provincial history to avoid debate on the issue and move forward with the legislation with no public scrutiny.[13] The PCs were persistently criticized late in their term for undemocratic tactics including prorogation of the Legislature and the dubious use of special warrants for spending.[14] [15]
Devine's PCs, which were clearly deeply unpopular, put off the next election as long as legally possible. When it finally occurred, Romanow led the NDP to a landslide majority government in the 1991 provincial election, winning 55 out of 66 seats, making Romanow Premier.[16]
When Romanow assumed office in 1991, the extent of the fiscal crisis facing the province began to become clearer. The provincial debt had reached nearly $15 billion under the Progressive Conservatives, and the province was facing the prospect of bankruptcy; interest payments on debt alone were accounting for more than 20% of government spending, second only to healthcare.[17] [18] Romanow had campaigned on getting the province's fiscal house back in order, and dealing with the fiscal crisis became his government's top priority.
In justifying his prioritization of the fiscal crisis, Romanow appealed to the previous CCF/NDP regimes of Blakeney and Tommy Douglas who, despite increasing the size and role of the government and its spending, prioritized sound fiscal management and balanced budgets.[19] [20] However, in their approach to dealing with the crisis, Romanow and finance minister Janice MacKinnon practiced austerity, greatly reducing government spending by downsizing the government and cutting services. They cited pressure from bondholders and a lack of assistance from the federal government as factors that increased the pressure to drastically reduce spending.[21] Some of the most controversial cuts including reforming provincial health care—replacing more than one hundred hospital boards with approximately thirty health regions, and ending acute-care in more than fifty rural hospitals—and ending the Gross Revenue Insurance Plan, which had directly supported crop farm incomes.[22] Such cuts were seen as disproportionately targeting rural life in the province.[23] Moreover, Romanow's governments adopted some of the same tactics the PCs had introduced to pass legislation, including closure when it came to their health care reforms.[24] The cuts to programs and services in rural Saskatchewan were deeply unpopular and would prove costly to the NDP in those regions. However, such measures did lead to a balanced budget by 1995, sooner than had been expected and effectively ending concerns about the fiscal crisis.[25] [26] After 1995, Romanow's government ran successive surpluses, and paid the debt down to approximately $10 billion.
Romanow led the NDP to a second majority in the 1995 provincial election. The PCs were reduced to third party status amid revelations of a major expense fraud scandal stemming from their last term in government, while the Liberals under Lynda Haverstock surged to Opposition status.[27] However, the NDP's seemingly solid grip on government and the growing frustrations of rural regions provided an impetus for a reorganization of conservatives in the province. In 1997, working behind the scenes with members of the federal Reform Party, four PC MLAs, including new leader Bill Boyd, and four Liberal MLAs—all from rural ridings—walked away from their parties and established the Saskatchewan Party.[28] With eight MLAs, the new party immediately took over Opposition status. In 1998, it chose former Reform MP Elwin Hermanson as its first leader.[29] Romanow framed the new party as an effort to rebrand the moribund Progressive Conservatives and took to referring to them as the "Saskatories".[30] [31]
The NDP were widely expected to secure another majority in the 1999 provincial election.[32] [33] The party was re-elected to a third consecutive term, but was in fact reduced to a minority of seats in the legislature, forcing Romanow to negotiate a coalition government with the Liberals, an agreement that resulted in appointing three Liberals to Cabinet.[34] This was the result of a strong performance by Hermanson's party—which actually edged the NDP in the popular vote—in rural areas; the Saskatchewan Party won 25 seats, but none in either Regina or Saskatoon. Hermanson capitalized on rural discontent with the NDP, characterizing spending cuts there as the NDP's "rural revenge", putting into stark relief the growing divide between urban and rural voters in the province. Critics of Romanow's austerity politics pointed to declining party membership and voter engagement as troubling factors in the election.
In 2000, less than a year after the election, Romanow announced that he would be retiring as soon as a successor was chosen by the party.[35] The announcement triggered a hotly contested leadership race with seven candidates—a far cry from Romanow's acclimation in 1987—with differing views for the future of the party.[36] Anti-neoliberal candidate Nettie Wiebe placed third in the 2001 leadership vote, while Romanow's attorney general Chris Axworthy was defeated on the final ballot by former cabinet minister Lorne Calvert, who was sworn in as premier on February 8, 2001.[37] Calvert had campaigned on the party's traditional social democratic values and a commitment to increase social spending. After Romanow's resignation, Calvert also succeeded him as MLA for Saskatoon Riversdale, winning the by-election there on March 19, 2001.[38]
Jean Chrétien's federal Liberal Party—a party with which Romanow had worked closely on Patriation in the early 1980s—encouraged Romanow to run for the party, but he declined. He stated that to do so would be a betrayal of the NDP, and he bargained instead for the opportunity to lead a Royal commission on the future of health care.[39] Romanow ultimately got his wish, and on April 4 2001, Romanow was appointed to head the Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada by Governor General Adrienne Clarkson, on the advice of Chrétien. The Romanow Report was released in 2002, outlining suggestions to improve the health care system. The Report urged the protection and strengthening of Canada's public health care system, calling for increased federal funding and a Health Charter outlining fundamental health care principles.[40] The Report has remained influential in health care discussions for decades.[41]
In 2003, Romanow was sworn in as a member of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada by Governor General Clarkson, again on the advice of Prime Minister Chrétien.[42]
After retiring from politics, Romanow became a senior policy fellow at the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Regina, as well as a visiting fellow at Queen's University. In 2016, he was named Chancellor of the University of Saskatchewan, a role he filled until the end of his term in 2019, when he remained a policy fellow at the university.[43] [44]
In 2003, Romanow was awarded the Saskatchewan Order of Merit, and in 2004 was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.[45] [46] Romanow's official portrait was unveiled at Saskatchewan's Legislative Assembly in 2005, when he received the Commemorative Medal for the Centennial of Saskatchewan from Lieutenant Governor Lynda Haverstock.[47]
Romanow's tenure as premier left a divisive legacy. His government inherited a dire fiscal crisis, and their actions are credited with getting the province's finances back in order. However, the pace at which Romanow's government addressed the problem, and the economic austerity it implemented in order to do so, have been subject to debate. Critics from the traditional left wing of the NDP like John Conway and John Warnock, along with former leadership candidate Nettie Wiebe, charged Romanow with embracing neoliberalism and effectively betraying the NDP's social democratic tradition.[48] Others have conceded that Romanow was more fiscally conservative than would be expected from an NDP leader, but have underscored his commitment to social democratic values. His approach preserved a large activist role for government as well as a social safety net and investments in health care and education. Howard Leeson, who worked with Romanow in the Blakeney government, wrote that Romanow had a "conservative approach to politics, tempered by a genuine concern for social needs", characterizing him as more of a "red tory" than a neoliberal.[49] Other observers, like historian Bill Waiser and political analyst Dale Eisler, have argued that the globalized economy in which Romanow operated left fewer options than were available to his NDP predecessors, and drastic actions were necessary to deal with the crisis.
Ultimately, Romanow's embrace of Third Way politics signaled an entrenchment of neoliberal economics in the province. David McGrane concluded that, while Romanow's successor Lorne Calvert steered the NDP back further towards the left in terms of social policy, it effectively carried forward its economic legacy.[50] Even the fledgling conservative Saskatchewan Party found little to criticize with NDP economic policy at the turn of the century, focusing its criticism on the NDP's "management style" rather than its economic ideology. The other lasting legacy of the Romanow era was a solidification of the rural-urban divide in Saskatchewan. That divide had been widened by the Devine Progressive Conservative government's rural emphasis;[51] Romanow's austerity, which was seen as disproportionately impacting rural areas, heightened the polarization and made the NDP deeply unpopular there.[52]