William Stevens Fielding Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
William Stevens Fielding
Honorific-Suffix:PC
Order:7th
Office:Premier of Nova Scotia
Predecessor:William Thomas Pipes
Successor:George Henry Murray
Lieutenant Governor:Matthew Henry Richey
Archibald McLelan
Malachy Bowes Daly
Term Start:July 28, 1884
Term End:July 18, 1896
Office1:MLA for Halifax County
Term Start1:June 20, 1882
Term End1:July 18, 1896
Predecessor1:Charles J. MacDonald
John F. Stairs
William D. Harrington
John Pugh
Successor1:William Bernard Wallace
Alongside1:William D. Harrington, Angus A. Buchanan, William Roche, Jr., Michael Joseph Power, William A. Black
Constituency Mp2:Shelburne and Queen's
Parliament2:Canadian
Predecessor2:Francis Gordon Forbes
Successor2:Fleming Blanchard McCurdy
Term Start2:August 5, 1896
Term End2:September 21, 1911
Predecessor3:Fleming Blanchard McCurdy
Successor3:District abolished
Term Start3:December 17, 1917
Term End3:October 29, 1925
Birth Date:24 November 1848
Birth Place:Halifax, Nova Scotia
Death Place:Ottawa
Nationality:Canadian
Party:Nova Scotia Liberal Party
Otherparty:Liberal
Unionist Party
Children:4 daughters and 1 son
Alma Mater:Dalhousie University
Occupation:Journalist
Profession:Politician
Cabinet:Minister of Finance (1896–1911) (1921–1925)
Minister of Railways and Canals (acting) (1903–1904) (1907)

William Stevens Fielding, (November 24, 1848 – June 23, 1929) was a Canadian Liberal politician, the seventh premier of Nova Scotia (1884–96), and the federal Minister of Finance from 1896 to 1911 and again from 1921 to 1925.

Early life

He was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Fielding became leader of the Anti-Confederation Party (Nova Scotia Liberal Party). In 1884, he became Premier and won the 1886 election on a pledge to remove Nova Scotia from confederation. When he failed to do this, he turned to economic matters including developing the coal industry.

The Liberal Party of Nova Scotia fared poorly in national elections during the 1880s and early 1890s. The national party advocated policies that would discontinue the national coal subsidy and, for all practical purposes, eliminate Catholic schools in Manitoba, policies disliked by provincial coal miners and Catholics respectively. Fielding forged a more moderate coal policy and defused the school issue, winning back Catholics. Thus in 1896 the provincial Liberals improved their showing in the national election.[1]

Federal politics

In 1896, he left provincial politics to become Minister of Finance in the Liberal government of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. In 1910, he negotiated a reciprocity or free trade agreement with the United States which led to the government's defeat in the 1911 general election. Fielding lost his seat, and became editor of the Daily Telegraph of Montreal.

First World War

Fielding supported the Unionist government of Sir Robert Borden during the Conscription Crisis of 1917 and returned to the House of Commons as a Liberal-Unionist member.

Liberal leadership convention, 1919

Fielding had widely been seen as Laurier's successor but his split with the party over the conscription issue cost him the 1919 Liberal leadership convention where he lost to William Lyon Mackenzie King by 38 votes.

Service in Mackenzie King's first Administration

He served again as Minister of Finance in King's first government formed after the 1921 election. Fielding's health began to deteriorate in the years after the election, and while he nominally remained as Finance Minister through King's first parliamentary term, Minister of Trade and Commerce James Robb effectively took over the role from late 1923 onwards. King's government fell in September 1925 when parliament unexpectedly voted to reject that year's budget. Fielding, recognising that he would likely not survive another full parliamentary term and that his political career was at its end, publicly took responsibility for the rejection of the budget, announcing his resignation as Finance Minister and that he would not seek re-election, saving Robb (who had actually been responsible for getting the budget passed) from having to resign.[2]

Later life

In 1923, Fielding was sworn into the Privy Council of the United Kingdom allowing him to be styled as Right Honourable, a rare privilege among Canadians who have not served as Prime Minister, Governor-General, or Chief Justice of Canada.

He died in Ottawa.

Notes

  1. K. M. McLaughlin, "W. S. Fielding and the Liberal Party in Nova Scotia, 1891–1896," Acadiensis, Spring 1974, Vol. 3#2 pp 65–79
  2. http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/fielding_william_stevens_15E.html Biography - Fielding, William Stevens