William Grenville "Bill"
Davis, PC,
CC, O.Ont., QC
(born July 30, 1929 in Brampton
, Ontario
) was the
Progressive
Conservative Premier of
Ontario
, Canada
, from 1971
to 1985.
Youth
Davis was politically active from a young age. Local
Progressive
Conservative Member of
Parliament (MP)
Gordon Graydon
was a frequent guest at his parents' house, and Davis himself
became the first delegate younger than seventeen years to attend a
national Progressive Conservative convention in Canada. He
frequently campaigned for local
Member of Provincial
Parliament (MPP)
Thomas Laird
Kennedy, who briefly served as Premier of Ontario in
1949.
He
graduated from the University of Toronto
in 1951 and attended Osgoode Hall Law
School
. Davis was a
football player during his university
years, and his teammates included
Roy
McMurtry and
Thomas Leonard
Wells, both of whom would later serve in his cabinet.
Early political career
He was first elected to the
Legislative Assembly of
Ontario in
1959
provincial election, for the southern Ontario constituency of
Peel. Although Peel was an
extremely safe Conservative seat for most of its history, Davis's
majority in this election was surprisingly narrow. The election
took place soon after the federal Progressive Conservative
government of
John Diefenbaker
cancelled the
Avro Arrow program. Most of
the 14,000 Canadians put out of work by this decision were
residents of Peel, and many cast protest ballots against
Diefenbaker by supporting
Bill Brydon,
the provincial
Liberal
candidate. Davis won, but by only 1,203 votes.
Davis served for two years as a
backbench supporter of
Leslie Frost's government. When Frost announced
his retirement in 1961, Davis became the chief organizer of
Robert Macaulay's campaign to
succeed him as premier and party leader. Macaulay was eliminated on
the next-to-last ballot, and, with Davis, delivered crucial support
for
John Robarts to defeat
Kelso Roberts on the final vote.
Minister of Education
Davis was appointed to Robarts's cabinet as
Minister of Education on
October 25,
1962, and
was re-elected by a greatly increased margin in the
1963 provincial
election.
Davis was given additional responsibilities as Ontario's
Minister of University
Affairs on
May 14,
1964, and held both portfolios until 1971. He soon
developed a reputation as a strongly interventionist minister, and
oversaw a dramatic increase in education expenditures throughout
the 1960s (education spending in Ontario grew by 454% between 1962
and 1971). He established many new public schools, often in
centralized locations to accommodate larger numbers of students.
Davis also undertook dramatic revisions of Ontario's outdated and
inefficient school board system, reducing the 3,676 boards of 1962
to only 192 in 1967. Many boards had presided over a single school
prior to Davis's reforms.
Davis also
created new universities, including Trent University
and Brock University
, and established twenty-two community colleges, the
first of which opened its doors in 1966. He established the
TVOntario educational television network
in 1970.
Davis's handling of the education portfolio made him a high-profile
minister, and there was little surprise when he entered the
leadership contest to succeed Robarts in 1971. He was quickly
dubbed as the frontrunner, though his awkward speaking style and
image as an "establishment" candidate hindered his campaign. He
defeated rival candidate
Allan Lawrence by only 44 votes
on the final ballot, after receiving support from third-place
candidate
Darcy McKeough. Shortly
after the convention, Davis invited Lawrence's campaign team to
join his inner circle of advisors. This group became known as the
Big Blue Machine, and remained the
dominant organizational force in the Progressive Conservative Party
until the 1980s.
Premier
Shortly after taking office as premier, Davis announced that his
government would not permit continuing construction of the rest of
the
Spadina Expressway into
downtown Toronto (an initiative that had been unpopular with many
of the area's residents). He also rejected a proposal to grant full
funding to Ontario's Catholic high schools, which some regarded as
an appeal to the Progressive Conservative Party's rural Protestant
base. Davis's team ran a professional campaign in the
1971 provincial election, and
was rewarded with an increased majority government.
Davis's first full term as premier was by most accounts his least
successful, with public confidence in his government weakened by a
series of scandals. There were allegations that the
Fidinam company had received special consideration
for a Toronto development program in return for donations to the
Progressive Conservative Party. In 1973, it was revealed that
Davis' friend
Gerhard Moog had received
a valuable untendered contract for the construction of
Ontario Hydro's new head office and related
projects.
Attorney
General Dalton Bales,
Solicitor General John Yaremko and
Treasurer McKeough were all accused of
conflicts-of-interest relating to government approval for
developments on properties they owned. The government was cleared
of impropriety in all cases, but its popular support nonetheless
declined. The Conservatives lost four key by-elections in 1973 and
1974.
On the
policy front, the Davis administration introduced regional
governments for Durham
, Hamilton-Wentworth,
Haldimand-Norfolk,
and Waterloo but
shelved further plans in response to popular protests. The
government was also forced to cancel a planned 7% energy tax in
1973 following protests from the Progressive Conservative
backbench. In the buildup to the
1975 provincial election,
Davis imposed a ninety-day freeze on energy prices, temporarily
reduced the provincial sales tax from 7% to 5%, and announced rent
controls for the province.
Minority governments
The 1975 campaign was far more bitter than that of 1971, with Davis
and Liberal leader
Robert Nixon
repeatedly hurling personal insults at one another. Polls taken
shortly before the election had the Liberals in the lead. The
Progressive Conservatives won only 51 seats out of 125, but were
able to remain in power with a
minority government. The
New Democratic Party (NDP)
won 38 seats under the leadership of
Stephen Lewis, while Nixon's Liberals finished
third with 36. Soon after the election, Davis hired
Hugh Segal as his legislative secretary.
Davis appointed right-wingers
Frank
Miller and
James
Taylor to key cabinet portfolios after the election, but
withdrew from a proposed austerity program following a negative
public response. In 1977, he introduced a policy statement written
by Segal which became known as the "Bramalea Charter", promising
extensive new housing construction for the next decade. Davis
called a
snap election in
1977, but was again returned
with only a minority. The Progressive Conservatives increased their
standing to 58 seats, against 34 for the Liberals and 33 for the
NDP.
The Conservatives remained the dominant party after the 1975 and
1977 elections due to the inability of either the
New Democrats and the
Liberals to become the clear
alternative. The Conservatives were able to stay in power due to
the competition between both opposition parties. As there was no
serious consideration of a Liberal-NDP alliance after both
campaigns, Davis was able avoid defeat in the legislature by
appealing to other parties for support on particular initiatives.
His government often moved to the left of the rural-based Liberals
on policy issues. The opposition parties had also undergone
leadership changes; Nixon and Lewis, who had posed a strong
challenge to Davis, resigned after the 1975 and 1977 elections,
respectively. Nixon's successor
Stuart
Lyon Smith proved unable to increase Liberal support, while new
NDP leader
Michael Cassidy lacked
the support of the party establishment and could not measure up to
Lewis's charismatic and dynamic figure.
This period of the Davis government was one of expansion for the
province's public health and education systems, and Davis held a
particular interest in ensuring that the province's community
colleges remained productive. The government also expanded the
provisions of the Ontario Human Rights Code, and expanded bilingual
services without introducing official bilingualism to the
province.
National scene
Davis had an awkward relationship with federal
Progressive
Conservative leader
Joe Clark. Clark
and Davis held differing views over fuel prices, and the Davis
government actively opposed Clark's 1979 austerity budget which
included a gas tax. In the
1980 federal election,
Davis's criticism of Clark's budget was used by the
Liberal Party in official campaign
documents and it played a role in the federal Tories' losses in
Ontario; the swing in support enabled the Liberals to regain
government.
Unlike
most provincial premiers in Canada, Davis strongly supported
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's 1981 plans to patriate the
Canadian Constitution from
the United
Kingdom
and add to it a Charter of Rights and
Freedoms. Davis's role in the constitutional negotiations of
1981 were pivotal in achieving a compromise that resulted in the
passage of the 1982 Constitution.
In 2003, while Davis played a role in the successful negotiations
to merge the federal Progressive Conservatives with the
Canadian Alliance to create the
Conservative Party of Canada,
Clark refused to endorse the newly merged party.
Final term
The Progressive Conservatives were returned with a majority
government in the
1981
provincial election, mostly at the expense of the NDP. Soon
after the election, Davis announced that
John
Tory (who become leader of the PCs 23 years later) had been
hired to succeed
Hugh Segal as his
principal secretary. He also announced that Ontario would purchase
a 25% share in the energy corporation
Suncor,
despite opposition from within his own caucus.
Davis considered moving to federal politics by running to lead the
federal
Progressive Conservatives in 1983 when Joe Clark only received
lukewarm support during a leadership review. Davis decided not to
do so when he realized that he would not receive endorsements from
western Canada because of his support for the Constitution
patriation and the
National
Energy Program. His candidacy had been strongly opposed by
Peter Lougheed, the
Premier of Alberta.
He retired a few months before the
1985 election, with him and
his government still well ahead in polls against
David Peterson's Liberals and
Bob Rae's NDP. One of his last major acts as premier
was to reverse his 1971 decision against the full funding of
Catholic schools, and announce that such funding would be provided
to the end of Grade Thirteen. Although the policy was supported by
all parties in the legislature, it was unpopular with some in the
Conservatives' traditional rural
Protestant base, and many would stay home in the
upcoming election because of this issue.
In retirement
Davis was succeeded by
Frank Miller, who was
elected leader at a February
1985
leadership convention over
Larry
Grossman, who was widely considered the successor to Davis and
his
Big Blue Machine. Although
Miller was more conservative, the Progressive Conservatives still
held a significant lead over the opposition when the election was
called. However, after a poor campaign and controversy over
Catholic school funding, they were reduced to minority government
and lost the popular vote to the
Ontario Liberal Party in the
1985 provincial election and
were soon defeated by a motion of non-confidence by a Liberal-NDP
accord, ending the party's 42 year period of rule over the
province.
Davis was made a Companion of the
Order
of Canada in 1985, and has served on numerous corporate boards
since his retirement from politics.
Davis's reputation within the Ontario Progressive Conservatives was
compromised during the 1990s by the party's shift to the right
under
Mike Harris. Many Conservatives
parliamentarians were openly dismissive of Davis-era spending
policies, and frequently highlighted the differences between Davis
and Harris on policy issues. Davis remained a supporter of the
party, but seldom appeared at official events. In a National Post
editorial, on the tenth anniversary of Harris' 1995 electoral
victory, Harris' chief of staff described the difference in their
policies, saying that Davis retained power with a careful balancing
act, while Harris used a bold platform to unexpectedly catapult the
party from third place to first.
More recently, Davis has returned to an honoured position within
the party. He was a keynote speaker at the
2004
Progressive Conservative leadership convention, and was singled
out for praise in speeches by outgoing party leader
Ernie Eves and new leader
John Tory. Davis was also present for Tory's first
session in the Ontario legislature, following the latter's victory
in a 2005
by-election.
In 2003, Davis played a role in the successful negotiations to
merge the federal Progressive Conservatives with the
Canadian Alliance, and create the new
Conservative Party of
Canada. In the
2006
federal campaign, he campaigned for Conservative Leader
Stephen Harper and endorsed former
provincial minister
Jim Flaherty.
Harper spoke favourably of Davis during the campaign, and said that
he learned much from Davis's style of governing. The Conservatives
were able to defeat the Liberals to form the government.
Throughout
his political career, Davis often remarked upon the lasting
influence of his hometown of Brampton
, Ontario
. He
is known, primarily by Bramptonians, as "Brampton Billy".
On October
24, 2006, Davis received Seneca College
’s first Honorary degree where he was presented with
an Honorary
Bachelor of Applied Studies. “It is fitting that Bill
Davis receives Seneca’s first honorary degree,” says Dr.
Rick Miner, President of Seneca College. “As one
of the architects of the college system in Ontario, he is
responsible for a dynamic post-secondary education environment
which continues to be a pillar of our province’s economy.”
Quotes
- "Bland works." (Davis explaining how his success in politics
went with his unexciting public image.)
Trivia
- At the
University of
Waterloo
, a building constructed during the early 1980s to
house computer research was named after the former premier.
The building is called the William G. Davis Centre for Computer
Research, or more commonly called the Davis Centre (DC).
- There
is a middle school (grades 7-8) on Bartley Bull Parkway in Brampton
named after him (W.
G.
Davis Senior Public School
) as well as one on Langs Drive in Cambridge
(William G. Davis Senior Public School) and an elementary
school on East Avenue in Scarborough (William G. Davis Public
School).
- Sheridan College
named its Brampton Campus after Davis.
Further reading
- Hoy, Claire. (1985) Bill Davis. Toronto: New York:
Methuen.
- Manthorpe, Jonathan. (1974) The Power & The
Tories. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada.
- Speirs, Rosemary. (1986) Out of the Blue: The Fall of the
Tory Dynasty in Ontario. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada.
External links
Succeeded by:
Frank
Miller