'Anti-Confederation' was the name used in what is now
Atlantic Canada by several parties opposed to
Canadian confederation .
Nova Scotia
In Nova Scotia, the "Anti-Confederates" were led by
Joseph Howe. They attempted to reverse the colony's decision to join Confederation, which was initially highly unpopular in the province. In 1867, the Anti-Confederates won 36 out of 38 seats in the provincial
legislature, and formed a government under
William Annand. The Anti-Confederation Party was opposed by the
Confederation Party of
Charles Tupper.
Federally, in the
1867 federal election, the Anti-Confederate party won 18 of Nova Scotia's 19 seats in the
Canadian House of Commons.
Britain, however, refused to allow Nova Scotia to secede.
Howe was a pragmatist, and ultimately accepted Confederation as a fact. He was soon persuaded to join the
Cabinet of Sir
John A. Macdonald, leading to the movement's collapse.
Newfoundland
In Newfoundland, the Anti-Confederates, led by businessman
Charles Fox Bennett, defeated the government of the pro-Confederation
Premier Sir
Frederick Carter in 1869, effectively killing Confederation as a saleable proposal for two generations. It wasn't until eighty years after Bennett's victory that Newfoundland finally joined
Confederation.
New Brunswick
There was also an ''Anti-Confederation Party'' in
New Brunswick led by
Albert J. Smith, whose coalition of Conservatives and Reformers won the 1865 election. It was, however, soundly defeated in the 1866 election by the
Confederation Party led by
Peter Mitchell. The legislature that resulted from that election approved Confederation by a margin of 38 to 1.
In the
1867 federal election the ''Anti-Confederates'' won five of New Brunswick's fifteen seats in the
Canadian House of Commons.
While in
Nova Scotia and elsewhere, opponents of confederation were predominantly Liberals and supporters were predominantly Tories, in New Brunswick the debate blurred party lines. Anti-Confederate leader Albert Smith and Confederate Peter Mitchell were both
Conservatives, while one of the most prominent leaders of the pro-Confederation forces,
Samuel Leonard Tilley, was a
Liberal. Tilley later joined the government of Sir
John A. Macdonald. Both Anti-Confederate and Confederate forces were mixtures of Tories and Reformers (Liberals).
By 1870, the Confederate and Anti-Confederate parties had dissolved and were replaced by the old Liberal and Tory parties.
See also
★
List of political parties in Canada
★
Secessionist movements of Canada