Vol. 63 (2009)
Articles

A Communist in the Council Chambers: Communist Municipal Politics, Ethnicity, and the Career of William Kolisnyk

Published 2009-05-15

How to Cite

Epp, S. (2009). A Communist in the Council Chambers: Communist Municipal Politics, Ethnicity, and the Career of William Kolisnyk. Labour Le Travail, 63(1), 79–103. Retrieved from https://lltjournal.ca/index.php/llt/article/view/5558

Abstract

The election of William Kolisnyk as alderman for Winnipeg’s Ward Three in the fall of 1926 was celebrated as one of the first times that any candi­date in North America running under the banner of a Communist Party was elected to public office. Although he was only an alderman for four years, a study of Kolisnyk’s political life contributes to the study of communist history in several ways. His term in office was split roughly in half by the introduction of Third Period ideology. As the Communist Party’s sole elected representative at the time, Kolisnyk’s political activity demonstrates the practical implications of this dramatic policy shift. While the Third Period radically changed Kolis­nyk’s politics, several local issues significantly influenced his politics. Ethnicity, both within the Party and in Kolisnyk’s constituency, profoundly affected his career. The paper also examines the political issues pursued by communists at the municipal level and the communist community that brought Kolisnyk to office. Therefore, this examination of William Kolisnyk’s aldermanic career reveals the importance of international influences as well as the political reali­ties of Winnipeg’s communist community, both of which contributed to the political activities of one of Canada’s first elected communists.