Reform Party
- Also called:
- Reform Movement
- Date:
- c. 1837 - c. 1854
- Related People:
- William Lyon Mackenzie
- Sir William Buell Richards
Reform Party, political movement in Canada West (later called Upper Canada from 1841 to 1867; now Ontario) and the Maritime Provinces that came into prominence shortly before 1837. Radical Reformers in Canada East (Lower Canada, 1841–67; now Quebec) were known as Patriotes.
The Reformers urged that the provincial legislative councils—and by implication even the governors and other officials—be made elective; they also proposed that the officials and advisers (i.e., the executive council) of the governors be made responsible or accountable to such elective legislative assemblies.
Some Reformers were active in the rebellions of 1837 against the existing systems of government. William Lyon Mackenzie, after suffering defeat in a provincial election in 1836, became the chief organizer of the rebellion in Canada West. In Canada East, Louis-Joseph Papineau led his Patriote Party on a course that resulted in armed conflict with the government, although he himself took little part in the rebellion. On the other hand, some Reformers did not support the rebellion at all.
In 1842–43 and 1848–54 Reform premiers were in power in what was then the Province of Canada (the union of Upper and Lower Canada into Canada West and Canada East). In the late 1840s, however, the party was split by a rising tide of radicalism, and by the 1850s the Reformers had divided into a moderate group and a more radical group, the latter known as the Clear Grits. Eventually, John Macdonald won many moderate Reformers over to his Liberal-Conservative Party (the name by which the Conservative Party in Canada was known until the 1940s), while the Clear Grits provided the nucleus of what came to be the Liberal Party.