The success of the Canada Pension Plan was
due in large part to unrelenting pressure from various federal and
provincial politicians as well as from the public and labour groups.
Judy LaMarsh (1924-1980) represented Niagara Falls as a
Liberal in Parliament between 1960 and 1968, and she served as Minister of
National Health and Welfare from 1963 to 1965. LaMarsh oversaw the
drafting of the Canada Pension Plan through its various stages, from the
first proposal in 1963 to the passage of Bill C-136, An Act to
Establish a Comprehensive Program of Old Age Pensions and Supplementary
Benefits, and the implementation of the Canada Pension Plan in 1966.
She also contributed to the creation of the Guaranteed Income Supplement,
which was introduced in 1967.
Jean Lesage (1912-1980) represented the
riding of Montmagny-l'Islet, Quebec. He left federal politics upon the
defeat of Louis St-Laurent's Liberal government in 1957. As a Liberal
Member of Parliament in Ottawa, Lesage took part in the development of the
Old Age Security program. After leaving Ottawa he became the leader of the
Quebec Liberal party and was elected Premier of Quebec in 1960. In early
1964, at a federal-provincial conference on the proposed Canada Pension
Plan, he revealed his government's plans to create a separate Quebec
Pension Plan. Lesage's term of office is associated with the beginnings of
Quebec's Quiet Revolution, and his insistence on securing a separate
pension plan is seen as an important part of the changing political
atmosphere in Quebec at the time.
Stanley
Knowles (1908-1997) was a very active member of the Commonwealth
Cooperative Federation and the New Democratic Party after its creation
(which he oversaw) in 1961. Knowles took over J.S. Woodsworth's seat of
Winnipeg North Central upon Woodsworth's death in 1942. He held the seat
until 1958, and again from 1962 to 1984. His persistent lobbying both for
large increases in Old Age Security benefits and for the introduction of
the Canada Pension Plan helped keep the issue of pensions in the national
political arena. Regarding Knowles's persistence on the issue of pensions,
Judy LaMarsh praised his activism, stating, "no minister has ever done
such a thing for an Opposition member before." (Judy LaMarsh, Memoirs of
a Bird in a Gilded Cage, Toronto, 1969, p.96.)
John P. Robarts (1917-1971) was Premier of Ontario
from 1961 to 1971. His decision to support the creation of the Canada
Pension Plan was critical. Judy LaMarsh, the federal Minister of Health
and Welfare, noted at the time:
"The participation of the provinces in the Canada Pension Plan was
very important to us. It would have been impossible to bring in a
universal, portable plan without provincial participation…If
Ontario and the other provinces refused consent to add survivors' benefits
to our plan, it would hurt. It would be fatal should Ontario decide to go
it alone." (Ibid)