Robert N. Thompson

Robert Norman Thompson (1914-1997) was a Canadian politician, chiropracter and educator. He was born in Deluth, Minnesota to Canadian parents and moved to Canada in 1918 with his family. Raised in Alberta, he graduated from the Palmer School of Chiropractic in 1939 and worked as a chiropracter and then as a teacher before serving in the Royal Canadian Air Force during World War II.

He was a supporter of the Social Credit Party of Alberta from its creation but couldn't run as a candidate in the 1935 provincial election because he was underage. Instead he became "Youth Leader" of the party.

In 1944, Thompson was sent to Ethiopia to serve as the founding commander of the Imperial Ethiopian Air Force and head up nation's Air Force academy. He became a confidante of Emperor Haile Sellassie and, after the war, became deputy minister of education and helped rebuild the nation's public school system.

Thompson returned to Canada in 1958 and resumed his activities with Social Credit. Alberta Premier and Social Credit Party of Alberta leader Ernest Manning saw Thompson as the ideal person to lead the national Sociail Credit Party of Canada and backed him in a hotly contested leadership vote in 1961 where Thompson beat Real Caouette to become the party's national leader. He was elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the 1962 federal election, and was re-elected in the 1963 and 1965 elections.

The 1962 and 1965 elections produced minority parliamentss in which no one party had a majority of seats. This meant that the government had to rely on smaller parties such as Social Credit to pass legislation and remain in power.

The Social Credit Party was divided, however, as after 1962 a majority of the caucus came from Quebec and favoured Caoutte as leader. The number of members of the Social Credit caucus coming from English Canada was declining. Thompson refused to cede the leadership of the party to Caouette. This caused the party to split: most of the Quebec MPss followed Caouette into his new Ralliement créditiste party in 1963.

Thompson was frustrated by the lack of support the national party enjoyed from the provincial Social credit parties in Alberta and British Columbia where they formed the governments and ran powerful political machines. As well, Manning was becoming concerned with the left ward trajectory of both the federal Liberal Party of Canada and the Progressive Conservatives and encouraged Thompson to try to bring about a merger of the federal Social Credit and Progressive Conservatie parties. Negotiations failed but, with the backing of both Manning and Robert Stanfield, Thompson decided to seek the nomination of the Progressive Conservative Party in an attempt to influence that party. He resigned as leader of Social Credit in March 1967 and sought and won the Progressive Conservative nomination in Red Deer, Alberta against the opposition of the local Tory riding association. He was re-elected as a Progressive Conservative MP from Alberta in the 1968 Canadian election.

Prior ot the 1972 Canadian election, Thompson moved to British Columbia to teach, and tried to win a seat from that province, but was defeated in the attempt. He retired from politics and taught political science at Trinity Western University in British Columbia through the 1970s. At various times he also served as chairman of the university's board of governors and vice president of development at the school.

In the late 1980s, Thompson was on the executive board of the extremist World Anti-Communist League.

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Preceded by:
Solon Earl Low
National Leaders of Social Credit Followed by:
Alexander Bell Patterson





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