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===Origins=== The CCF aimed to alleviate the suffering that workers and farmers, the ill and the old endured under capitalism, seen most starkly during the [[Great Depression]], through the creation of a Co-operative Commonwealth, which would entail economic co-operation, public ownership of the economy, and political reform. The object of the political party as reported at its founding meeting in Calgary in 1932 was "the federation [joining together] of organizations whose purpose is the establishment in Canada of a co-operative commonwealth, in which the basic principle of regulating production, distribution and exchange will be the supplying of human needs instead of the making of profit."<ref name="Calgary Herald, August 1, 1932"/> The goal of the CCF was defined as a "community freed from the domination of irresponsible financial and economic power in which all social means of production and distribution, including land, are socially owned and controlled either by voluntarily organized groups of producers and consumers or β in the case of major public services and utilities and such productive and distributive enterprises as can be conducted most efficiently when owned in common β by public corporations responsible to the people's elected representatives".<ref>Laurence Gronlund, ''Co-operative Commonwealth, An Exposition of Socialism'' (1884), p. 36 as quoted in Monto, Tom, ''Protest and Progress, Three Labour Radicals in Early Edmonton'', Crang Publishing/Alhambra Books, p. 156</ref> Many of the party's first [[Member of Parliament (Canada)|Members of Parliament]] (MPs) were members of the [[Ginger Group (Canada)|Ginger Group]], composed of United Farmers of Alberta, left-wing [[Progressive Party of Canada|Progressive]], and [[Labour candidates and parties in Canada|Labour]] MPs. These MPs included [[United Farmers of Alberta]] MPs [[William Irvine (Canadian politician)|William Irvine]] and [[Edward Joseph Garland|Ted Garland]], [[Agnes Macphail]] (UFO), [[Humphrey Mitchell]], [[Abraham Albert Heaps]], [[Angus MacInnis]], and Labour Party MP [[J. S. Woodsworth]]. Founding groups included the Independent Labour Party (of Manitoba), the Canadian Labour Party (mostly in Edmonton), the Dominion Labour Party of southern Alberta, the UFA, and the United Farmers of Ontario (which withdrew from the CCF in 1934).<ref>{{cite web | url=http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/quebechistory/encyclopedia/Co-operativeCommonwealthFederation-CCF-CanadianHistory.htm | title=Quebec History }}</ref> Also involved in founding the new party were members of the [[League for Social Reconstruction]] (LSR), such as [[F. R. Scott]] and [[Frank Underhill]].<ref name="Young_1969">{{cite book | last = Young | first = Walter D. | title = The anatomy of a party: the national CCF 1932β61 | publisher = University of Toronto Press | year = 1969 | location = Toronto | url = https://archive.org/details/anatomyofpartyna0000youn | url-access = registration | quote = Anatomy of a party}}</ref>{{rp|31}} It can be said that the CCF was founded on May 26, 1932, when the Ginger Group MPs and LSR members met in William Irvine's office, the unofficial caucus meeting room for the Ginger Group, and went about forming the basis of the new party.{{sfnp|McNaught|2001|pp=259β260}} J. S. Woodsworth was unanimously appointed the temporary leader until they could hold a founding convention.{{sfnp|McNaught|2001|pp=259β260}} The temporary name for the new party was the Commonwealth Party.<ref name="Young_1969"/>{{rp|30}} The [[Social Gospel]] was a significant influence on the CCF.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://esask.uregina.ca/entry/social_gospel.jsp|title=The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan | Details}}</ref> [[File:CooperativeCommonwealthFederationFoundingMeeting.jpg|left|upright=1.5|thumb|CCF founding meeting, Calgary, 1932]] At its founding convention in 1932 in Calgary, the party settled on the name "Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (Farmer-Labour-Socialist)" and selected J. S. Woodsworth as party leader.{{sfnp|Morton|1986|p=12}} Woodsworth had been an [[Independent Labour Party (Manitoba, 1920)|Independent Labour Party]] MP since 1921 and a member of the Ginger Group of MPs. The party's 1933 convention, held in [[Regina, Saskatchewan]], adopted the [[Regina Manifesto]] as the party's program. The manifesto outlined a number of goals, including [[nationalization|public ownership]] of key industries, universal public [[pension]]s, [[universal health care]], children's allowances, [[Unemployment benefits|unemployment insurance]], and [[workers' compensation]].<ref name="Young_1969"/>{{rp|304β313}} Its conclusion read, "No CCF Government will rest content until it has eradicated [[capitalism]] and put into operation the full programme of socialized planning which will lead to the establishment in Canada of the Co-operative Commonwealth."{{sfnp|Morton|1986|p=12}} The party affiliated itself with the [[Socialist International]].<ref name="Knuttila2007">{{cite book|author=Kenneth Murray Knuttila|title=The Prairie Agrarian Movement Revisited|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K03wdWJ3uLQC&pg=PA173|year=2007|publisher=University of Regina Press|isbn=978-0-88977-183-3|pages=173β}}</ref>
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