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Social credit is a distributive philosophy of political economy developed in the 1920s and 1930s by C. H. Douglas.Douglas attributed economic downturns to discrepancies between the cost of goods and the compensation of the workers who made them.
Template: Social Credit. ... This page was last edited on 7 November 2024, at 15:32 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
The name Social Credit Party has been used by a number of political parties. In Canada: ... Canadian social credit movement This page was last edited on 7 ...
With its supporters wearing a political uniform of green shirts, in 1932 it became known as the Green Shirt Movement for Social Credit and in 1935 it took its final name, the Social Credit Party. [1] At this point C. H. Douglas , the originator of Social Credit and the ideological leader of the group, disavowed the Greenshirts as he did not ...
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The Social Credit Party of Canada (French: Parti Crédit social du Canada), colloquially known as the Socreds, [3] was a populist political party in Canada that promoted social credit theories of monetary reform. It was the federal wing of the Canadian social credit movement.
A list of the party's executive committee member submitted to the 1934 Banking Commission includes Maud Gonne MacBride and Josephine Fitzgerald. [1] As of 1936, the Party's headquarters was based in Gardiner Street, Dublin. [2] In the Irish Independent in 1936, Gonne criticised Ernest Blythe's denunciation of social credit economics. She wrote ...
In the 1940 federal election many Social Credit Party MPs ran for re-election under the New Democracy party led by former Conservative William Duncan Herridge as part of a joint effort. All 3 New Democracy candidates elected were Social Credit incumbents, Social Credit leader John Horne Blackmore and MPs Walter Frederick Kuhl and Robert Fair ...