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W. E. N. Sinclair

W.E.N. Sinclair
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Ontario (riding)
In office
1945–1947
Preceded by William Henry Moore
Succeeded by Arthur Henry Williams
Ontario MPP
In office
1934–1937
Preceded by New riding
Succeeded by Arthur Henry Williams
Constituency Ontario (riding)
In office
1919–1934
Preceded by Charles Calder
Succeeded by Riding abolished
Constituency Ontario South
In office
1911–1914
Preceded by Charles Calder
Succeeded by Charles Calder
Constituency Ontario South
Mayor of Oshawa, Ontario
In office
1911, 1915, 1932-34
Personal details
Born (1873-06-28)June 28, 1873
Whitby Township, Ontario
Died November 26, 1947(1947-11-26) (aged 74)
Ottawa, Ontario
Political party Liberal
Spouse(s) Ella Montgomery (1907–1918), Edna Worden
Occupation Lawyer

William Edmund Newton Sinclair (June 28, 1873 – November 26, 1947), known as W. E. N. Sinclair, was a Canadian barrister, solicitor and politician.

Sinclair was born in Whitby Township, Ontario, the son of John Sinclair, and was educated at Toronto University, receiving a bachelor's degree in law. In 1907, he married Ella Minerva Montgomery; he married Edna Worden in 1918 after his first wife's death.

Sinclair was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario as a candidate of the Ontario Liberal Party in the 1911 provincial election but was defeated in 1914.

He returned to politics in the 1917 federal election on conscription (see Conscription Crisis of 1917), Sinclair ran on as part of the anti-conscription "Laurier Liberals" but was again defeated.

He returned to provincial politics and was elected again to the Ontario legislature in the 1919 provincial election as the MLA for the riding of Ontario South.

Sinclair ran for the leadership of the party in the 1922 leadership convention, but lost to Wellington Hay. Hay resigned following a disastrous election result, and Sinclair served as interim leader of the Ontario Liberal Party from 1923 to 1930 and also as Leader of the Opposition in the provincial legislature. He was interim leader for that length of time (and through the elections of 1926 and 1929) because of the party's state of disorganization and inability to hold a proper leadership convention.


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