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The False Historical Pretences of Canada’s Medicare

The False Historical Pretences of Canada’s Medicare
Tommy Douglas is surrounded by supporters as he arrives at the Palace Theatre to address an NDP rally in Hamilton, Ont., on June 11, 1968. The Canadian Press
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Commentary
Tommy Douglas continues to be celebrated as a national hero, referred to in media reports as the “Father of Canadian Medicare” and the “Greatest Canadian.” He has schools named after him, a commemorative stamp, a bronze statue in his hometown of Weyburn, Saskatchewan, the National Film Board’s 1986 film, “Tommy Douglas: Keeper of the Flame,” and his very own cringey, inaccurate CBC drama, “Prairie Giant: The Tommy Douglas Story,” which even former NDP Premier Allan Blakeney slammed as “seriously flawed.”)
C.P. Champion
C.P. Champion
Author
C.P. Champion, Ph.D., is the author of two books, was a fellow of the Centre for International and Defence Policy at Queen's University in 2021, and edits The Dorchester Review magazine, which he founded in 2011.