Paul Bardal(November 5, 1889 inWinnipeg,Manitoba– February 6, 1966) was a politician in Manitoba,Canada.He served in theLegislative Assembly of Manitobaas aLiberal-ProgressiveMLA from 1941 to 1945, and again from 1949 to 1953.[1]
Bardal was born to Paul Bardal and Dora Bjornson,Icelandicimmigrants living in Winnipeg, and was educated in the city. He became the director of A.S. Bardal, Funeral Directors, and was analdermanin the City of Winnipeg from 1931 to 1941. He married Oddny Bergson in 1926.[2]Bardal was also a member of the British and Foreign Bible Society, and a director of theWinnipeg Symphony Orchestra.
He first ran for the Manitoba legislature in the1936 provincial election,in the constituency ofWinnipeg(which elected ten members by asingle transferable ballot). He finished sixteenth out of twenty-one candidates on the first ballot, and was eliminated on the seventh count.
He ran again in the1941 election,and this time finished twelfth out of twenty-seven candidates on the first count. He did well on transfers, and was elected[1]to the eighth seat in the city. From 1941 to 1945, he was a backbench supporter of the ministries ofJohn BrackenandStuart Garson.
TheCooperative Commonwealth Federationpolled well in Winnipeg in the1945 provincial election,and helped to push Bardal to fifteenth place out of twenty candidates on the first ballot. He was eliminated[1]on the eleventh count.
Winnipeg's electoral map was redrawn prior to the1949 provincial election,and the city's single ten-member constituency was replaced with three four-member constituencies. Bardal sought a return to the legislature inWinnipeg Centre.Although he finished fifth out of nine candidates on the first ballot, he did well enough to transfers to defeat[1]Progressive ConservativecandidateHank Scottfor the final seat, by a margin of only 200 votes. For the next four years, he served as a backbench supporter toDouglas Campbell's government.
In March 1953, the Liberal-Progressive Party announced that it would nominate three candidates in Winnipeg Centre. Bardal declared himself a candidate, but could not attend the nomination meeting due to an illness. He was defeated by three other candidates, and left the legislature after serving out the remainder of his term.
His brotherSigurgeirwas a prominent physician in Manitoba.[2]
References
edit- ^abcd"MLA Biographies - Deceased".Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.Archived fromthe originalon 2014-03-30.
- ^ab"Paul Bardal (1889-1966)".Manitoba Historical Society.Retrieved2013-04-24.