David Best (Manitoba politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Alexander Best (born November 21, 1880 in Derry, Ireland; year of death unknown) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1941 to 1945 as an anti-coalition Conservative.

Born in what is now Northern Ireland, Best was educated at Foyle College and came to Canada in 1911. He worked as an accountant and printing salesman, and was elected as the reeve of St. James, Manitoba in 1938.

Best was elected to the Manitoba legislature in the provincial election of 1941. Prior to this election, the Conservative Party of Manitoba entered a coalition government led by the Liberal Progressive Party and also including the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation and Social Credit. A number of Conservatives opposed joining the coalition, and ran for the legislature against their party's position.

Best was one of three anti-coalition Conservatives elected to the legislature in 1941. He defeated CCF incumbent James Aikens in Assiniboia by 274 votes, and served as an opposition member for the parliament that followed.

In 1943, the Conservative Party changed its name to the Progressive Conservative Party. Best ran in the 1945 provincial election as an official Progressive Conservative candidate, but lost to CCF candidate Ernest Draffin by 180 votes.