Angus MacInnis

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Angus MacInnis (September 2, 1884 - March 3, 1964) was a socialist politician and Canadian parliamentarian.

MacInnis, a trade unionist, was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in the 1930 election as an Independent Labour Member of Parliament (MP) for Vancouver. He joined the Ginger Group of socialist MPs led by J.S. Woodsworth. He helped form the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) in 1932 and thereafter sat as a CCF MP.

MacInnis retained his seat through five subsequent elections until his retirement in 1957. He was an outspoken civil libertarian and spoke against the discrimination against Japanese Canadians that was widespread in British Columbia in the 1930s and 1940s, and was an early advocate of extending the right to vote to Japanese Canadians, a right that was not won until 1949.

In 1943, he and his wife Grace MacInnis published Oriental Canadians -- Outcasts or Citizens? which, while a call for humane treatment of Japanese-Canadians, acquiesced to the prevailing mood at the time that favoured "evacuating" Japanese Canadians from the Pacific coast of British Columbia for reasons of wartime security.

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