Charles Greenlay
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Charles Edwin Greenlay (born June 8, 1899 in High Bluff, Manitoba; died May 27, 1984) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a from 1943 to 1959, and was a cabinet minister in the governments of Stuart Garson and Douglas Campbell.
Greenlay was educated in High Bluff and Portage la Prairie. He served as secretary-treasurer of the rural municipality of Portage la Prairie before entering provincial politics.
He was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in a by-election held on November 18, 1943. At this time, Manitoba was governed by a coalition of Liberal-Progressives and Conservatives. Running in Portage La Prairie, Greenlay easily won election as a pro-coalition Conservative. Shortly after his election, the Conservatives renamed themselves as Progressive Conservatives.
Greenlay was re-elected as a coalition Progressive Conservative in the general election of 1945, defeating opponents from the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation and Labour Progressive Party. On February 14, 1946, he was appointed to Stuart Garson's cabinet as Provincial Secretary. When Douglas Campbell replaced Garson as Premier of Manitoba on December 14, 1948, he named Greenlay as his Minister of Labour. Greenlay would hold this portfolio until 1958, usually in tandem with other ministerial responsibilities.
Greenlay was re-elected without opposition in the 1949 provincial election. The following year, the Progressive Conservatives left the coalition government to sit on the opposition benches. Greenlay opposed this decision, and left the Progressive Conservatives to sit as a Liberal-Progressive. He was named Provincial Secretary again on February 13, 1950, also retaining the Labour portfolio.
Greenlay was re-elected as a Liberal-Progressive in the 1953 election, defeating his Progressive Conservative opponent by 324 votes. After a cabinet shuffle on September 4, 1953, he was named Minister of Mines and Natural Resources. On July 6, 1956, he was promoted to Provincial Treasurer.
The Liberal-Progressives were defeated by the Progressive Conservatives in the 1958 provincial election, although Greenlay was re-elected in Portage la Prairie with an increased majority. In the 1959 election, however, he lost his seat to Progressive Conservative candidate John Christianson by 473 votes.
Manitoba CCF leader once described Greenlay as "a mild, quiet little man, not lacking in ability but essentially cautious and stubborn". Though likeable on a personal level, he was a very conservative administrator. His decision to switch parties in 1950 was met with little controversy.