Martin Ellingham

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The Right Honourable
Martin Ellingham
Joseph McCarthy adjusted.jpg
Austin Houghton in 1958
8th Prime Minister of Imagua and the Assimas
In office
23 April, 1956 – 23 April, 1960
PresidentVenanzio Mazzone
DeputyGiovanni Almgren
Preceded byMarguerite Ernman
Succeeded byEfrem Lacovara
Senator
In office
5 October, 1973 – 9 November, 1989
Preceded byClaud Knowlton
Succeeded byDarryl Winston
Member of Parliament for Nua Taois-East
In office
23 April, 1936 – 23 April, 1960
Preceded byconstituency established
Succeeded byRichard Smith
Personal details
Born
Martin Ellingham

(1904-02-11)11 February 1904
New Taois, Saint Isidore's, Imagua
Died9 November 1989(1989-11-09) (aged 85)
Cuanstad, Imagua and the Assimas
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery, Nua Taois
NationalityEstmerish
Imaguan
Political partyConservatives
SpouseMarjory Ellingham
Children3

Martin Ellingham (b. 11 February, 1904, d. 9 November, 1989) was an Imaguan politician who served as the eighth Prime Minister of Imagua and the Assimas, succeeding Marguerite Ernman in 1956 after her defeat in that year's general election, and serving until being defeated by Efrem Lacovara in 1960.

Born in Nua Taois, he was an excellent student, and after finishing school in 1919, he worked for several years at the Bank of the Orient. In 1924, he joined the Conservatives, rising through the ranks until being elected in 1936 for Nua Taois-East. He would serve as a member of Parliament until 1960, during which time he kept rising through the ranks of the party, ultimately succeeding Frederick Maynard as Conservative parliamentary leader, serving until he lost his seat in 1960.

Following this, he remained active in the party, but played a marginal role in politics until he was appointed to the Senate in 1973. He would serve as Senator until his death in 1989.

Biography

Early life

Martin Ellingham was born on 11 February, 1904 to Chester Ellingham, a civil servant who was born in Estmere, and Georgia Ellingham, who was a housewife in Nua Taois. As the eldest of five children, and the only son, Martin was treated very well by his parents.

In 1909, he started attending school, where he was described as an excellent student. In 1914, he attended the Wensley Grammar School, where he was described as an excellent student, excelling in the humanities. After finishing his education in 1919, Martin Ellingham worked for several years as a bank teller at the Bank of the Orient.

He joined the Conservatives in 1924, and was elected as MP for the constituency of Nua Taois-East in 1936. As a backbencher member of parliament, Ellingham was an excellent legislator, helping him rise through the ranks of the Conservatives. By 1944, he became the Deputy Prime Minister, serving under Frederick Maynard until 1952, when he was defeated by Democratic Labour candidate Marguerite Ernman.

Following the defeat, Maynard resigned, and at the leadership convention, he became the leader of the Conservatives, and by extension became leader of the opposition. During his tenure, he attacked Ernman's policies for harming her base of support, and for undermining Imagua's competitiveness on the world stage, as well as accusing her policies of leading towards Swetanian-style communism.

These tactics helped secure his election to the premiership in 1956, with the Conservatives gaining seven seats in the Lesser House of Parliament.

Premiership

During his tenure as Prime Minister, Martin Ellingham focused on liberalising the Imaguan economy, in order to attract foreign businesses and reduce outsourcing by Imaguan manufacturing firms to other countries. As well, his efforts at reducing regulations were criticised by unions and by the Democratic Labour Party, whose new leader, Efrem Lacovara criticised these measures as hurting the working class.

As well, during his tenure, Martin Ellingham attempted to strengthen private healthcare, and to try and roll back measures by former Prime Minister Marguerite Ernman that made emergency care free. However, these efforts were thwarted, both by civil society, and in the Imaguan Senate, which was still controlled by the Democratic Labour Party.

These policies made Martin Ellingham unpopular, and in the 1960 election, he was defeated by Efrem Lacovara, and lost his own seat to Richard Smith.

Later years and death

After his defeat, Martin Ellingham remained an active member of the Conservatives, serving as a fundraiser and a speaker to help promote the Conservative cause. He endorsed Oswald Dunning in 1964, Roland Arnold in 1968, and Querano Piro in 1972.

In 1973, he was appointed to the Senate, succeeding Claud Knowlton, who retired. He would serve "diligently" in the Senate through the 1970s and into the 1980s, even as his health began to deteriorate.

Martin Ellingham died of a heart attack on 9 November, 1989, and after a state funeral on 14 November, 1989, he was interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in his hometown of Nua Taois.

Personal life

Martin Ellingham married Marjory Ellingham in 1923, and had three children: Rudolph Ellingham, who was born in 1924 and died in 1985, Monty Ellingham, who was born in 1926 and died in 1930 from smallpox, and Edith Angwin, who was born in 1928, and died in 2015. At the time of his death in 1989, he was survived by his wife, his daughter, three grandchildren, and one great-grandson.

He spoke Estmerish as his first language, fluent in Imaguan Creole and Ostisk, and could comfortably hold a basic conversation in Gaullican and Etrurian

Martin Ellingham was a devout Low Estmerian, having been baptised in the church and having received confirmation. Until his death, he attended services frequently.

Honours

Domestic

Foreign