xiàn dài jiā zuòzhělièbiǎo
· fēn · shèng luò lǎng Louis Stephen St. Laurentyuē hàn · qiáo zhì · fēn bèi John George Diefenbaker
lāi · 'ěr xùn Lester Bowles Pearson 'āi 'ěr · duō Joseph Philippe Pierre Yves Elliott Trudeau
chá 'ěr · yuē · Joe Clark 'āi 'ěr · duō Joseph Philippe Pierre Yves Elliott Trudeau
yuē hàn · nèi 'ěr · John Napier Turner dīng · lài 'ēn · 'ěr luó Martin Brian Mulroney
jīn · kǎn bèi 'ěr Kim Campbellràng · léi 'ān Joseph Jacques Jean Chrétien
bǎo luó · dīng Paul Edgar Philippe Martin fēn · Stephen Joseph Harper
jiǎ tíng · duō Justin Pierre James Trudeau
· fēn · shèng luò lǎng Louis Stephen St. Laurent
xiàn dài jiā   (1882niánèryuè1rì1973niánqīyuè25rì)
chūshēngdì: jiā kuí běi shěng kāng dùn
qùshìdì: jiā kuí běi shěng kuí běi shì
kāiduānzhōngjié
zàiwèi1948niánshíyīyuè15rì1957niánliùyuè21rì

路易·斯蒂芬·圣洛朗Louis Stephen St. Laurent)(1882年2月1日-1973年7月25日),是第16任加拿大总理大臣。


Louis Stephen St. Laurent PC CC QC (Saint-Laurent or St-Laurent in French, baptized Louis-Étienne St-Laurent; 1 February 1882 – 25 July 1973) was a Canadian politician who served as the 12th prime minister of Canada, from 15 November 1948 to 21 June 1957. He was a Liberal with a strong base in the Catholic francophone community, from which base he had long mobilised support to Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. St. Laurent was an enthusiastic proponent of Canada's joining NATO in 1949 to fight the spread of Communism, overcoming opposition from some intellectuals, the Labor-Progressive Party, and many French Canadians. The contrast with Mackenzie King was not dramatic – they agreed on most policies. St. Laurent had more hatred of communism, and less fear of the United States. He was neither an idealist nor a bookish intellectual, but an "eminently moderate, cautious... man ... and a strong Canadian nationalist".
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