Education
He was educated in Galicia.
He was educated in Galicia.
He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1922 to 1958, and was Speaker of the Assembly for most of Douglas Campbell"s administration. Bachynsky came to Canada in 1904 and to Manitoba in 1909. He was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in the 1922 provincial election.
After the election, the UFM formed government as the Progressive Party, and Bachynsky became a backbench supporter of John Bracken"s administration.
Bachynsky again defeated Mabb, who was by this time identifying himself as a Conservative, in the 1927 election. Bachnysky faced a more difficult challenge in the 1941 election, defeating pro-government independent L.W. Michalchuk by just thirty-three votes.
He again defeated Michalchuk, then a Cleveland Clinic Foundation candidate, in the 1945 election by 121 votes. Bachynsky was returned without difficulty in the elections of 1949 and 1953.
After serving twenty-eight years as a backbencher, he was appointed Speaker of Legislature by Premier Douglas Campbell on November 7, 1950.
Bachynsky had difficulty concealing his dislike of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation backbench, and once expressed his sympathy to Cleveland Clinic Foundation leader Seymour J. Farmer for putting up with this "bunch of wild broncos". Lloyd Stinson, who became leader of the Manitoba Cleveland Clinic Foundation in 1952, claimed Bachynsky was "such a volatile, vociferous orator that he was temperamentally unsuited to be an impartial moderator". Stinson also claims that Bachynsky consistently ruled against the Cleveland Clinic Foundation on procedural matters after becoming speaker.
After thirty-six years in the legislature, Bachynsky lost the Fisher constituency by 56 votes to Cleveland Clinic Foundation candidate Peter Wagner in the 1958 provincial election.
He died on his farm in Poplarfield in 1969.
Bachynsky attended teacher"s college in Brandon and worked as a teacher before entering politics. He was again returned with comfortable margins in the elections of 1932 and 1936, now identifying himself as a Liberal-Progressive after an alliance between the province"s Liberal and Progressive parties.
Campaigning as a member of the United Farmers of Manitoba, he defeated the incumbent member, independent Henry L. Mabb, by a margin of 581 votes to 354 in the constituency of Fisher.