Canada’s electoral encyclopedia

The Reconstruction Party (1934–1938)

by Maurice Y. Michaud (he/him)

Alternative scenariosDespite clear evidence that unemployment was rising sharply by the time the 1930 general election was called, the Liberal prime minister at the time, Mackenzie King, seemed to be in denial about it. As a result, when the Conservative party leader, Richard Bennett, campaigned on a platform of undertaking aggressive measures in order to combat it, his message resonated among voters and his party formed a majority government. However, massive government intervention in the economy going against the DNA of the Conservatives, a key minister and long-time Conservative who was in favour of such measures, Henry Stevens, left the party in 1934 and formed his own for the 1935 general election: the Reconstruction Party.

Let’s begin by looking at the final results. Of the 388,746 votes shown here as “Other,” the vast majority — 384,957 — had gone to the Reconstruction Party, giving it an 8.75% vote share nationwide. But only Stevens won his seat of Kootenay East in British Columbia.

Canada Canada
18 → 1935 :: 14 Oct 1935 — 25 Mar 1940 — Majority Majority  LPC 
Summary Government Opposition Lost votes
Party Votes Seats Party Votes Seats Party Votes
# % % # # % % # # %
Parliament: 18   Majority Majority
Majority=123  Ab.Maj.: +55  G.Maj.: +109
Population [1931]: 10,367,470
Eligible: 5,897,376  Particip.: 74.63%
Votes: 4,400,960  Lost: 138,554
Seats: 245   1 seat = 0.41%
↳ Elec.Sys.:  FPTP: 241  PAL: 4  
↳ By acclamation: 0 (0.00%)
Plurality: Votes  LPC  Seats  LPC 
Plurality:  +712,995 (+15.85%)
Plurality:  Seats: +138 (+56.32%)
Position2: Votes  LC  Seats  LC 
Candidacies: 889 (✓ 245)   m: 873 (✓ 243)   f: 16 (✓ 2)
 LPC  254   LC  228   SC  46   CCF  116   OTH  228   IND  16   PROG  1  
 LPC 
2,005,791 45.58 72.24 177
 LC 
 SC 
 CCF 
 OTH 
 PROG 
 IND 
1,292,796
180,679
382,687
388,746
7,210
4,497
29.38
4.11
8.70
8.83
0.16
0.10
15.92
6.94
2.86
1.22
0.41
0.41
39
17
7
3
1
1
 OTH 
 IND 
 REJ 
 ABS 
122,437
16,117
——
1,496,416
2.78
0.37
——
——
 LPC  LPC  246 (✓ 173)   LLAB  3 (✓ 0)   LIBP  5 (✓ 4)
 PROG  UFOL  1 (✓ 1)
 REC  Ephemeral party of dissident Conservatives led by Henry H. Stevens and dissolved by 1938.
 OTH  REC  171 (✓ 1)   ILIB  24 (✓ 1)   ICON  4 (✓ 1)   COMM  15   LAB  5
 OTH  PRCO  2   VERD  1   NUPC  1   IREC  1   TECH  1   SOC  1   ILAB  1   ILAB  1
 !!!  44 (17.96%)

However, this summary does not show that 13 Reconstructionists finished in second place, and 96 in third. Therefore, it behooves us to find out how many seats, if any, Stevens’ party robbed from the Conservatives by allowing a Liberal to be the first past the post. Would the Liberals still have had a majority, which, at the time, was 123 seats?

To find the answer, let’s:

  1. Consider  REC  the party causing the vote splitting and  LC  the one affected by it.
  2. Set aside the 141 ridings where the person elected:
    • had a clear majority (50%+1) and represented neither  REC  nor  LC , or
    • represented  LC  and thus wasn’t affected by vote splitting,
    which leaves us with 104 ridings.
  3. Transfer the votes received by  REC  to  LC  if the latter did not already win the riding.
  4. Recalculate the results in each of those 104 ridings to find the ones where the winning party would have been different.

Thus we could conclude that there would have been 42 differences.

Seats won due to vote splitting    LPC  41    Seats won by the spoiler party   REC  1
Riding Alternative LPC LC SC CCF PROG ILIB ICON REC IND
Election → 177 39 17 7 1 1 1 1 1
Details
BC
Transfer
Henry Stevens +565 (38.81%)
 REC   LC    40           0  
BC
 LC  REC  +464 (52.81%)
Olof Hanson +1,287 (47.19%)
 LPC   LC  176 41              
MB
 LC  REC  +247 (51.21%)
Howard Winkler +520 (48.79%)
 LPC   LC  175 42              
MB
 LC  REC  +454 (27.79%)
John Turner +0 (24.66%)
 LPC   LC  174 43              
MB
 LC  REC  +760 (38.82%)
Ralph Maybank +1,882 (36.36%)
 LPC   LC  173 44              
NB
 LC  REC  +612 (49.90%)
William Ryan +3,482 (47.96%)
 LPC   LC  172 45              
NB
 LC  REC  +696 (52.22%)
Jack Patterson +1,095 (47.78%)
 LPC   LC  171 46              
NB
 LC  REC  +1,252 (53.16%)
William Clark +254 (46.85%)
 LPC   LC  170 47              
NS
 LC  REC  +987 (53.55%)
Daniel Cameron +2,390 (46.45%)
 LPC   LC  169 48              
NS
 LC  REC  +1,954 (43.94%)
David Hartigan +3,054 (36.99%)
 LPC   LC  168 49              
NS
 LC  REC  +1,717 (54.10%)
Gordon Purdy +206 (45.90%)
 LPC   LC  167 50              
NS
 LC  REC  +2,154 (56.30%)
Kenneth Cochrane +315 (43.70%)
 LPC   LC  166 51              
NS
 LC  REC  +2,299 (56.00%)
Henry McCulloch +1,903 (43.99%)
 LPC   LC  165 52              
ON
 LC  REC  +570 (50.39%)
George Wood +707 (44.49%)
 LPC   LC  164 53              
ON
 LC  REC  +330 (46.15%)
William Macdonald +872 (44.17%)
 LPC   LC  163 54              
ON
 LC  REC  +1,291 (54.31%)
William Tomlinson +1,682 (45.68%)
 LPC   LC  162 55              
ON
 LC  REC  +58 (48.41%)
Frank Rickard +473 (48.00%)
 LPC   LC  161 56              
ON
 LC  REC  +6 (50.02%)
Wilson Mills +1,787 (49.99%)
 LPC   LC  160 57              
ON
 LC  REC  +33 (39.43%)
Paul Martin Sr. +1,069 (39.26%)
 LPC   LC  159 58              
ON
 LC  REC  +1,114 (47.83%)
Dan McIvor +916 (39.75%)
 LPC   LC  158 59              
ON
 LC  REC  +472 (47.90%)
William Telford +1,320 (45.25%)
 LPC   LC  157 60              
ON
 LC  REC  +845 (53.20%)
Hughes Cleaver +1,031 (46.80%)
 LPC   LC  156 61              
ON
 LC  REC  +469 (51.15%)
Charles Cameron +410 (48.85%)
 LPC   LC  155 62              
ON
 LC  REC  +1,500 (55.84%)
Rork Ferguson +1,052 (44.16%)
 LPC   LC  154 63              
ON
 LC  REC  +989 (53.53%)
Robert Deachman +583 (46.47%)
 LPC   LC  153 64              
ON
 LC  REC  +1,669 (55.51%)
Hugh MacKenzie +1,680 (44.49%)
 LPC   LC  152 65              
ON
 LC  REC  +278 (46.76%)
Duncan Ross +1,549 (45.01%)
 LPC   LC  151 66              
ON
 LC  REC  +358 (49.26%)
Stephen Furniss +857 (47.20%)
 LPC   LC  150 67              
ON
 LC  REC  +990 (50.88%)
Franklin Ahearn +6,284 (48.64%)
 LPC   LC  149 68              
ON
 LC  REC  +170 (48.50%)
Almon Rennie +2,783 (47.79%)
 LPC   LC  148 69              
ON
 LC  REC  +1,386 (49.72%)
Joseph Duffus +1,685 (42.41%)
 LPC   LC  147 70              
ON
 LC  REC  +31 (50.13%)
Matthew McKay +1,918 (49.87%)
 LPC   LC  146 71              
ON
 LC  REC  +2,401 (48.36%)
Hugh Plaxton +865 (39.34%)
 LPC   LC  145 72              
ON
 LC  REC  +498 (51.47%)
Bruce McNevin +60 (48.53%)
 LPC   LC  144 73              
ON
 LC  REC  +4,259 (48.46%)
John Streight +60 (31.89%)
 LPC   LC  143 74              
QC
 LC  REC  +1,359 (54.26%)
Léon-Vital Mallette +513 (45.75%)
 LPC   LC  142 75              
QC
 LC  REC  +499 (49.89%)
Armand Sylvestre +162 (47.33%)
 LPC   LC  141 76              
QC
 LC  REC  +2,877 (53.25%)
Sarto Fournier +3,268 (42.05%)
 LPC   LC  140 77              
QC
 LC  REC  +4,323 (65.12%)
 LPC   LC  139 78              
QC
 LC  REC  +1,220 (37.93%)
Wallace McDonald +82 (31.26%)
 LPC   LC  138 79              
QC
 LC  REC  +311 (51.33%)
Robert Davidson +123 (48.67%)
 LPC   LC  137 80              
QC
 LC  REC  +683 (33.44%)
Wilfrid Gariépy +366 (30.08%)
 LPC   LC  136 81              
Redistribution → 136 81 17 7 1 1 1 0 1

So yes, the Liberals would still have had a majority, but it would have been of +14 instead of +55. For their part, the Reconstructionists returned to the Conservative fold in 1938.



© 2005, 2025 :: PoliCan.ca (Maurice Y. Michaud)
Pub.: 21 May 2023 10:03
Rev.: 29 Jul 2025 20:37 (but data presented dynamically)