Canada’s electoral encyclopedia

The nasty split on the Right

by Maurice Y. Michaud (he/him)

Alternative scenariosIn 1968, Trudeaumania returned the Liberals to power with their first majority mandate since the Louis St-Laurent years. While Atlantic Canada was impervious to it and strongly favoured the Conservatives, even the West got enthralled, to the point that four Liberals were elected in Alberta and two in Saskatchewan. But by the 1972 election, the honeymoon was long over. Through the 1970s, Atlantic Canada gradually drifted towards the Liberals, while the West returned to its pattern of overwhelmingly supporting the right-of-centre. After a series of policy measures seen as working against their economic interests, and on-going resentment about having both English and French appear on their cereal boxes, the West felt increasingly alienated from the rest of the country.

The decisive tipping point from which echoes are still heard in the 21st century was the imposition of the National Energy Program in 1980. However, lacking a viable right-of-centre alternative, the West begrudgingly continued to vote for the Progressive Conservatives, viewing them as the least bad option. That was until Preston Manning founded the Reform Party of Canada in late 1987. Running only 72 candidates from Manitoba westward in the 1988 elec­tion, the party didn’t enjoy much success in an election that was dominated by a single issue: free trade with the United States. But in the following years, a long series of acrimonious (and failed) constitutional debates, and an increasing sense that Ontario and Québec dominated the political discourse at the expense of the West, brought the Reform Party to build a strong base for itself just in time for the 1993 election, and the split on the right of the Canadian political spectrum began in earnest. The infighting lasted a decade, and the Liberals profited from it by winning three majority governments in a row.

So let’s begin with 1993, which saw the most consequential federal general election of the late 20th century. Two of the three main­stream parties collapsed. Before this election, the NDP held the most seats it had ever had in Parliament, but more importantly, the PCs had been the governming party with a comfortable majority. But both parties failed to win the 12 seats required to retain their official party status in the Commons.

Canada Canada
35 → 1993 :: 25 Oct 1993 —  1 Jun 1997 — Majority Majority  LPC 
Summary Government Opposition Lost votes
Party Votes Seats Party Votes Seats Party Votes
# % % # # % % # # %
Parliament: 35   Majority Majority
Majority=148  Ab.Maj.: +30  G.Maj.: +59
Population [1993]: 28,600,864 (est.)
Eligible: 19,814,718  Particip.: 69.96%
Votes: 13,862,010  Lost: 662,449
Seats: 295   1 seat = 0.34%
↳ Elec.Sys.:  FPTP: 295  
↳ By acclamation: 0 (0.00%)
Plurality: Votes  LPC  Seats  LPC 
Plurality:  +3,088,707 (+22.60%)
Plurality:  Seats: +123 (+41.69%)
Position2: Votes  REF  Seats  BQ 
Candidacies: 2,156 (✓ 295)   m: 1,678 (✓ 242)   f: 478 (✓ 53)
 LPC  295   BQ  75   REF  207   NDP  294   PCPC  295   IND  152   GPC  79   OTH  759  
 LPC 
5,647,952 41.32 60.00 177
 BQ 
 REF 
 NDP 
 PCPC 
 IND 
1,846,024
2,559,245
939,575
2,186,422
20,343
13.51
18.72
6.87
16.00
0.15
18.31
17.63
3.05
0.68
0.34
54
52
9
2
1
 IND 
 GPC 
 OTH 
 REJ 
 ABS 
89,050
32,979
346,081
194,339
5,952,708
0.65
0.24
2.53
1.40
——
 OTH  NP  171   NLP  231   CHP  59   LBT  52   ABOL  80   CAN  56   CWC  59   ML  51
 !!!  99 (33.56%)

Jean Chrétien’s Liberals obviously performed better than any other party, but hidden behind their 30-seat majority is the fact that they obtained only 41.32% of the popular vote nationwide. That could hardly be called a massive love affair, although they were quick to counter that they had representation from coast to coast to coast. But while their sweep of all but one seat in Ontario certainly looked impressive, how much of it did they owe to vote splitting between the battered PCs and the fledging Reformers?

To find the answer, let’s:

  1. Consider  REF  the party causing the vote splitting and  PCPC  the one affected by it.
  2. Set aside the 147 ridings where the person elected:
    • had a clear majority (50%+1) and represented neither  REF  nor  PCPC , or
    • represented  PCPC  and thus wasn’t affected by vote splitting,
    which leaves us with 148 ridings.
  3. Transfer the votes received by  REF  to  PCPC  if the latter did not already win the riding.
  4. Recalculate the results in each of those 148 ridings to find the ones where the winning party would have been different.

Thus we could conclude that there would have been 99 differences.

Seats won due to vote splitting    LPC  43    NDP  4    Seats won by the spoiler party   REF  52
Riding Alternative LPC BQ REF NDP PCPC IND      
Election → 177 54 52 9 2 1
Details
AB
Transfer
David Chatters +7,330 (47.07%)
 REF   PCPC      51   3        
AB
Transfer
Deborah Grey +10,183 (58.00%)
 REF   PCPC      50   4        
AB
Transfer
Jim Silye +7,443 (45.08%)
 REF   PCPC      49   5        
AB
Transfer
Diane Ablonczy +17,609 (52.45%)
 REF   PCPC      48   6        
AB
Transfer
Art Hanger +5,591 (44.35%)
 REF   PCPC      47   7        
AB
Transfer
Jan Brown +22,277 (59.85%)
 REF   PCPC      46   8        
AB
Transfer
Preston Manning +28,988 (61.22%)
 REF   PCPC      45   9        
AB
Transfer
Stephen Harper +14,895 (52.25%)
 REF   PCPC      44   10        
AB
Transfer
Jack Ramsay +17,180 (65.98%)
 REF   PCPC      43   11        
AB
 PCPC  REF  +2,557 (40.03%)
Judy Bethel +115 (32.96%)
 LPC   PCPC  176       12        
AB
 PCPC  REF  +4,390 (48.34%)
John Loney +202 (39.47%)
 LPC   PCPC  175       13        
AB
 PCPC  REF  +3,473 (45.66%)
Anne McLellan +12 (35.80%)
 LPC   PCPC  174       14        
AB
Transfer
Ian McClelland +7,012 (45.45%)
 REF   PCPC      42   15        
AB
Transfer
Hugh Hanrahan +404 (39.33%)
 REF   PCPC      41   16        
AB
Transfer
Ken Epp +14,137 (56.04%)
 REF   PCPC      40   17        
AB
Transfer
Ray Speaker +12,660 (52.63%)
 REF   PCPC      39   18        
AB
Transfer
Grant Hill +17,316 (63.27%)
 REF   PCPC      38   19        
AB
Transfer
Monte Solberg +13,884 (54.71%)
 REF   PCPC      37   20        
AB
Transfer
Charlie Penson +19,132 (60.22%)
 REF   PCPC      36   21        
AB
Transfer
Bob Mills +23,870 (64.81%)
 REF   PCPC      35   22        
AB
Transfer
John Williams +11,104 (50.94%)
 REF   PCPC      34   23        
AB
Transfer
Leon Benoit +11,552 (54.74%)
 REF   PCPC      33   24        
AB
Transfer
Dale Johnston +19,296 (63.41%)
 REF   PCPC      32   25        
AB
Transfer
Myron Thompson +23,444 (63.75%)
 REF   PCPC      31   26        
AB
Transfer
Cliff Breitkreuz +13,826 (55.04%)
 REF   PCPC      30   27        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +443 (34.97%)
Svend Robinson +4,217 (34.15%)
 NDP   PCPC        8 28        
BC
Transfer
Herb Grubel +4,653 (41.95%)
 REF   PCPC      29   29        
BC
Transfer
Philip Mayfield +3,049 (36.44%)
 REF   PCPC      28   30        
BC
Transfer
Bill Gilmour +13,466 (44.17%)
 REF   PCPC      27   31        
BC
Transfer
John Cummins +3,680 (38.20%)
 REF   PCPC      26   32        
BC
Transfer
Keith Martin +3,752 (35.29%)
 REF   PCPC      25   33        
BC
Transfer
Chuck Strahl +7,712 (45.91%)
 REF   PCPC      24   34        
BC
Transfer
Randy White +12,220 (49.10%)
 REF   PCPC      23   35        
BC
Transfer
Jim Abbott +9,135 (48.42%)
 REF   PCPC      22   36        
BC
Transfer
Jim Gouk +728 (32.46%)
 REF   PCPC      21   37        
BC
Transfer
Daphne Jennings +5,394 (36.71%)
 REF   PCPC      20   38        
BC
Transfer
Bob Ringma +11,499 (41.22%)
 REF   PCPC      19   39        
BC
Transfer
Paul Forseth +814 (29.33%)
 REF   PCPC      18   40        
BC
Transfer
John Duncan +6,376 (39.28%)
 REF   PCPC      17   41        
BC
Transfer
Ted White +4,279 (39.97%)
 REF   PCPC      16   42        
BC
Transfer
Werner Schmidt +15,015 (46.62%)
 REF   PCPC      15   43        
BC
Transfer
Darrel Stinson +9,227 (42.44%)
 REF   PCPC      14   44        
BC
Transfer
Jim Hart +9,268 (43.59%)
 REF   PCPC      13   45        
BC
Transfer
Sharon Hayes +3,711 (33.97%)
 REF   PCPC      12   46        
BC
Transfer
Dick Harris +6,231 (40.29%)
 REF   PCPC      11   47        
BC
Transfer
Jay Hill +13,584 (56.39%)
 REF   PCPC      10   48        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +7,476 (49.96%)
Raymond Chan +3,557 (37.05%)
 LPC   PCPC  173       49        
BC
Transfer
Jack Frazer +8,038 (37.21%)
 REF   PCPC      9   50        
BC
Transfer
Mike Scott +4,408 (37.90%)
 REF   PCPC      8   51        
BC
Transfer
Margaret Bridgman +6,413 (36.94%)
 REF   PCPC      7   52        
BC
Transfer
Val Meredith +7,515 (44.11%)
 REF   PCPC      6   53        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +7,414 (42.56%)
Hedy Fry +3,821 (31.09%)
 LPC   PCPC  172       54        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +83 (39.62%)
Ted McWhinney +8,919 (39.46%)
 LPC   PCPC  171       55        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +6,436 (48.93%)
Herb Dhaliwal +4,923 (35.61%)
 LPC   PCPC  170       56        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +470 (38.02%)
David Anderson +5,579 (37.21%)
 LPC   PCPC  169       57        
MB
 PCPC  REF  +7,269 (52.78%)
Glen McKinnon +967 (33.00%)
 LPC   PCPC  168       58        
MB
 PCPC  REF  +4,532 (45.30%)
Marlene Cowling +735 (31.73%)
 LPC   PCPC  167       59        
MB
Transfer
Jake Hoeppner +4,653 (41.02%)
 REF   PCPC      5   60        
MB
 PCPC  REF  +2,331 (47.21%)
Jon Gerrard +4,705 (40.68%)
 LPC   PCPC  166       61        
MB
 PCPC  REF  +1,109 (47.07%)
David Iftody +2,656 (44.04%)
 LPC   PCPC  165       62        
MB
 PCPC  REF  +2,096 (37.18%)
Ron Fewchuk +3,488 (32.88%)
 LPC   PCPC  164       63        
NB
 PCPC  REF  +3,020 (52.43%)
Harold Culbert +811 (43.11%)
 LPC   PCPC  163       64        
NL
 PCPC  REF  +412 (45.10%)
Bonnie Hickey +950 (44.20%)
 LPC   PCPC  162       65        
NS
 PCPC  REF  +1,642 (47.90%)
Roseanne Skoke +4,255 (43.52%)
 LPC   PCPC  161       66        
NS
 PCPC  REF  +3,056 (49.71%)
Dianne Brushett +2,582 (42.58%)
 LPC   PCPC  160       67        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,077 (48.35%)
Gurbax Malhi +5,779 (43.26%)
 LPC   PCPC  159       68        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,732 (49.54%)
Paddy Torsney +9,303 (44.26%)
 LPC   PCPC  158       69        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +6,542 (50.87%)
Janko Peric +3,231 (39.26%)
 LPC   PCPC  157       70        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +11,100 (54.99%)
Alex Shepherd +3,840 (36.76%)
 LPC   PCPC  156       71        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +1,992 (47.96%)
Gar Knutson +6,310 (43.05%)
 LPC   PCPC  155       72        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +3,521 (49.73%)
Jean Augustine +5,152 (42.11%)
 LPC   PCPC  154       73        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +3,949 (45.60%)
Brenda Chamberlain +8,876 (39.24%)
 LPC   PCPC  153       74        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +12,898 (58.43%)
Julian Reed +3,928 (37.00%)
 LPC   PCPC  152       75        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +1,389 (47.95%)
John Bryden +13,150 (45.81%)
 LPC   PCPC  151       76        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,471 (49.10%)
Paul Steckle +7,993 (44.11%)
 LPC   PCPC  150       77        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +1,723 (48.74%)
Jag Bhaduria +16,214 (46.50%)
 LPC   PCPC  149       78        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +877 (48.49%)
Paul Szabo +9,886 (46.59%)
 LPC   PCPC  148       79        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +35 (47.18%)
Gary Pillitteri +9,672 (47.10%)
 LPC   PCPC  147       80        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,420 (49.86%)
Bonnie Brown +14,927 (46.56%)
 LPC   PCPC  146       81        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +6,289 (50.40%)
Dan McTeague +10,583 (43.35%)
 LPC   PCPC  145       82        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,315 (43.93%)
Ivan Grose +3,825 (38.27%)
 LPC   PCPC  144       83        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +3,841 (49.16%)
John Finlay +7,016 (41.13%)
 LPC   PCPC  143       84        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,124 (48.82%)
Andy Mitchell +7,405 (44.22%)
 LPC   PCPC  142       85        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,895 (49.48%)
Jack Richardson +7,940 (43.26%)
 LPC   PCPC  141       86        
ON
Transfer
Ed Harper +182 (37.91%)
 REF   PCPC      4   87        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +7,523 (53.83%)
Paul DeVillers +5,618 (40.61%)
 LPC   PCPC  140       88        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +7,773 (50.66%)
John O'Reilly +4,605 (36.74%)
 LPC   PCPC  139       89        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +4,756 (49.77%)
Andrew Telegdi +10,353 (42.14%)
 LPC   PCPC  138       90        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +13,630 (59.71%)
Murray Calder +1,770 (35.80%)
 LPC   PCPC  137       91        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +11,487 (55.53%)
Karen Kraft Sloan +4,627 (38.92%)
 LPC   PCPC  136       92        
SK
Transfer
Elwin Hermanson +3,836 (40.45%)
 REF   PCPC      3   93        
SK
 PCPC  REF  +2,644 (39.86%)
Vic Althouse +1,238 (31.14%)
 NDP   PCPC        7 94        
SK
Transfer
Allan Kerpan +310 (30.34%)
 REF   PCPC      2   95        
SK
 PCPC  REF  +2,997 (38.39%)
Chris Axworthy +1,066 (30.85%)
 NDP   PCPC        6 96        
SK
 PCPC  REF  +1,847 (39.28%)
Georgette Sheridan +1,683 (34.34%)
 LPC   PCPC  135       97        
SK
 PCPC  REF  +4,451 (45.66%)
Bernie Collins +591 (32.43%)
 LPC   PCPC  134       98        
SK
Transfer
Lee Morrison +825 (34.88%)
 REF   PCPC      1   99        
SK
 PCPC  REF  +3,570 (42.64%)
Len Taylor +729 (31.23%)
 NDP   PCPC        5 100        
SK
Transfer
Garry Breitkreuz +1,074 (32.68%)
 REF   PCPC      0   101        
Redistribution → 134 54 0 5 101 1

Indeed, vote splitting gave the Liberals 43 seats, with more than half (24) being in Ontario. And as sad as the New Democrats’ per­for­mance was, they, too, benefitted from vote splitting in the West. They would have been reduced to only five seats if the right had been united, and one of them would NOT have been Svend Robinson’s!

The grievance that Canadian conservatism had been dominated by the East at the expense of the West had gained credence by 1997. Conservative-minded spirits in the East viewed the Reform Party as too extreme, while those in the West viewed the Progressive Conservatives as too soft. There were indeed two solitudes within the conservative family, but when­ever one of them dared to suggest a rapprochement, they expected that it would be on their terms. The PCs wanted to believe that the spanking they received in 1993 was simply a result of the wear of power, and people would eventually return to the party of John A. But Reformers believed that they represented the real future of conservatism in Canada. History would reveal that the latter were right, but they would have to wait six more years before seeing an end to the split. In 1997, the civil war within this political family made its members blind to the vulnerability of the Liberals who had angered a lot of people in their first mandate.

Canada Canada
36 → 1997 ::  2 Jun 1997 — 26 Nov 2000 — Majority Majority  LPC 
Summary Government Opposition Lost votes
Party Votes Seats Party Votes Seats Party Votes
# % % # # % % # # %
Parliament: 36   Majority Majority
Majority=151  Ab.Maj.: +5  G.Maj.: +9
Population [1997]: 29,818,012 (est.)
Eligible: 19,672,879  Particip.: 66.96%
Votes: 13,172,106  Lost: 380,551
Seats: 301   1 seat = 0.33%
↳ Elec.Sys.:  FPTP: 301  
↳ By acclamation: 0 (0.00%)
Plurality: Votes  LPC  Seats  LPC 
Plurality:  +2,481,197 (+19.11%)
Plurality:  Seats: +95 (+31.57%)
Position2: Votes  REF  Seats  REF 
Candidacies: 1,672 (✓ 301)   m: 1,262 (✓ 239)   f: 410 (✓ 62)
 LPC  301   REF  227   BQ  75   NDP  301   PCPC  301   IND  76   GPC  79   OTH  312  
 LPC 
4,994,277 38.46 51.50 155
 REF 
 BQ 
 NDP 
 PCPC 
 IND 
2,513,080
1,385,821
1,434,509
2,446,705
17,163
19.35
10.67
11.05
18.84
0.13
19.93
14.62
6.98
6.64
0.33
60
44
21
20
1
 IND 
 GPC 
 OTH 
 REJ 
 ABS 
43,596
55,583
95,140
186,232
6,500,773
0.34
0.43
0.73
1.41
——
Difference since the previous general election: +6 seats
 OTH  NLP  136   CHP  53   ACT  58   ML  65
 !!!  177 (58.80%)

On election night, as the results came in from Atlantic Canada, probably many were the Liberals who were clutching their pearls. They had swept up all but one of the region’s 32 seats in 1993, the holdout being the one of two seats the PCs had managed to hold, namely Elsie Wayne’s in Saint John. But in 1997, they exited the region with only 11 seats — five through vote splitting and two fewer than the PCs, but three more than — damn! — the NDP. It looked like it was going to be a long night!

Then encouraging signs emerged from Québec. The Bloc Québécois was still strong but dropped to 44 seats compared to their 52 in 1993, and the Liberals were winning the popular vote. The PCs also felt encouraged, picking up four seats in addition to their leader’s. Moreover, “Fortress Ontario” was holding. But how much of that was due to vote splitting?

To find the answer, let’s:

  1. Consider  REF  the party causing the vote splitting and  PCPC  the one affected by it.
  2. Set aside the 92 ridings where the person elected:
    • had a clear majority (50%+1) and represented neither  REF  nor  PCPC , or
    • represented  PCPC  and thus wasn’t affected by vote splitting,
    which leaves us with 209 ridings.
  3. Transfer the votes received by  REF  to  PCPC  if the latter did not already win the riding.
  4. Recalculate the results in each of those 209 ridings to find the ones where the winning party would have been different.

Thus we could conclude that there would have been 102 differences.

Seats won due to vote splitting    LPC  38    NDP  4    Seats won by the spoiler party   REF  60
Riding Alternative LPC REF BQ NDP PCPC IND      
Election → 155 60 44 21 20 1
Details
AB
Transfer
David Chatters +6,607 (54.62%)
 REF   PCPC    59     21        
AB
Transfer
Eric Lowther +3,705 (40.08%)
 REF   PCPC    58     22        
AB
Transfer
Deepak Obhrai +6,042 (44.98%)
 REF   PCPC    57     23        
AB
Transfer
Art Hanger +10,073 (52.11%)
 REF   PCPC    56     24        
AB
Transfer
Jason Kenney +14,035 (55.02%)
 REF   PCPC    55     25        
AB
Transfer
Preston Manning +18,206 (57.99%)
 REF   PCPC    54     26        
AB
Transfer
Rob Anders +9,601 (47.20%)
 REF   PCPC    53     27        
AB
Transfer
Diane Ablonczy +13,223 (51.80%)
 REF   PCPC    52     28        
AB
Transfer
Jack Ramsay +23,910 (70.99%)
 REF   PCPC    51     29        
AB
Transfer
Peter Goldring +3,470 (44.58%)
 REF   PCPC    50     30        
AB
Transfer
Deborah Grey +4,304 (44.30%)
 REF   PCPC    49     31        
AB
 PCPC  REF  +544 (47.68%)
David Kilgour +1,450 (45.98%)
 LPC   PCPC  154       32        
AB
Transfer
Ian McClelland +7,864 (51.34%)
 REF   PCPC    48     33        
AB
 PCPC  REF  +1,509 (47.13%)
Anne McLellan +1,410 (43.45%)
 LPC   PCPC  153       34        
AB
Transfer
Rahim Jaffer +2,951 (41.30%)
 REF   PCPC    47     35        
AB
Transfer
Ken Epp +17,740 (60.64%)
 REF   PCPC    46     36        
AB
Transfer
Leon Benoit +16,238 (59.28%)
 REF   PCPC    45     37        
AB
Transfer
Rick Casson +14,941 (55.53%)
 REF   PCPC    44     38        
AB
Transfer
Grant Hill +18,670 (68.02%)
 REF   PCPC    43     39        
AB
Transfer
Monte Solberg +16,682 (65.45%)
 REF   PCPC    42     40        
AB
Transfer
Charlie Penson +15,110 (58.94%)
 REF   PCPC    41     41        
AB
Transfer
Bob Mills +22,056 (68.38%)
 REF   PCPC    40     42        
AB
Transfer
John Williams +11,732 (55.19%)
 REF   PCPC    39     43        
AB
Transfer
Dale Johnston +20,751 (65.96%)
 REF   PCPC    38     44        
AB
Transfer
Myron Thompson +20,063 (63.79%)
 REF   PCPC    37     45        
AB
Transfer
Cliff Breitkreuz +16,642 (64.82%)
 REF   PCPC    36     46        
BC
Transfer
Philip Mayfield +9,515 (51.11%)
 REF   PCPC    35     47        
BC
Transfer
John Cummins +4,820 (46.50%)
 REF   PCPC    34     48        
BC
Transfer
Grant McNally +9,585 (47.26%)
 REF   PCPC    33     49        
BC
Transfer
Keith Martin +8,092 (43.43%)
 REF   PCPC    32     50        
BC
Transfer
Chuck Strahl +21,532 (62.85%)
 REF   PCPC    31     51        
BC
Transfer
Werner Schmidt +13,940 (50.01%)
 REF   PCPC    30     52        
BC
Transfer
Jim Abbott +16,014 (61.91%)
 REF   PCPC    29     53        
BC
Transfer
Randy White +18,931 (62.02%)
 REF   PCPC    28     54        
BC
Transfer
Bill Gilmour +13,907 (49.86%)
 REF   PCPC    27     55        
BC
Transfer
Reed Elley +9,573 (44.95%)
 REF   PCPC    26     56        
BC
Transfer
Paul Forseth +1,848 (34.47%)
 REF   PCPC    25     57        
BC
Transfer
Ted White +8,269 (48.86%)
 REF   PCPC    24     58        
BC
Transfer
Jim Hart +12,329 (53.06%)
 REF   PCPC    23     59        
BC
Transfer
Darrel Stinson +13,367 (53.13%)
 REF   PCPC    22     60        
BC
Transfer
Sharon Hayes +7,477 (43.61%)
 REF   PCPC    21     61        
BC
Transfer
Dick Harris +10,435 (54.28%)
 REF   PCPC    20     62        
BC
Transfer
Jay Hill +16,587 (66.91%)
 REF   PCPC    19     63        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +182 (44.25%)
Raymond Chan +3,253 (43.81%)
 LPC   PCPC  152       64        
BC
Transfer
Gary Lunn +6,533 (43.07%)
 REF   PCPC    18     65        
BC
Transfer
Mike Scott +3,539 (42.35%)
 REF   PCPC    17     66        
BC
Transfer
Val Meredith +11,331 (54.87%)
 REF   PCPC    16     67        
BC
Transfer
Gurmant Grewal +2,866 (34.67%)
 REF   PCPC    15     68        
BC
Transfer
Chuck Cadman +6,435 (46.80%)
 REF   PCPC    14     69        
BC
Transfer
John Duncan +11,617 (47.54%)
 REF   PCPC    13     70        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +1,039 (44.46%)
Ted McWhinney +6,507 (42.14%)
 LPC   PCPC  151       71        
BC
 PCPC  REF  +852 (36.39%)
David Anderson +2,737 (34.76%)
 LPC   PCPC  150       72        
BC
Transfer
Jim Gouk +10,085 (46.78%)
 REF   PCPC    12     73        
BC
Transfer
John Reynolds +2,774 (40.05%)
 REF   PCPC    11     74        
MB
 PCPC  REF  +1,137 (46.04%)
John Harvard +7,261 (42.97%)
 LPC   PCPC  149       75        
MB
Transfer
Inky Mark +4,952 (35.49%)
 REF   PCPC    10     76        
MB
Transfer
Jake Hoeppner +1,449 (40.25%)
 REF   PCPC    9     77        
MB
 PCPC  REF  +4,158 (51.40%)
David Iftody +1,797 (40.00%)
 LPC   PCPC  148       78        
MB
Transfer
Howard Hilstrom +66 (28.30%)
 REF   PCPC    8     79        
NB
 PCPC  REF  +6,398 (51.93%)
Andy Scott +1,417 (34.12%)
 LPC   PCPC  147       80        
NB
 PCPC  REF  +1,314 (44.26%)
Charles Hubbard +3,354 (40.45%)
 LPC   PCPC  146       81        
NL
 PCPC  REF  +1,737 (45.56%)
Gerry Byrne +232 (39.83%)
 LPC   PCPC  145       82        
NS
 PCPC  REF  +2,303 (38.66%)
Wendy Lill +2,028 (32.57%)
 NDP   PCPC        20 83        
NS
 PCPC  REF  +5,114 (42.86%)
Peter Stoffer +41 (30.37%)
 NDP   PCPC        19 84        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +3,228 (49.44%)
Aileen Carroll +7,507 (43.48%)
 LPC   PCPC  144       85        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +407 (47.36%)
Gurbax Malhi +8,278 (46.37%)
 LPC   PCPC  143       86        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +9,404 (56.12%)
Ovid Jackson +1,735 (36.79%)
 LPC   PCPC  142       87        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,964 (50.05%)
Paddy Torsney +5,698 (44.12%)
 LPC   PCPC  141       88        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,393 (41.71%)
Janko Peric +6,906 (36.74%)
 LPC   PCPC  140       89        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +4,892 (52.58%)
Murray Calder +6,197 (42.63%)
 LPC   PCPC  139       90        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,176 (48.08%)
Alex Shepherd +6,819 (43.34%)
 LPC   PCPC  138       91        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +3,916 (48.74%)
Gar Knutson +6,391 (39.99%)
 LPC   PCPC  137       92        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +1,563 (46.66%)
John Maloney +4,754 (42.84%)
 LPC   PCPC  136       93        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +1,209 (48.11%)
Bob Speller +8,495 (45.50%)
 LPC   PCPC  135       94        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +5,873 (52.07%)
Larry McCormick +6,172 (39.47%)
 LPC   PCPC  134       95        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +1,827 (48.26%)
Ian Murray +11,386 (45.32%)
 LPC   PCPC  133       96        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +6,989 (53.89%)
Joe Jordan +3,487 (39.47%)
 LPC   PCPC  132       97        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +5,053 (50.58%)
Gary Pillitteri +4,882 (38.36%)
 LPC   PCPC  131       98        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +878 (47.67%)
Christine Stewart +9,724 (45.77%)
 LPC   PCPC  130       99        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +36 (47.75%)
Bonnie Brown +9,014 (47.68%)
 LPC   PCPC  129       100        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +3,021 (44.87%)
Ivan Grose +3,951 (37.72%)
 LPC   PCPC  128       101        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +7,958 (53.57%)
John Finlay +1,575 (35.98%)
 LPC   PCPC  127       102        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +4,592 (52.35%)
Andy Mitchell +6,317 (41.60%)
 LPC   PCPC  126       103        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +670 (45.51%)
Jack Richardson +8,510 (44.01%)
 LPC   PCPC  125       104        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +5,818 (52.22%)
Hec Clouthier +6,534 (40.25%)
 LPC   PCPC  124       105        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,437 (49.14%)
Paul DeVillers +8,412 (44.39%)
 LPC   PCPC  123       106        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +11,280 (57.40%)
Paul Bonwick +481 (35.21%)
 LPC   PCPC  122       107        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +451 (44.39%)
Walt Lastewka +6,052 (43.46%)
 LPC   PCPC  121       108        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +13,102 (58.55%)
John O'Reilly +1,181 (34.05%)
 LPC   PCPC  120       109        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +2,279 (49.01%)
Lynn Myers +5,896 (44.01%)
 LPC   PCPC  119       110        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +4,164 (50.50%)
John Bryden +6,103 (41.65%)
 LPC   PCPC  118       111        
ON
 PCPC  REF  +1,611 (48.44%)
Karen Kraft Sloan +9,697 (45.25%)
 LPC   PCPC  117       112        
SK
Transfer
Gerry Ritz +4,590 (42.75%)
 REF   PCPC    7     113        
SK
Transfer
Allan Kerpan +3,137 (36.88%)
 REF   PCPC    6     114        
SK
 PCPC  REF  +539 (37.08%)
Rick Laliberte +538 (34.53%)
 NDP   PCPC        18 115        
SK
Transfer
Lee Morrison +9,309 (49.10%)
 REF   PCPC    5     116        
SK
Transfer
Derrek Konrad +2,090 (38.06%)
 REF   PCPC    4     117        
SK
Transfer
Jim Pankiw +220 (33.07%)
 REF   PCPC    3     118        
SK
Transfer
Roy Bailey +4,655 (41.17%)
 REF   PCPC    2     119        
SK
Transfer
Maurice Vellacott +4,061 (39.16%)
 REF   PCPC    1     120        
SK
Transfer
Garry Breitkreuz +8,633 (50.07%)
 REF   PCPC    0     121        
YT
 PCPC  REF  +1,419 (39.20%)
Louise Hardy +509 (28.94%)
 NDP   PCPC        17 122        
Redistribution → 117 0 44 17 122 1

Fortress Ontario was partially a house of cards because, of the 38 seats the Liberals won through vote splitting, 28 were there. For its part, the NDP picked up four in this manner: two in Nova Scotia, one in Saskatchewan, and the Yukon seat. But what jumps out is that the conservative family would have formed a minority government, albeit an extremely weak one. Yet a “majority” government with only 38.46% of the popular vote? Talk about being lucky!

Come the 2000 general election, some movement had occurred since 1997, in that the Reformers, having much more representation in the Commons than the Progressive Conservatives, understood that they had to be the ones to take on the initiative of uniting the right. They had hoped that re­brand­ing themselves as the Canadian Alliance would attract right-of-centre sympathizers in the East, but former prime minister Joe Clark, who had returned to politics to lead the PCs, seemed to regard this attempt as presenting a wolf in sheep’s clothing, and thus stayed the course with his party. Preston Manning had lost his bid to lead the Alliance, so instead Clark challenged Stockwell Day on his right and Jean Chrétien on his left. This con­tin­ued disunity suited the Liberal Party, making its own internal struggle to have Paul Martin replace Chrétien seem like a mere friendly dis­a­gree­ment. With the ink barely dry on the Alliance’s certification papers, Chrétien called an early election, and the right remained confined to the opposition.

Canada Canada
37 → 2000 :: 27 Nov 2000 — 27 Jun 2004 — Majority Majority  LPC 
Summary Government Opposition Lost votes
Party Votes Seats Party Votes Seats Party Votes
# % % # # % % # # %
Parliament: 37   Majority Majority
Majority=151  Ab.Maj.: +22  G.Maj.: +43
Population [2000]: 30,594,030 (est.)
Eligible: 21,211,657  Particip.: 61.27%
Votes: 12,997,149  Lost: 429,654
Seats: 301   1 seat = 0.33%
↳ Elec.Sys.:  FPTP: 301  
↳ By acclamation: 0 (0.00%)
Plurality: Votes  LPC  Seats  LPC 
Plurality:  +1,975,063 (+15.36%)
Plurality:  Seats: +106 (+35.21%)
Position2: Votes  CA  Seats  CA 
Candidacies: 1,808 (✓ 301)   m: 1,436 (✓ 239)   f: 372 (✓ 62)
 LPC  301   CA  298   BQ  75   NDP  298   PCPC  291   GPC  111   OTH  348   IND  86  
 LPC 
5,251,978 40.85 57.14 172
 CA 
 BQ 
 NDP 
 PCPC 
3,276,915
1,377,727
1,093,853
1,567,022
25.49
10.72
8.51
12.19
21.93
12.62
4.32
3.99
66
38
13
12
 GPC 
 OTH 
 IND 
 REJ 
 ABS 
104,422
130,789
55,031
139,412
8,214,508
0.81
1.02
0.43
1.07
——
First general election that included the new territory of Nunavut.
 PCPC  Last general election for the original Conservative Party of Canada.
 CA  Only general election for this party (former Reform Party and future Conservative Party of Canada).
 OTH  MP  73   ACT  70   NLP  69   ML  84   COMM  52
 !!!  239 (79.40%)

The Liberals clearly did better than in 1997, garnering 2% more of the popular vote. As for Reform’s rebranding as the Canadian Alliance, it utterly failed against Fortress Ontario, and the PCs lost some ground compared to ’97 but at least managed to keep (barely) its official party status in the Commons. So what role did vote splitting play this time in handing the Liberals their third majority government?

To find the answer, let’s:

  1. Consider  CA  the party causing the vote splitting and  PCPC  the one affected by it.
  2. Set aside the 121 ridings where the person elected:
    • had a clear majority (50%+1) and represented neither  CA  nor  PCPC , or
    • represented  PCPC  and thus wasn’t affected by vote splitting,
    which leaves us with 180 ridings.
  3. Transfer the votes received by  CA  to  PCPC  if the latter did not already win the riding.
  4. Recalculate the results in each of those 180 ridings to find the ones where the winning party would have been different.

Thus we could conclude that there would have been 102 differences.

Seats won due to vote splitting    LPC  34    NDP  2    Seats won by the spoiler party   CA  66
Riding Alternative LPC CA BQ NDP PCPC        
Election → 172 66 38 13 12
Details
AB
Transfer
David Chatters +8,982 (54.46%)
 CA   PCPC    65     13        
AB
Transfer
Deepak Obhrai +11,298 (54.26%)
 CA   PCPC    64     14        
AB
Transfer
Art Hanger +18,401 (62.54%)
 CA   PCPC    63     15        
AB
Transfer
Jason Kenney +23,139 (63.25%)
 CA   PCPC    62     16        
AB
Transfer
Preston Manning +25,850 (64.81%)
 CA   PCPC    61     17        
AB
Transfer
Rob Anders +19,963 (54.05%)
 CA   PCPC    60     18        
AB
Transfer
Diane Ablonczy +24,302 (60.13%)
 CA   PCPC    59     19        
AB
Transfer
Kevin Sorenson +26,989 (70.56%)
 CA   PCPC    58     20        
AB
Transfer
Peter Goldring +3,445 (42.44%)
 CA   PCPC    57     21        
AB
Transfer
Deborah Grey +7,277 (51.22%)
 CA   PCPC    56     22        
AB
Transfer
James Rajotte +7,974 (48.85%)
 CA   PCPC    55     23        
AB
 PCPC  CA  +2,276 (48.83%)
Anne McLellan +733 (44.24%)
 LPC   PCPC  171       24        
AB
Transfer
Rahim Jaffer +5,647 (42.00%)
 CA   PCPC    54     25        
AB
Transfer
Ken Epp +24,441 (64.23%)
 CA   PCPC    53     26        
AB
Transfer
Leon Benoit +20,298 (65.45%)
 CA   PCPC    52     27        
AB
Transfer
Rick Casson +22,583 (66.02%)
 CA   PCPC    51     28        
AB
Transfer
Grant Hill +24,704 (70.05%)
 CA   PCPC    50     29        
AB
Transfer
Monte Solberg +26,742 (74.28%)
 CA   PCPC    49     30        
AB
Transfer
Charlie Penson +21,013 (65.59%)
 CA   PCPC    48     31        
AB
Transfer
Bob Mills +30,418 (72.61%)
 CA   PCPC    47     32        
AB
Transfer
John Williams +19,108 (59.50%)
 CA   PCPC    46     33        
AB
Transfer
Dale Johnston +25,357 (69.50%)
 CA   PCPC    45     34        
AB
Transfer
Myron Thompson +32,823 (70.36%)
 CA   PCPC    44     35        
AB
Transfer
Rob Merrifield +20,476 (66.08%)
 CA   PCPC    43     36        
BC
 PCPC  CA  +516 (38.52%)
Svend Robinson +1,961 (37.39%)
 NDP   PCPC        12 37        
BC
Transfer
Philip Mayfield +12,658 (59.63%)
 CA   PCPC    42     38        
BC
Transfer
John Cummins +15,024 (56.79%)
 CA   PCPC    41     39        
BC
Transfer
Grant McNally +19,464 (58.42%)
 CA   PCPC    40     40        
BC
Transfer
Keith Martin +12,446 (49.73%)
 CA   PCPC    39     41        
BC
Transfer
Chuck Strahl +29,544 (69.97%)
 CA   PCPC    38     42        
BC
Transfer
Betty Hinton +9,978 (48.59%)
 CA   PCPC    37     43        
BC
Transfer
Werner Schmidt +20,246 (59.47%)
 CA   PCPC    36     44        
BC
Transfer
Jim Gouk +8,029 (46.70%)
 CA   PCPC    35     45        
BC
Transfer
Jim Abbott +20,082 (67.78%)
 CA   PCPC    34     46        
BC
Transfer
Randy White +29,256 (70.11%)
 CA   PCPC    33     47        
BC
Transfer
James Lunney +15,639 (50.45%)
 CA   PCPC    32     48        
BC
Transfer
Reed Elley +12,784 (46.63%)
 CA   PCPC    31     49        
BC
Transfer
Paul Forseth +6,169 (44.01%)
 CA   PCPC    30     50        
BC
Transfer
Ted White +9,577 (49.88%)
 CA   PCPC    29     51        
BC
Transfer
Stockwell Day +18,871 (59.37%)
 CA   PCPC    28     52        
BC
Transfer
Darrel Stinson +19,490 (61.30%)
 CA   PCPC    27     53        
BC
Transfer
James Moore +11,694 (49.69%)
 CA   PCPC    26     54        
BC
Transfer
Dick Harris +12,394 (58.84%)
 CA   PCPC    25     55        
BC
Transfer
Jay Hill +18,521 (69.62%)
 CA   PCPC    24     56        
BC
Transfer
Joe Peschisolido +1,124 (44.41%)
 CA   PCPC    23     57        
BC
Transfer
Gary Lunn +6,390 (43.16%)
 CA   PCPC    22     58        
BC
Transfer
Andy Burton +4,073 (42.73%)
 CA   PCPC    21     59        
BC
Transfer
Val Meredith +18,562 (59.95%)
 CA   PCPC    20     60        
BC
Transfer
Gurmant Grewal +10,299 (51.61%)
 CA   PCPC    19     61        
BC
Transfer
Chuck Cadman +9,694 (56.10%)
 CA   PCPC    18     62        
BC
Transfer
John Duncan +12,752 (51.04%)
 CA   PCPC    17     63        
BC
 PCPC  CA  +472 (45.78%)
Stephen Owen +3,640 (44.84%)
 LPC   PCPC  170       64        
BC
 PCPC  CA  +328 (43.49%)
Herb Dhaliwal +2,321 (42.70%)
 LPC   PCPC  169       65        
BC
Transfer
John Reynolds +11,377 (47.97%)
 CA   PCPC    16     66        
MB
 PCPC  CA  +7,659 (56.17%)
John Harvard +2,332 (36.21%)
 LPC   PCPC  168       67        
MB
Transfer
Inky Mark +8,764 (47.66%)
 CA   PCPC    15     68        
MB
Transfer
Brian Pallister +11,185 (50.31%)
 CA   PCPC    14     69        
MB
Transfer
Vic Toews +6,939 (52.76%)
 CA   PCPC    13     70        
MB
Transfer
Howard Hilstrom +8,244 (43.82%)
 CA   PCPC    12     71        
NB
 PCPC  CA  +5,558 (53.73%)
Andy Scott +3,256 (38.60%)
 LPC   PCPC  167       72        
NB
 PCPC  CA  +9,420 (62.64%)
Andy Savoy +150 (33.60%)
 LPC   PCPC  166       73        
NS
 PCPC  CA  +5,878 (52.69%)
Robert Thibault +703 (36.09%)
 LPC   PCPC  165       74        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +4,802 (51.08%)
John Bryden +4,649 (41.16%)
 LPC   PCPC  164       75        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +3,015 (50.94%)
Ovid Jackson +3,857 (44.22%)
 LPC   PCPC  163       76        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +565 (47.97%)
Paddy Torsney +10,675 (46.77%)
 LPC   PCPC  162       77        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +1,276 (48.25%)
Murray Calder +6,650 (45.57%)
 LPC   PCPC  161       78        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +1,508 (48.51%)
Alex Shepherd +6,859 (45.20%)
 LPC   PCPC  160       79        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +4,374 (51.45%)
Gar Knutson +1,706 (41.02%)
 LPC   PCPC  159       80        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +3,112 (49.92%)
John Maloney +2,062 (42.21%)
 LPC   PCPC  158       81        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +310 (47.52%)
Bob Speller +5,451 (46.82%)
 LPC   PCPC  157       82        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +13,389 (61.16%)
John O'Reilly +1,119 (33.95%)
 LPC   PCPC  156       83        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +6,462 (53.83%)
Larry McCormick +3,769 (39.00%)
 LPC   PCPC  155       84        
ON
Transfer
Scott Reid +1,859 (38.93%)
 CA   PCPC    11     85        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +7,885 (56.26%)
Joe Jordan +55 (39.51%)
 LPC   PCPC  154       86        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +7,276 (53.35%)
David Pratt +2,260 (41.16%)
 LPC   PCPC  153       87        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +169 (46.35%)
Gary Pillitteri +5,908 (45.92%)
 LPC   PCPC  152       88        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +69 (46.07%)
Paul Macklin +8,699 (45.90%)
 LPC   PCPC  151       89        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +59 (47.86%)
Bonnie Brown +9,530 (47.74%)
 LPC   PCPC  150       90        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +359 (43.87%)
Ivan Grose +5,316 (42.92%)
 LPC   PCPC  149       91        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +2,652 (48.40%)
Marlene Catterall +7,854 (43.32%)
 LPC   PCPC  148       92        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +9,324 (57.38%)
John Finlay +2,131 (35.55%)
 LPC   PCPC  147       93        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +4,342 (50.70%)
Jack Richardson +5,443 (40.37%)
 LPC   PCPC  146       94        
ON
Transfer
Cheryl Gallant +2,423 (44.18%)
 CA   PCPC    10     95        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +2,544 (49.90%)
Paul Bonwick +6,111 (44.77%)
 LPC   PCPC  145       96        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +1,401 (47.93%)
Walt Lastewka +5,121 (44.93%)
 LPC   PCPC  144       97        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +673 (48.33%)
Bob Kilger +2,962 (46.69%)
 LPC   PCPC  143       98        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +1,270 (41.09%)
Stan Dromisky +2,382 (36.98%)
 LPC   PCPC  142       99        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +3,177 (50.73%)
Lynn Myers +4,822 (43.66%)
 LPC   PCPC  141       100        
ON
 PCPC  CA  +1,210 (48.98%)
Karen Kraft Sloan +10,680 (46.50%)
 LPC   PCPC  140       101        
PE
 PCPC  CA  +224 (49.32%)
Lawrence MacAulay +276 (48.06%)
 LPC   PCPC  139       102        
SK
Transfer
Gerry Ritz +12,584 (60.23%)
 CA   PCPC    9     103        
SK
Transfer
Lynne Yelich +6,477 (44.24%)
 CA   PCPC    8     104        
SK
Transfer
David Anderson +13,492 (61.65%)
 CA   PCPC    7     105        
SK
 PCPC  CA  +1,039 (41.42%)
Dick Proctor +209 (38.16%)
 NDP   PCPC        11 106        
SK
Transfer
Brian Fitzpatrick +8,071 (45.59%)
 CA   PCPC    6     107        
SK
Transfer
Larry Spencer +161 (42.94%)
 CA   PCPC    5     108        
SK
Transfer
Jim Pankiw +6,360 (44.28%)
 CA   PCPC    4     109        
SK
Transfer
Carol Skelton +68 (41.66%)
 CA   PCPC    3     110        
SK
Transfer
Maurice Vellacott +9,382 (52.57%)
 CA   PCPC    2     111        
SK
Transfer
Roy Bailey +14,523 (63.28%)
 CA   PCPC    1     112        
SK
Transfer
Garry Breitkreuz +14,825 (62.98%)
 CA   PCPC    0     113        
YT
 PCPC  CA  +357 (35.18%)
Larry Bagnell +70 (32.48%)
 LPC   PCPC  138       114        
Redistribution → 138 0 38 11 114

This time, 25 of the 34 cases of vote splitting favouring the Liberals were in Ontario, while the NDP picked up two in this manner: one in British Columbia and the other in Saskatchewan.

Clark formed the Democratic Representative Coalition in September 2001 in an attempt to unite the right on his terms, but failed. Around the same time, several members of the Alliance caucus, disappointed by their 2000 election results, turned on Day, leading the way to Stephen Harper becoming their leader in 2002. Peter MacKay became PC leader in May 2003, having reached the position after striking a deal with David Orchard during the leadership convention, promising never to have an alliance with the Alliance — a promise on which he reneged a few months later. By Christmas 2003, both the Alliance and the PCs ceased to exist and, together, became the modern-day Conservative Party of Canada, with Clark being granted permission to be designated as a PC for the remainder of his term.

In May 2004, Martin, by then the Liberal leader and prime minister, called an early election. Was he perhaps pulling Page 2000 of the Chrétien playbook, in the hope of catching the new Conservative ill-prepared for an election?

Canada Canada
38 → 2004 :: 28 Jun 2004 — 22 Jan 2006 — Majority Minority  LPC 
Summary Government Opposition Lost votes
Party Votes Seats Party Votes Seats Party Votes
# % % # # % % # # %
Parliament: 38   Majority Minority
Majority=155  Ab.Maj.: -20  G.Maj.: -38
Population [2004]: 31,550,768 (est.)
Eligible: 22,466,621  Particip.: 60.91%
Votes: 13,683,591  Lost: 859,272
Seats: 308   1 seat = 0.32%
↳ Elec.Sys.:  FPTP: 308  
↳ By acclamation: 0 (0.00%)
Plurality: Votes  LPC  Seats  LPC 
Plurality:  +962,722 (+7.10%)
Plurality:  Seats: +36 (+11.69%)
Position2: Votes  CPC  Seats  CPC 
Candidacies: 1,685 (✓ 308)   m: 1,291 (✓ 243)   f: 394 (✓ 65)
 LPC  308   CPC  308   BQ  75   NDP  308   IND  65   GPC  308   OTH  313  
 LPC 
4,982,220 36.73 43.83 135
 CPC 
 BQ 
 NDP 
 IND 
4,019,498
1,680,109
2,127,403
15,089
29.63
12.39
15.68
0.11
32.14
17.53
6.17
0.32
99
54
19
1
 IND 
 GPC 
 OTH 
 REJ 
 ABS 
49,775
582,247
108,361
118,889
8,783,030
0.37
4.29
0.79
0.87
——
Difference since the previous general election: +7 seats
 CPC  First general election for the modern Conservative Party of Canada (merger of the Conservative Reform Alliance and the Progressive Conservative Party).
 OTH  CHP  62   MP  71   PCP  16   ACT  45   ML  76   COMM  35   LBT  8
 !!!  260 (84.42%)

In any case, while the Conservatives did not win, they did manage to reduce the Liberals to minority status. And eighteen months later, they would go on to form their first minority government. But what emerges from the data is that none of the Liberals’ majorities should have been majorities, and even one of them should have been a minority... for the “conservatives.”



© 2005, 2026 :: PoliCan.ca (Maurice Y. Michaud)
Pub.: 21 May 2023 11:51
Rev.:  5 May 2024 19:56 (but data presented dynamically)