Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Canadian federal election, 1988

Encyclopedia : C : CA : CAN : Canadian federal election, 1988


Map of the Popular Vote with bar graphs showing seat totals in the provinces and territories
Enlarge
Map of the Popular Vote with bar graphs showing seat totals in the provinces and territories
The Canadian Parliament after the 1988 election
Enlarge
The Canadian Parliament after the 1988 election

The Canadian federal election of 1988 was held November 21, 1988, to elect members of the Canadian House of Commons. It was an election largely fought on a single issue: the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement.

Incumbent Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, leader of the Progressive Conservative Party, had signed the agreement. The Liberal Party, led by John Turner, was opposed to the agreement, as was the New Democratic Party led by Ed Broadbent. Among the minor parties, the Christian Heritage Party, running its first election candidates, supported the concept of free trade but had serious reservations about the negotiated agreement.

The Conservatives went into the election suffering from a number of scandals. Despite winning a large majority only four years before, they looked vulnerable at the outset.

The Liberals had some early struggles, notably during one day in Montreal where 3 different costs were given for the proposed Liberal daycare program. The campaign was also hampered by a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation report that stated there was a movement in the backroom to replace Turner with Jean Chrétien, even though Turner had passed a leadership review in 1986.

Support swung back and forth between the Conservatives and Liberals over free trade. With mid-campaign polls suggesting a Liberal government, this prompted the Conservatives to stop the relatively calm campaign they had been running, and go with Allan Gregg's suggestion of "bombing the bridge" that joined anti-FTA voters and the Liberals: Turner's credibility. The ads focused on Turner's leadership struggles, and combined with over $6 million CAD in pro-FTA ads, managed to stop the Liberals' momentum. Infighting among the Liberals and vote splitting between the NDP and Liberals contributed to a second Conservative majority government.

The Liberals reaped most of the benefits of opposing the FTA and doubled their representation to 83 seats to emerge as the main opposition; the NDP had also made gains but finished a distant third with 43 seats. The Progressive Conservatives won a reduced but strong majority government with 169 seats. Despite the Liberals' improved standing, the results were considered a disappointment for Turner, after polls in mid-campaign predicted a Liberal government. The election loss seemed to confirm Turner's fate, and he eventually resigned in 1990, and was succeeded by Chrétien.

The 1988 election was the most successful in the New Democratic Party's history. The party dominated in British Columbia and Saskatchewan, and also won significant support in Ontario.

The election was the last for Canada's Social Credit movement: the party won no seats, and had an insignificant portion of the popular vote.

The newly founded Reform Party also contested the election, but was considered little more than a fringe group, and did not win any seats.

In all, 76% of eligible voters cast a ballot.

National results

For a complete list of MPs elected in the 1988 election see 34th Canadian parliament.

|- |bgcolor="lightcoral"|     |- |bgcolor="sandybrown"|     |- |bgcolor="mediumseagreen"|     |- |bgcolor="yellowgreen"|     |- |bgcolor="green"|     |- |bgcolor="tomato"|     |- |bgcolor="lightgreen"|     |- |bgcolor="gainsboro"|     |- |bgcolor="gainsboro"|    
Party Party leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular vote
1984 Dissolution Elected % Change # % Change |- |bgcolor="#9999FF"|     Progressive Conservative Brian Mulroney 295 211 203 169 align="right"
5,667,543 43.02% align="right"
Liberal John Turner 294 40 38 83 align="center"
107.5%
4,205,072 31.92% align="right"
3.89%
New Democratic Party Ed Broadbent 295 30 32 43 align="right"
34.4%
2,685,263 20.38% align="right"
1.57%
Reform Preston Manning 72 * * align="right"
* 275,767 2.09% * |- |bgcolor="#CC6699"|     Christian Heritage Ed Vanwoudenberg 63 * * align="right"
* 102,533 0.78% * |- |bgcolor="thistle"|     Rhinoceros Charles McKenzie 74 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
52,173 0.40% align="right"
Green Seymour Trieger 68 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
47,228 0.36% +0.14% |- |bgcolor="#66CC66"|     Confederation of Regions Elmer Knutson 51 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
41,342 0.31% align="right"
Libertarian Dennis Corrigan 88 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
33,135 0.25% +0.06% |- |bgcolor="lightsalmon"|     Commonwealth Gilles Gervais 58 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
7,467 0.06% align="right"
Communist George Hewison 51 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
- 7,066 0.05% align="right"
Social Credit Harvey Lainson 9 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
3,407 0.03% align="right"
Independent 55 1 4 align="right"
align="right"
22,982 0.17% align="right"
No affiliation 100 align="right"
align="right"
align="right"
  24,516 0.19% align="right"
     Vacant 5  
Total 1,573 282 282 295 +4.61% 13,175,494 100%  

Note:

"% change" refers to change from previous election

A number of unregistered parties also contested the election. The Western Canada Concept party, led by Douglas Christie, fielded three candidates in British Columbia. The Western Independence Party ran one candidate in British Columbia, seven in Alberta, and three in Manitoba (although one of the Manitoba candidates appears to have withdrawn before election day).

The Marxist-Leninist Party fielded candidates in several ridings.

Blair T. Longley campaigned in British Columbia as a representative of the "Student Party". Newspaper reports indicate that this was simply a tax-avoidance scheme.

The moribund Social Credit Party actually fielded fewer candidates than was required for official recognition, but the Chief Electoral Officer allowed the party's name to appear on the ballot by virtue of its history as a recognized party.

Results by province

>
Party name BC AB SK MB ON QC NB NS PE NL NT YK Total |- |bgcolor="#9999FF"|     Progressive Conservative Seats: 12 25 4 7 46 63 5 5 - 2 - - 169 |- |bgcolor="#9999FF"|     Popular Vote: 35.3 51.8 36.4 36.9 38.2 52.7 40.4 40.9 41.5 42.2 26.4 35.3 43.0 |- |bgcolor="lightcoral"|     Liberal Seats: 1 - align="right"
5 43 12 5 6 4 5 2 - 83 |- |bgcolor="lightcoral"|     Vote: 20.4 13.7 18.2 36.5 38.9 30.3 45.4 46.5 49.9 45.0 41.4 11.3 31.9 |- |bgcolor="sandybrown"|     New Democratic Party Seats: 19 1 10 2 10 - - - - - - 1 43 |- |bgcolor="sandybrown"|     Vote: 37.0 17.4 44.2 21.3 20.1 14.4 9.3 11.4 7.5 12.4 28.3 51.4 20.38
Total seats 32 26 14 14 99 75 10 11 4 7 2 1 295
Parties that won no seats: |- |bgcolor="mediumseagreen"|     Reform Vote: 4.8 15.4   3.3                 2.1 |- |bgcolor="#CC6699"|     Christian Heritage Vote:   1.1     1.4             2.0 0.8 |- |bgcolor="thistle"|     Rhinoceros Vote:           1.2             0.4 |- |bgcolor="yellowgreen"|     Green Vote:                         0.4 |- |bgcolor="#66CC66"|     Confederation of Regions Vote:             4.3           0.3 |- |bgcolor="green"|     Libertarian Vote:                         0.3 |- |bgcolor="lightsalmon"|     Commonwealth Vote:           0.2             0.1 |- |bgcolor="tomato"|     Communist Vote:                         0.1 |- |bgcolor="lightgreen"|     Social Credit Vote:                         xx |- |bgcolor="gainsboro"|     Other Vote:                         0.4

xx - less than 0.05% of the popular vote.

Note: Parties that captured less than 1 % of the vote in a province are not recorded.

Notes

10 closest ridings

1. London-Middlesex, ON: Terry Clifford (PC) def. Garnet Bloomfield (Lib) by 8 votes
2. Northumberland, ON: Christine Stewart (Lib) def. Reg Jewell (PC) by 28 votes
3. Hamilton Mountain, ON: Beth Phinney (Lib) def. Marion Dewar (NDP) by 73 votes
4. York North, ON: Maurizio Bevilacqua (Lib) def. Michael O'Brien (PC) by 77 votes
5. Rosedale, ON: David MacDonald (PC) def. Bill Graham (Lib) by 80 votes
6. London East, ON: Joe Fontana (Lib) def. Jim Jepson (PC) by 102 votes
7. Haldimand-Norfolk, ON: Bob Speller (Lib) def. Bud Bradley (PC) by 209 votes
8. Hillsborough, PEI: George Proud (Lib) def. Tom McMillan (PC) by 259 votes
9. Cariboo-Chilcotin, BC: Dave Worthy (PC) def. Jack Langford (NDP) by 269 votes
10. Vancouver Centre, BC: Kim Campbell (PC) def. Johanna Den Hertog (NDP) by 269 votes

See also

External link


Preceded by:
1984 federal election
Canadian federal elections Followed by:
1993 federal election

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: