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Canadian federal election, 1984


The Canadian federal election of 1984 was called on July 4, 1984, and held on September 4 of that year. It resulted in the Progressive Conservative Party winning a the largest majority government in Canadian history.

Contents

Issues


The election was won fought almost entirely on the record of the governing Liberal Party. The party's new leader John Napier Turner had at first managed to distance himself from the policies of his predecessor Pierre Trudeau, but as the campaign wore on, he became closely attached to these faults.

The Liberal Party had lost favour with Western Canadians, and policies such as the National Energy Policy only aggravated this sentiment. A change from earlier elections was the great disaffection in Quebec with the Liberal government. The Conservatives had not won significant support in that province in decades, but hope for success there was one of the main reasons Brian Mulroney had been chosen as party leader. Mulroney was a fluently bilingual Quebecer who promised a new deal for Quebec. The province, annoyed at being left out of the 1982 repatriation of constitution, shifted dramatically to support him.

The Liberal Party had entered the campaign with a lead in the polls following the selection of Turner as leader. That lead began to slip as Turner, who had been out of politics since he had resigned as Minister of Finance in 1975, made several mistakes that caused voters to see him as "yesterday's man". In particular, he spoke of "make work programs", a concept from the 1970s that had been replaced by the less patronizing "job creation programs". He also was caught on camera patting Liberal Party President Iona Campagnolo on her posterior. Turner defended this action as being a friendly gesture, not recognizing that it was seen by many women as being condescending.

Other voters turned against the Liberals due to their mounting legacy of patronage and corruption. An especially important issue was that of 79 patronage appointments Trudeau made in the days before leaving office. Turner, despite promising a new way of doing politics, refused to cancel these appointments. During the English-language televised debate between Mulroney, Turner and New Democratic Party leader Ed Broadbent, Turner defended the appointments by saying, "I had no option". Mulroney effectively attacked Turner saying, "You had an option, sir; you could have said 'no'". This was a key turning point of the campaign, and cemented the view of many voters that Turner did not represent change from the discredited Liberal Party of Pierre Trudeau.

National results

The election was a landslide victory for the Progressive Conservative Party, which won half the popular vote and 211 out of 282 seats. The party won a majority of the ridings in every province. The New Democratic Party also did very well: voters in the manufacturing areas of Ontario and on the prairies gave it 30 seats. At the time, many pundits thought Canada was moving towards the British model of a Labour-Tory division .

All numerical results from Elections Canada's Official Report on the Thirty-Third Election

Party Party Leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular Vote
Before1 After % Change # % % Change Progressive Conservative Brian Mulroney 282 100 211 +111% 6,278,818 50.03% +17.59% Liberal John Turner 282 135 40 -70.4% 3,516,486 28.02% -16.32% New Democratic Ed Broadbent 282 31 30 -2.3% 2,359,915 18.81% -0.97% No Affiliation2 20 - 1   39,298 0.31% +0.29% Rhinoceros Cornelius the First 88 - -   99,178 0.79% -0.22% Parti nationaliste du Québec Denis Monière 74 - -   85,865 0.68% n.a. Confederation of Regions Elmer Knutson 55 - -   65,655 0.52% n.a. Green Trevor Hancock 60 - -   26,921 0.21% n.a. Libertarian Victor Levis 72 - -   23,514 0.19% +0.05%
     Independent 65 1 -   22,067 0.18% +0.04% Social Credit Ken Sweigard 51 - -   16,659 0.13% -1.56% Communist William Kashtan 51 - -   7,479 0.06% +x Commonwealth Gilles Gervais 66 - -   7,007 0.06% n.a.
     Vacant 15 N/A
Total 1,449 282 282 - 12,548,721 100.0  
Sources: http://www.elections.ca -- History of Federal Ridings since 1867

Notes:

1 "Before" refers to standings in the House of Commons at dissolution, and not to standings at previous election.

2 Tony Roman was elected in the Toronto-area riding of York North as a "coalition candidate", defeating incumbent PC MP John Gamble. Roman drew support from Progressive Conservatives were were upset by Gamble's extreme right-wing views, and Liberals who were upset when their candidate punched his campaign manager's wife.

n.a.= not applicable - party was not recognized in the previous election.

x - less than 0.05% of the popular vote

Results by province

Party Name BC AB SK MB ON QC NB NS PE NL NT YK Total
     Progressive Conservative Seats: 19 21 9 9 67 58 9 9 3 4 2 1 211
     Popular Vote: 46.6 68.8 41.7 43.2 47.6 50.2 53.6 50.7 52.0 57.6 41.3 56.8 50.0
     Liberal Seats: 1 - - 1 14 17 1 2 1 3 - - 40
     Vote: 16.4 12.7 18.2 21.8 29.8 35.4 31.9 33.6 41.0 36.4 26.9 21.7 28.0
     New Democratic Seats: 8 - 5 4 13 - - - - - - - 30
     Vote: 35.1 14.1 38.4 27.2 20.8 8.8 14.1 15.2 6.5 5.8 28.2 16.1 18.8
     No affiliation Seats: - -     1 -     -       1
     Vote: xx 0.2     0.8 xx     0.4       0.3
Total seats: 28 21 14 14 95 75 10 11 4 7 2 1 282
Parties that won no seats:
     Rhinoceros Vote: 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.1 2.4   0.3       1.1 0.8
     Nationaliste Vote:           2.5             0.7
     Confederation of Regions Vote: 0.2 2.2 1.3 6.7                 0.5
     Green Vote: 0.6 0.3 0.1   0.3 0.1     0.1       0.2
     Libertarian Vote: 0.3 0.1   0.4 0.3 0.1 0.1     0.1   4.4 0.2
     Independent Vote: 0.1 0.5 0.1 0.4 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.1 3.5   0.2
     Social Credit Vote: 0.2 0.6     0.1 0.2 0.1           0.1
     Communist Vote: 0.1 0.1   0.1 0.1 0.1             0.1
     Commonwealth Vote:           0.2             0.0

Notes

Last updated: 05-07-2005 06:01:20
Last updated: 05-13-2005 07:56:04