Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1917 Canadian federal election

none

1917 Canadian federal election

none

FieldValue
election_name1917 Canadian federal election
countryCanada
flag_year1907
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
party_nameno
previous_election1911 Canadian federal election
previous_year1911
next_election1921 Canadian federal election
next_year1921
seats_for_election235 seats in the House of Commons
majority_seats118
turnout75.0%{{cite webtitle=Voter Turnout at Federal Elections and Referendums
urlhttp://www.elections.ca/content.aspx?section=ele&dir=turn&document=index&lang=eaccess-date=10 March 2019}} ( 4.8 pp)
election_dateDecember 17, 1917
elected_members13th Canadian Parliament
outgoing_members12th Canadian Parliament
image1[[File:Borden-sm (cropped).jpg200x200px]]
colour1
leader1Robert Borden
leader_since1February 6, 1901
Unionist: October 10, 1917
party1
leaders_seat1Kings
last_election1132 seats, 48.56%
seats1**153**
seat_change121
popular_vote1**1,070,694**
percentage1**56.93%**
swing18.38 pp
image2[[File:Sir Wilfrid Laurier - Bain.jpg200x200px]]
colour2
leader2Wilfrid Laurier
leader_since2June 2, 1887
Laurier Liberals: 1917
party2
leaders_seat2Quebec East
last_election285 seats, 45.82%
seats282
seat_change23
popular_vote2729,756
percentage238.80%
swing27.02 pp
map{{Switcher
titlePrime Minister
posttitlePrime Minister after election
before_electionRobert Borden
before_party
after_electionRobert Borden
after_party
map2_imageChambre des Communes 1917.png
map2_size380px
map2_captionThe Canadian parliament after the 1917 election

Unionist: October 10, 1917 Laurier Liberals: 1917 | [[File:1917 Canadian General Election.svg|350px]] | Results by electoral district | [[File:Canada 1917 Federal Election.svg|350px]] | Results by province and territory}} The 1917 Canadian federal election was held on December 17, 1917, to elect members of the House of Commons of Canada of the 13th Parliament of Canada. Described by historian Michael Bliss as the "most bitter election in Canadian history", it was fought mainly over the issue of conscription (see Conscription Crisis of 1917). The election resulted in Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden's Unionist government elected with a strong majority and the largest percentage of the popular vote for any party in Canadian history. This election is known as a "khaki election" as it was held on a period of wartime sentiment.

The previous election of 1911 was won by Borden's Conservatives. Normally, there is a constitutional requirement that Parliament last no longer than five years, which would have resulted in an election in 1916. However, citing the wartime emergency, the Parliament of Canada approved a one-year extension, which was implemented by the British Parliament. The Borden government hoped that the delay would allow the formation of a "grand coalition" government, encompassing all the parties, such as existed in Britain.

Sir Wilfrid Laurier, head of the Liberal Party of Canada, refused to join the coalition over the issue of conscription, which was strongly opposed in the French heartland of Quebec. Laurier worried that agreeing to Borden's coalition offer would cause that province to abandon the Liberals and perhaps even Canada. Borden proceeded to form a "Unionist" government, and the Liberal Party split over the issue. Many English Canadian Liberal MPs and provincial Liberal parties in English Canada supported the new Unionist government.

To ensure victory for conscription, Borden introduced two laws to skew the voting towards the government. The first, the Wartime Elections Act, disenfranchised conscientious objectors and Canadian citizens if they were born in enemy countries and had arrived after 1902. The law also gave wives and female relatives of servicemen the vote. Thus, the 1917 election was the first federal election in which some women were allowed to vote. The other new law was the Military Voters Act, which allowed soldiers serving abroad to choose which riding their vote would be counted in or to allow the party for which they voted to select the riding in which the vote would be counted. That allowed government officials to guide the strongly pro-conscription soldiers into voting in those ridings where they would be more useful. Servicemen were given a ballot with the simple choice of "Government" or "Opposition". It is calculated that the Unionist government took 14 seats from the Opposition due to its use of Army votes.

Soon after these measures were passed, Borden convinced a faction of Liberals (using the name Liberal-Unionists) along with Gideon Decker Robertson, who was described as a "Labour" Senator (but was unaffiliated with any Labour Party) to join with them, forming the Unionist government in October 1917. He then dissolved parliament to seek a mandate in the election, which pitted "Government" candidates, running as the Unionist Party, against the anti-conscription faction of the Liberal Party, which ran under the name Laurier Liberals. As well, Independent, Labour and Socialist candidates ran in many ridings across the country.

The divisive debate ended with the country divided on linguistic lines. The Liberals won 82 seats, 62 in Quebec, with many other seats won in provinces such as Manitoba, New Brunswick, and Ontario in ridings with significant French Canadian populations. The Unionists won 153 seats. The three Unionist won seats in Quebec were all in mainly English-speaking ridings. That led to the Francœur Motion in January 1918.

Out of 235 seats, 33 were won by acclamation—17 to the Laurier Liberals (all in Quebec) and 16 to the Unionists (all outside Quebec). Two of the Unionist acclamations were for the riding of Halifax, where the only candidates were two Unionists, and where, eleven days earlier, the tragic Halifax Explosion had taken place.

The election was conducted mostly using First past the post in single-member ridings but Ottawa, Queens, and Halifax each had two members and each of the voters there cast up to two votes as per Plurality block voting.

National results

PartyParty leader# of
candidatesSeatsPopular voteTotal476221235+5.9%1,880,702100%
[1911](1911-canadian-federal-election)**Elected**% Change#%pp ChangeGovernment (Unionist)1Robert Borden211132**153**+15.9%1,070,694
**Sources:** http://www.elections.ca -- [History of Federal Ridings since 1867](http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/process/house/hfer/hfer.asp?Language=E)

Notes:

  • Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election.

1 % change for Government compared to Conservative Party (including Liberal-Conservatives) in 1911 election, and for Opposition to Liberal Party.

Results by province

Party nameBCABSKMBONQCNBNSPEYKTotal
GovernmentSeats:1311161474371221
**Total seats****13****12****16****15****82****65****11****16****4****1****235**
**Parties that won no seats:**Vote (%):5.60.82.30.36.1

Notes

References

Primary sources

References

  1. ''Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs 1917'' pp. 587–643. [https://archive.org/details/canadianannualre0000unse_a4b9/page/587/mode/1up?view=theater online ]
  2. see [https://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/British_North_America_Act,_1916 ''British North America Act, 1916''.]
  3. "Wartime Elections Act".
  4. A History of the Vote in Canada, p. 60
  5. Parliamentary Guide
  6. Parliamentary Guide 1969, p. 333-334
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1917 Canadian federal election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report