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1921 Canadian federal election

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1921 Canadian federal election

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FieldValue
election_name1921 Canadian federal election
countryCanada
flag_year1921
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
party_colourno
party_nameno
previous_election1917 Canadian federal election
previous_year1917
next_election1925 Canadian federal election
next_year1925
seats_for_election235 seats in the House of Commons
majority_seats118
turnout67.7%{{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}} ( 7.3 pp)
election_dateDecember 6, 1921
elected_members14th Canadian Parliament
outgoing_members13th Canadian Parliament
image_sizex160px
image1King1919HeadShot (cropped).jpg
colour1
leader1W. L. Mackenzie King
leader_since1[August 7, 1919](1919-liberal-party-of-canada-leadership-election)
party1
leaders_seat1Prince
*candidate in* York North
last_election182 seats, 38.80%
seats1**118**
seat_change136
popular_vote1**1,285,998**
percentage1**41.15%**
swing12.34 pp
image2CRERAR (cropped).jpg
colour2
leader2Thomas Crerar
leader_since2February 26, 1920
party2
leaders_seat2Marquette
last_election2*New party*
seats258
seat_change258
popular_vote2658,976
percentage221.09%
swing2*New party*
image3Former PM Arthur Meighen (cropped).jpg
colour3
leader3Arthur Meighen
leader_since3July 10, 1920
party3
leaders_seat3Portage la Prairie *(lost re-election)*
last_election3153 seats, 56.93%
seats349
seat_change3104
popular_vote3935,651
percentage329.95%
swing326.98 pp
image4Ac.woodsworth.jpg
colour4
leader4J. S. Woodsworth
leader_since4December 6, 1921
party4Independent Labour
leaders_seat4Winnipeg Centre
last_election40 seats, 1.84%
seats43
seat_change43
popular_vote485,388
percentage42.73%
swing40.90 pp
image5Herbert Greenfield - circa 1921-25 (cropped).jpg
colour5
leader5Herbert Greenfield
leader_since5August 13, 1921
party5
leaders_seat5*Did not run*
last_election5*New party*
seats52
seat_change52
popular_vote522,251
percentage50.71%
swing5*New party*
image6EC Drury Photo B (HS85-10-36997) (cropped).jpg
colour6
leader6Ernest C. Drury
leader_since6November 14, 1919
party6
leaders_seat6*Did not run*
last_election6*New party*
seats61
seat_change61
popular_vote63,919
percentage60.13%
swing6*New party*
map{{Switcher
titlePrime Minister
posttitlePrime Minister after election
before_electionArthur Meighen
before_party
after_electionWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King
after_party
map2_imageChambre des Communes 1921.png
map2_size350px
map2_captionThe Canadian parliament after the 1921 election

candidate in York North | [[File:Canada 1921.svg|350px]] | Results by electoral district | [[File:Canada 1921 Federal Election.svg|350px]] | Results by province and territory}} The 1921 Canadian federal election was held on December 6, 1921, to elect members of the House of Commons of Canada of the 14th Parliament of Canada. The Union government that had governed Canada through the First World War was defeated, and replaced by a Liberal government under the young leader William Lyon Mackenzie King. A new third party, the Progressive Party, won the second most seats in the election.

Since the 1911 election, the country had been governed by the Conservatives, first under the leadership of Prime Minister Robert Borden and then under Prime Minister Arthur Meighen. During the war, the Conservatives had united with the pro-conscription Liberal-Unionists and formed a Union government. A number of Members of Parliament (MPs), mostly Quebecers, stayed loyal to Sir Wilfrid Laurier, however, and they maintained their independence. When Laurier died, he was replaced as leader by the Ontarian Mackenzie King. After the 1919 federal budget, a number of western unionist MPs, who were former Liberals, left the Union government in protest against high tariffs on farm products imposed by the budget. Led by Thomas Alexander Crerar, the group became known as the Progressive Party. Also running were a number of Labour advocates, foremost amongst them J. S. Woodsworth of Winnipeg, who had organized their political movement after the Winnipeg general strike of 1919. Meighen had played a key role in violently suppressing the strikers and this earned him the animosity of organized labour.

Meighen attempted to make the "Unionist" party a permanent alliance of Tories and Liberals by renaming it the National Liberal and Conservative Party, but the name change failed, and most Unionist Liberals either returned to the Liberal fold or joined the new Progressive Party. Besides the labour strife and farm tariffs in the Prairie provinces, the Conscription Crisis of 1917 had a lasting effect on Tory fortunes by making the party virtually unelectable in Quebec.

The election was the first in which the majority of Canadian women were allowed to vote, thanks to reforms passed by the Conservatives. Five women also ran for office. Agnes Macphail of the Progressive Party was elected as the first woman MP in Canada.

Parliament was split three ways by this election. King's Liberals took 41 percent of the vote and won a minority government of one seat, if an Independent Liberal is counted as Liberal. It won all of Quebec, much of the Maritime Provinces, and a good portion of Ontario.

The Progressive Party, including the United Farmers of Alberta (UFA), won the second largest number of seats, dominating the Prairies, and winning almost a third of the seats in Ontario. Liberal and Conservative candidates were shut out in Alberta, with 10 UFA and two Labour candidates taking the province's 12 federal seats. The party won only one seat east of Ontario, however. Despite winning the second most seats, it declined to form the official opposition. It would be the only Canadian federal election before 1993 in which a party other than the Liberals or the Conservatives/Progressive Conservatives won the second most seats.

The Unionists/Conservatives lost the most seats up to that time of any governing party at the federal level. They won fewer seats than the Progressives (despite having more popular votes) but were named as the official opposition anyway. The Conservatives won much of the Ontario seats and had some support in the Maritimes and British Columbia but won no seats in the Prairies or in Quebec.

Three Labour MPs were elected: Independent Labour candidate J. S. Woodsworth won a Winnipeg seat largely due to his role in the 1919 Winnipeg general strike, and Labour Party candidates William Irvine and Joseph Tweed Shaw were elected in Calgary.

Majority or minority?

King's party won the most seats in the election but was one seat short of a majority if an Independent Liberal is counted as a Liberal. The confusion between majority and minority is the result of the mislabelling of two Manitoba members as Liberals. Albert Blellock Hudson, a former provincial Liberal cabinet minister, was elected as an Independent Liberal (or Independent) over the official Liberal candidate, William Robert Hogarth. Arthur-Lucien Beaubien was elected in Provencher as a Progressive, defeating the sitting Liberal incumbent, John Patrick Molloy.

The Liberal Party lost two by-elections to Conservative candidates but later won a by-election in a seat that had been held by the Conservatives.

The Progressive caucus was less united than the Liberals or Conservatives, due to the formation of the Ginger Group and the semi-autonomous United Farmers of Alberta group. The Farmer MPs had promised among other things that they would reject the traditional Parliamentary traditions such as that of bending to the will of the party leader and whip. Many Progressives argued that an MP should be able to vote against the party line so long as the vote was in accordance to his constituents' wishes. As a result, King always found enough Progressive MPs who backed him on crucial votes. In the final session in 1925, 17 moderate Progressives consistently supported the Liberal government despite a caucus decision against them doing so.

There is no historical basis for the suggestion that in 1925 the government was brought down by an adverse vote due to a moment of confusion. This may itself result from confusion with the incident in the following Parliament (the 15th), when Arthur Meighen's government was defeated by one vote, becoming the first Canadian ministry to be defeated on a motion of non-confidence. In that vote, held on July 2, 1926, Rev. T. M. Bird (Progressive member for Nelson, Man.) stated he voted inadvertently, having been “paired” with another Progressive who was ill; if his vote had not been cast, the Meighen government would have likely survived on the vote of the Speaker breaking the tie.

Electoral system

Most of the MPs were elected in single-winner First past the post; Ottawa and Halifax were two-seat ridings with each voter able to cast up to two votes as per Plurality block voting.

National results

PartyParty leader# of
candidatesSeatsPopular voteTotal635235235-3,123,903100%
[1917](1917-canadian-federal-election)**Elected**% Change#%pp ChangeLiberalW. L. Mackenzie King20482**118**+43.9%1,285,998
**Sources:** http://www.elections.ca -- [History of Federal Ridings since 1867](https://web.archive.org/web/20090609211221/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/Sites/LOP/HFER/hfer.asp?Language=E)

Note:

  • not applicable - the party was not recognized in the previous election

  • UFA candidates were sometimes referred to as Progressives, just as sometimes "Progressive" candidates running outside Alberta were referred to as UFA. All farmer/Progressive candidates running in Alberta were both UFA and Progressive, and sat as such in the House of Commons, at least until the UFA caucus became more independent. The vote shares of Progressive and UFA candidates shown above, if combined, are accurate for the two parties together as one.)

Vote and seat summaries

Results by province

Party nameBCABSKMBONQCNBNSPEYKTotalTotal seats131216158265111641235Parties that won no seats:
LiberalSeats:3-1321655164-118Popular vote (%):29.815.818.718.930.170.250.252.445.747.641.2Progressive
OtherVote (%):0.40.22.40.61.65.21.0SocialistVote (%):1.80.1

Notes

References

References

  1. (2007-12-01). "Hopkins, John Castell, (1 April 1864–5 Nov. 1923), author The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs, 1901–20; Managing Director, The Canadian Review Co., Ltd". Oxford University Press.
  2. Wilson, John. (March 1969). "J. Murray Beck, Pendulum of Power: Canada's Federal Elections. Scarborough, Ont.: Prentice-Hall, 1968, pp. 442.". Canadian Journal of Political Science.
  3. Cook, Ramsay. (May 1964). "Arthur Meighen. II. And Fortune Fled. By Roger Graham. Toronto: Clarke, Irwin & Company. 1963. Pp. viii, 535. $8.00.". Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science.
  4. Parliamentary Guide
  5. Red Deer News, Dec. 14, 1921
  6. Parliamentary Guide 1922, p. 292
  7. Edmonton Bulletin, Dec. 10, 1921, p. 9
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