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1988 Canadian federal election
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| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| election_name | 1988 Canadian federal election | |
| country | Canada | |
| type | parliamentary | |
| ongoing | no | |
| party_colour | no | |
| party_name | no | |
| turnout | 75.3% | |
| opinion_polls | Opinion polling for the 1988 Canadian federal election | |
| previous_election | 1984 Canadian federal election | |
| previous_year | 1984 | |
| previous_mps | 33rd Canadian Parliament | |
| next_election | 1993 Canadian federal election | |
| next_year | 1993 | |
| elected_mps | 34th Canadian Parliament | |
| seats_for_election | 295 seats in the House of Commons | majority_seats = 148 |
| election_date | November 21, 1988 | |
| image_size | x160px | |
| image1 | ||
| colour1 | ||
| leader1 | Brian Mulroney | |
| leader_since1 | [June 11, 1983](1983-progressive-conservative-leadership-election) | |
| party1 | ||
| leaders_seat1 | Charlevoix | |
| last_election1 | 211 seats, 50.03% | |
| seats_before1 | 203 | |
| seats1 | **169** | |
| seat_change1 | 34 | |
| popular_vote1 | **5,667,543** | |
| percentage1 | **43.02%** | |
| swing1 | 7.01 pp | |
| image2 | ||
| colour2 | ||
| leader2 | John Turner | |
| leader_since2 | [June 16, 1984](1984-liberal-party-of-canada-leadership-election) | |
| party2 | ||
| leaders_seat2 | Vancouver Quadra | |
| last_election2 | 40 seats, 28.02% | |
| seats_before2 | 38 | |
| seats2 | 83 | |
| seat_change2 | 45 | |
| popular_vote2 | 4,205,072 | |
| percentage2 | 31.92% | |
| swing2 | 3.89 pp | |
| image3 | ||
| colour3 | ||
| leader3 | Ed Broadbent | |
| leader_since3 | [July 7, 1975](1975-new-democratic-party-leadership-election) | |
| party3 | ||
| leaders_seat3 | Oshawa | |
| last_election3 | 30 seats, 18.81% | |
| seats_before3 | 32 | |
| seats3 | 43 | |
| seat_change3 | 11 | |
| popular_vote3 | 2,685,263 | |
| percentage3 | 20.38% | |
| swing3 | 1.57 pp | |
| map | {{Switcher | |
| title | Prime Minister | |
| posttitle | Prime Minister after election | |
| before_election | Brian Mulroney | |
| before_party | ||
| after_election | Brian Mulroney | |
| after_party | ||
| map2_image | Cdn1988.PNG | |
| map2_caption | The Canadian parliament after the 1988 election |
() | [[File:1988 Canadian Federal Election.svg|350px]] | Results by electoral district | [[File:Canada 1988 Federal Election.svg|350px]] | Results by province and territory}} The 1988 Canadian federal election was held on November 21, 1988, to elect members to the House of Commons of Canada of the 34th Parliament of Canada following the dissolution of the House on October 1. It was an election largely fought on a single issue, the Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement (CUSFTA); the Progressive Conservative Party campaigned in favour of it, whereas the Liberal Party and the New Democratic Party (NDP) campaigned against it.
The incumbent Progressive Conservative Party, led by Brian Mulroney, was reelected with a second majority government, although based on less than half the votes cast. Mulroney was the party's first leader since John A. Macdonald to win a second consecutive majority government. Additionally, this election was the last election in which the Progressive Conservatives would poll over 40 percent of the vote, as this would not recur until 2025, under the banner of the Conservative Party of Canada.
The Liberal Party experienced a recovery after its 1984 wipeout, more than doubling its seat count. The New Democratic Party won its largest number of seats up to the time (they would beat the 1988 record in 2011). The election was the last won by the Progressive Conservatives, the last until 2011 in which a right-of-centre party formed a majority government, and the last where a right-of-centre party won the most seats in Quebec during a federal election. It was also the last election in Canadian history in which only three parties would be elected to Parliament. With Mulroney winning a majority, the agreement was passed into law, even though a majority of the voters had voted for parties opposing free trade.
Background
Brian Mulroney led the Progressive Conservative Party to a landslide majority government victory in the 1984 federal election. Despite this achievement, scandals including patronage damaged his polling numbers. However, in his fourth year in office in 1988, his popularity began to recover; a poll a few days before the election call showed the Progressive Conservatives ahead of the Liberal Party and New Democratic Party.
The Liberal Party led by John Turner suffered a heavy defeat in the 1984 election. Despite this, Turner stayed on as leader and was preparing to campaign for the second election. However, the Liberal Party was in financial and political disarray; by 1986 the party was heavily in debt and the expenses of the national organization continued to rise. Turner's office experienced significant staff turnover, and leaving members were willing to recount stories of the office's disfunction to the press, resulting in Turner's leadership being nicknamed a "reign of error". Some pundits believed the Liberals would permanently drop to third place.
In 1988, Mulroney reached an agreement on free trade with the United States. Turner's Liberal Party and Ed Broadbent's New Democratic Party opposed the agreement; Turner believed that the agreement would "Americanize" Canada. Mulroney used his large majority to pass the bill through the House of Commons; however, the Liberal-dominated Senate demanded an election before they would pass it. The election was called on October 1.
Campaign
The Liberals had some early struggles, notably during one day in Montreal where three different costs were given for the proposed Liberal daycare program. When asked by reporters about the incident, Turner's chief of staff responded using vulgar language. The campaign was also hampered by a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) 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 with 76.3 percent of delegates rejecting a leadership convention.
Turner strongly campaigned against free trade, arguing that it would cost many Canadian jobs. His October 25 debate performance helped polls suggest a Liberal government; a week after the debate, the Liberals were six points ahead of the PCs. The Liberal surge prompted the PCs to stop the relatively calm campaign they had been running and instead run a more negative campaign, capitalizing on the perceived lack of public confidence in Turner, his perceived inability to lead the Liberal Party, and arguing that he only opposed free trade because of political opportunism. The PCs' poll numbers started to rebound.
National results
The Progressive Conservatives won a reduced but strong majority government with 169 seats, and the free trade agreement would go into effect on January 1, 1989. Mulroney was the first Conservative prime minister since John A. Macdonald to win more than one majority. In an ironic reversal of most prior federal elections, the PCs owed their majority to their success in Quebec, where they achieved the best result in party history by winning 63 of 75 seats.
Despite the Liberals more than doubling their seat count from 38 to 83, the results were considered a disappointment for Turner, after polls in mid-campaign predicted a Liberal victory. This second election loss sealed Turner's fate; he would eventually resign in 1990, and was succeeded by Jean Chrétien, who proved to be a more effective leader and when in government, accepted free trade with the United States and did not overturn CUSFTA.
Despite the New Democratic Party enjoying their best result at the time (winning 43 seats), Ed Broadbent resigned as leader in 1989. Some NDP members were disappointed by the fact that they did not become the Official Opposition.
| Party | Party leader | # of | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| candidates | Seats | Popular vote | ||
| [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Dissol. | **Elected** | % change | # |
| Vacant | 5 | |||
| **Total** | **1,573** | **282** | **282** | **295** |
Note:
"% change" refers to change from previous election
Vote and seat summaries
|File:Ternary CA1984.svg |1984 |File:Ternary CA1988.svg |1988
A number of unregistered parties also contested the election. The Western Canada Concept party, led by Doug 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 Liberal candidate in Etobicoke-Lakeshore, Emmanuel Feuerwerker, withdrew from the race, resulting in the Liberals not running a candidate in all 295 ridings during this election.
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 fielded nine candidates, far short of the 50 required for official recognition. However, the Chief Electoral Officer allowed the party's name to appear on the ballot by virtue of its half-century history as a recognized party. It would be the last time that the party, which had been the third-largest or fourth-largest party in Canada at its height, would fight an election under its own name. The party was deregistered before the 1993 election after it failed to nominate enough candidates to keep its registration.
Seats which changed hands
Defeated MPs
| Party | Riding | MP | First elected | Defeated by | Party |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burin—St. George's | Joe Price | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Roger Simmons | ||
| Cardigan | Pat Binns | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Lawrence MacAulay | ||
| Charlottetown | Thomas McMillan | [1979](1979-canadian-federal-election) | George Proud | ||
| Cape Breton Highlands—Canso | Lawrence O'Neil | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Francis LeBlanc | ||
| Dartmouth | Michael Forrestall | [1965](1965-canadian-federal-election) | Ron MacDonald | ||
| Halifax | Stewart McInnes | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Mary Clancy | ||
| South West Nova | Gerald Comeau | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Coline Campbell | ||
| Miramichi | Bud Jardine | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Maurice Dionne | ||
| Moncton | Dennis Cochrane | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | George Rideout | ||
| Restigouche—Chaleur | Al Girard | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Guy Arseneault | ||
| Gatineau—La Lièvre | Claudy Mailly | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Mark Assad | ||
| Lasalle (contested LaSalle—Émard) | Claude Lanthier | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Paul Martin | ||
| Charlevoix (contested Laurier—Sainte-Marie) | Charles Hamelin | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Jean-Claude Malepart | ||
| Essex-Kent | James Eber Caldwell | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Jerry Pickard | ||
| Etobicoke North | Bob Pennock | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Roy MacLaren | ||
| Haldimand—Norfolk | Bud Bradley | [1979](1979-canadian-federal-election) | Bob Speller | ||
| Hamilton West | Peter Peterson | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Stan Keyes | ||
| Kent | Elliott Hardey | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Rex Crawford | ||
| Kingston and the Islands | Flora MacDonald | [1972](1972-canadian-federal-election) | Peter Milliken | ||
| Lambton—Middlesex | Sidney Fraleigh | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Ralph Ferguson | ||
| Leeds—Grenville | Jennifer Cossitt | 1982 by-election | Jim Jordan | ||
| London East | Jim Jepson | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Joe Fontana | ||
| Nepean—Carleton (contested Nepean) | William Tupper | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Beryl Gaffney | ||
| Nipissing | Moe Mantha Sr. | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Bob Wood | ||
| Ottawa—Carleton (contested Ottawa South) | Barry Turner | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | John Manley | ||
| Ottawa West | David Daubney | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Marlene Catterall | ||
| Parkdale—High Park | Andrew Witer | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Jesse Flis | ||
| Sault Ste. Marie | Jim Kelleher | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Steve Butland | ||
| Scarborough West | Reg Stackhouse | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Tom Wappel | ||
| York—Scarborough (contested Scarborough—Agincourt) | Paul McCrossan | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Jim Karygiannis | ||
| Timmins—Chapleau | Aurèle Gervais | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Cid Samson | ||
| Welland (contested Welland—St. Catharines—Thorold) | Allan Pietz | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Gilbert Parent | ||
| Willowdale | John Oostrom | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Jim Peterson | ||
| Saint Boniface | Léo Duguay | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Ron Duhamel | ||
| Mackenzie | Jack Scowen | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Vic Althouse | ||
| Saskatoon West (contested Saskatoon—Clark's Crossing) | Ray Hnatyshyn | [1974](1974-canadian-federal-election) | Chris Axworthy | ||
| The Battlefords—Meadow Lake | John Kenneth Gormley | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Len Taylor | ||
| Edmonton East | William Lesick | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Ross Harvey | ||
| Kootenay East | Stan Graham | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Sid Parker | ||
| Kootenay West (contested Kootenay West—Revelstoke) | Robert Brisco | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) ([1974](1974-canadian-federal-election)) | Lyle Kristiansen | ||
| Mission—Port Moody (contested Mission—Coquitlam) | Gerry St. Germain | 1983 by-election | Joy Langan | ||
| Nanaimo—Alberni (contested Nanaimo—Cowichan) | Ted Schellenberg | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | David Stupich | ||
| Okanagan—Similkameen (contested Okanagan—Similkameen—Merritt) | Fred King | [1979](1979-canadian-federal-election) | Jack Whittaker | ||
| Esquimalt—Saanich (contested Saanich—Gulf Islands) | Patrick Crofton | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Lynn Hunter | ||
| Western Arctic | Dave Nickerson | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Ethel Blondin | ||
| St. John's East | Jack Harris | 1987 by-election | Ross Reid | ||
| Broadview—Greenwood | Lynn McDonald | 1982 by-election | Dennis Mills | ||
| Hamilton Mountain | Marion Dewar | 1987 by-election | Beth Phinney | ||
| Kenora—Rainy River | John Edmund Parry | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Bob Nault | ||
| Ottawa Centre | Mike Cassidy | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Mac Harb | ||
| Thunder Bay—Nipigon | Ernie Epp | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Joe Comuzzi | ||
| Winnipeg North Centre | Cyril Keeper | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | David Walker | ||
| Winnipeg North | David Orlikow | [1962](1962-canadian-federal-election) | Rey Pagtakhan | ||
| Outremont | Lucie Pépin | [1984](1984-canadian-federal-election) | Jean-Pierre Hogue |
Open seats that changed hands
| Party | Candidate | Incumbent retiring from the House | Riding | Won by | Party |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morrissey Johnson | Morrissey Johnson | Bonavista—Trinity—Conception | Fred Mifflin | ||
| Gordon Lank | Melbourne Gass | Malpeque | Catherine Callbeck | ||
| Jean Gauvin | Roger Clinch | Gloucester | Doug Young | ||
| Reg Jewell | George Hees | Northumberland | Christine Stewart | ||
| Jack Arthur | Jack Ellis | Prince Edward—Hastings | Lyle Vanclief | ||
| Eric J. Cameron | Norman Warner | Stormont—Dundas | Bob Kilger | ||
| Sedluk Bryan Pearson | Thomas Suluk | Nunatsiaq | Jack Iyerak Anawak | ||
| Valerie Kordyban | Lorne McCuish | Prince George—Bulkley Valley | Brian Gardiner | ||
| Geoff Young | Allan McKinnon | Victoria | John F. Brewin | ||
| N/A | Tony Roman | York North | Maurizio Bevilacqua |
New seats
| Old riding | New riding | New seat won by | Party |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mississauga North | Mississauga East | Albina Guarnieri | |
| Mississauga North | Mississauga West | Robert Horner |
Results by province
| Party name | BC | AB | SK | MB | ON | QC | NB | NS | PE | NL | NT | YK | Total | 32 | 26 | 14 | 14 | 99 | 75 | 10 | 11 | 4 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 295 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CA | PC | background}} | Progressive Conservative | Seats: | 12 | 25 | 4 | 7 | 46 | 63 | 5 | 5 | - | 2 | - | - | 169 | ||||||||||||
| 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 | ||||||||||||||||
| CA | Liberal | background}} | Liberal | Seats: | 1 | - | - | 5 | 43 | 12 | 5 | 6 | 4 | 5 | 2 | - | 83 | ||||||||||||
| 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 | ||||||||||||||||
| CA | NDP | background}} | New Democratic Party | Seats: | 19 | 1 | 10 | 2 | 10 | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1 | 43 | ||||||||||||
| 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** | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| **Parties that won no seats:** | Vote: | 4.8 | 15.4 | 3.3 | 2.1 | Vote: | 1.1 | 1.4 |
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.
Election milestones
Until the 2011 federal election, the 1988 election was the most successful in the New Democratic Party's history. The party dominated in British Columbia and Saskatchewan, won significant support in Ontario and elected its first (and, until the 2008 election, only) member from Alberta. This is the most recent election in which the New Democrats won the most seats in British Columbia and Saskatchewan.
This was the second election contested by the Green Party, and it saw a more than 50 percent increase in its vote, but it remained a minor party.
The election was the last for Canada's Social Credit Party. The party won no seats, and won an insignificant portion of the popular vote. The party attempted to fight the 1993 election, but lost its registration after being unable to field enough candidates.
This was the first election for the newly founded Reform Party which for this vote only contested seats in Western Canada. The party at this stage was filled to a large extent with former Socreds along with some former PC supporters disaffected at the perceived lack of support from the Mulroney government for western interests. It was led by Preston Manning, who was himself a one time Socred candidate and the son of longtime Alberta Social Credit premier Ernest Manning.
Reform won no seats and a negligible percentage of the vote. However, Deborah Grey would win the first seat for Reform, Beaver River in Alberta, in a by-election held four months later. Grey, who had finished a distant fourth running in the same riding in the general election, succeeded rookie Progressive Conservative MP John Dahmer, who died of pancreatic cancer before taking office.
For the Progressive Conservatives, this was the last federal election they would ever win. A centre-right party would not win government until 2006, and a conservative party would not win over 40 percent of the vote until 2025.
Notes
- Number of parties: 11
- First appearance: Christian Heritage Party, Reform Party
- Final appearance: Confederation of Regions Party, Social Credit Party
- Final appearance before hiatus: Communist Party (returned in 2000), Rhinoceros Party (returned in 2006)
10 closest ridings
- London-Middlesex, ON: Terry Clifford (PC) def. Garnet Bloomfield (Lib) by 8 votes
- Northumberland, ON: Christine Stewart (Lib) def. Reg Jewell (PC) by 28 votes
- Hamilton Mountain, ON: Beth Phinney (Lib) def. Marion Dewar (NDP) by 73 votes
- York North, ON: Maurizio Bevilacqua (Lib) def. Micheal O'Brien (PC) by 77 votes
- Rosedale, ON: David MacDonald (PC) def. Bill Graham (Lib) by 80 votes
- London East, ON: Joe Fontana (Lib) def. Jim Jepson (PC) by 102 votes
- Haldimand—Norfolk, ON: Bob Speller (Lib) def. Bud Bradley (PC) by 209 votes
- Hillsborough, PE: George Proud (Lib) def. Thomas McMillan (PC) by 259 votes
- Cariboo—Chilcotin, BC: Dave Worthy (PC) def. Jack Langford (NDP) by 269 votes
- Vancouver Centre, BC: future Prime Minister Kim Campbell (PC) def. Johanna Den Hertog (NDP) by 269 votes
References
Notes
Party platforms
References
- "Voter Turnout at Federal Elections and Referendums". [[Elections Canada]].
- "Journals : Senate Journals, 33rd Parliament, 2n... - Canadian Parliamentary Historical Resources". Canadian Parliamentary Historical Resources.
- ""The New Life of Brian Mulroney". The Walrus, Ira Wells, Apr. 19, 2018".
- (28 September 2008). "Election of 1988".
- (20 September 1988). "Canadian Pact Voted By Senate".
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