This is a list of results of leadership elections for the Ontario Liberal Party, a political party in Ontario, Canada.
Note: Before 1919, the leaders of the Ontario Liberal Party were chosen by its elected Members of the Legislative Assembly. There were calls for a more open process as early as 1907.
1919 leadership convention
edit(Held on June 26, 1919 at the Foresters' Hall, 22 College Street, Toronto.)[1]
First ballot:
- Hartley Dewart 147
- J.C. Tolmie 97
- J.C. Elliott 37
- William Proudfoot 23
- Thomas McMillan 8
Second ballot:
- Hartley Dewart 158
- J.C. Tolmie 121
- J.C. Elliott 24
Charles Martin Bowman, MPP for Bruce North; W.T.R. Preston, editor of the Port Hope Evening Guide, Rev. W. G. Charlton of Aylmer, and A. J. Young of Toronto were nominated but declined. Frederick Forsyth Pardee, Member of Parliament for Lambton West was to be nominated but sent a message to the convention declining.[2]
1922 leadership convention
edit(Held on March 3, 1922 at the Foresters' Hall, 22 College Street, Toronto.)[3]
- Wellington Hay won with clear majority on the first ballot
- J.C. Tolmie
- W.E.N. Sinclair
(Note: The vote totals do not appear to have been announced.)
1930 leadership convention
edit(Held on December 16–17, 1930 at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto.)[4]
- Mitchell Hepburn 427
- Elmore Philpott 97
W.E.N. Sinclair and Sydney Tweed both withdrew from the race before balloting.
1943 leadership convention
edit(Held on April 30, 1943 at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto.)
- Harry Nixon 418
- Arthur Roebuck 85
- Thomas McQuesten 40
- Walter Thomson 22
There were 8 spoiled ballots. Premier Gordon Conant had also been a candidate but collapsed the morning of the leadership vote and withdrew.
1945 leadership election
edit(Held on April 2, 1945 at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto.)
- Mitchell Hepburn acclaimed
Harry Nixon resigned as Liberal leader on December 10, 1944 and nominated Hepburn to succeed him as parliamentary leader until a leadership convention could be held.[5] Following the defeat of George Drew's Conservative government in a non-confidence motion, Hepburn was elected Acting Leader on April 2, 1945, at a joint meeting held at the King Edward Hotel of Ontario Liberal MPPs, federal Ontario Liberal MPs the party executive and other party officials in order to lead the party into the election. The move was to be affirmed by a party convention to be held on May 1, but this was cancelled due to the 1945 provincial election being underway.[6][7][8] Hepburn was defeated in the 1945 provincial election, and Farquhar Oliver was chosen as the Ontario Liberal Party's parliamentary leader on July 4, 1945.
1947 leadership convention
edit(Held on May 16, 1947 at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto)[9][10]
- Farquhar Oliver elected
- Colin Campbell
- Allan A. Lamport
- Alvin P. Cadeau
- W.A. Gunn
- P.M. Dewan and W.A. Moore both withdrew from the race before balloting.
(Note: Complete vote totals were not reported. Oliver received 492 of 661 votes cast)[10]
1950 leadership convention
edit(Held on November 10, 1950 at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto.)[11]
First ballot:
- Walter Thomson 296
- Harry Cassidy 156
- John G. Brown 149
- Campbell Calder 69
- Henry Arnott Hicks 28
- Charles Winnans Cox 24
- Norman Hipel 12
- J.J. Sullivan 4
Second ballot (Sullivan eliminated; Hicks, Cox and Hipel withdrew):
- Walter Thomson 334
- Harry Cassidy 194
- John G. Brown 166
- Campbell Calder 50
Third ballot (Calder eliminated):
- Walter Thomson 365
- Harry Cassidy 220
- John G. Brown 116
1954 leadership convention
edit(Held on April 9, 1954 at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto.)[12]
- Farquhar Oliver 412
- Albert Wren 162
- Bob Temple 46
1958 leadership convention
edit(Held on April 20, 1958 at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto.)[13]
First ballot:
- Walter Harris 304
- John Wintermeyer 264
- Joe Greene 88
- Vernon Singer 43
- Ross Whicher 39
- Arthur Reaume 32
- Albert Wren 7
Wren eliminated and endorsed Wintermeyer; Whicher and Reaume withdrew and endorsed Wintermeyer.[14]
Second ballot:
- John Wintermeyer 369
- Walter Harris 354
- Joe Greene45
- Vernon Singer 21
Singer eliminated.
Third ballot:
- John Wintermeyer 398
- Walter Harris 349
- Joe Greene 14
1964 leadership convention
edit(Held on September 19–20, 1964 at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto.)
Candidate | 1st ballot | 2nd ballot | 3rd ballot | 4th ballot | 5th ballot | 6th ballot | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % |
Andy Thompson | 379 | 27.7 | 408 | 29.7 | 462 | 33.6 | 520 | 38.1 | 539 | 39.9 | 772 | 58.8 |
Charles Templeton | 317 | 23.1 | 356 | 25.9 | 396 | 28.8 | 422 | 30.9 | 419 | 31.0 | 540 | 41.2 |
Robert Nixon | 313 | 22.8 | 351 | 25.6 | 356 | 25.9 | 387 | 28.3 | 392 | 29.0 | ||
Joe Greene | 236 | 17.2 | 211 | 15.4 | 149 | 10.9 | 37 | 2.7 | ||||
Victor Copps | 61 | 4.5 | 27 | 2.0 | 10 | 0.7 | ||||||
Eddie Sargent | 51 | 3.7 | 20 | 1.5 | ||||||||
Joseph Gould | 13 | 0.9 | ||||||||||
Total | 1,370 | 100.0 | 1,373 | 100.0 | 1,373 | 100.0 | 1,366 | 100.0 | 1,350 | 100.0 | 1,312 | 100.0 |
1967 leadership convention
edit(Held on January 6, 1967 at the Royal York Hotel, Toronto)[15]
- Robert Nixon acclaimed
(Nixon was elected interim leader by the caucus on November 16, 1966 following the resignation of Andrew Thompson. Nixon had suggested that Charles Templeton may become permanent leader but members of his caucus spoke in opposition and Templeton decline to run. Nixon was acclaimed as permanent leader at the party's 1967 convention. He announced his resignation as party leader in 1972, but subsequently entered the race to succeed himself in 1973.)
1973 leadership convention
edit(Held on October 28, 1973 at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto.)
Candidate | 1st ballot | 2nd ballot | 3rd ballot | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % |
Robert Nixon | 730 | 42.5 | 768 | 45.3 | 922 | 57.7 |
Norman Cafik | 574 | 33.4 | 613 | 36.1 | 675 | 42.3 |
Donald Deacon | 402 | 23.4 | 316 | 18.6 | Endorsed Nixon | |
Michael Houlton | 11 | 0.6 | No endorsement | |||
Total | 1,717 | 100.0 | 1,697 | 100.0 | 1,597 | 100.0 |
1976 leadership convention
edit(Held on January 24–25, 1976 at the Four Seasons Sheraton Hotel, Toronto)
Candidate | 1st ballot | 2nd ballot | 3rd ballot | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % | Votes cast | % |
Stuart Smith | 629 | 32.0 | 742 | 38.5 | 998 | 51.2 |
David Peterson | 518 | 26.4 | 673 | 34.9 | 953 | 48.8 |
Albert Roy | 469 | 23.9 | 513 | 26.6 | No Endorsement | |
Mark MacGuigan | 308 | 15.7 | No Endorsement | |||
Larry Condon | 37 | 1.9 | No Endorsement | |||
Michael Houlton | 4 | 0.2 | No endorsement | |||
Total | 1,965 | 100.0 | 1,928 | 100.0 | 1,951 | 100.0 |
1982 leadership convention
edit(Held on February 21, 1982 at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel, Toronto).
- = Eliminated from next round
- = Withdrew nomination
- = Winner
Candidate | 1st Ballot | 2nd Ballot | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||||
David Peterson | 966 | 46.3 | 1136 | 55.2 | ||||||
Sheila Copps | 636 | 30.5 | 774 | 37.6 | ||||||
Richard Thomas | 234 | 11.2 | 148 | 7.2 | ||||||
Jim Breithaupt | 130 | 6.2 | ||||||||
John Sweeney | 122 | 5.8 | ||||||||
Votes cast by ballot | ||||||||||
Total | 2088 | 100.0 | 2058 | 100.0 |
1992 leadership convention
edit(Held February 8–9, 1992 at the Copps Coliseum in Hamilton.)
- = Eliminated from next round
- = Withdrew nomination
- = Winner
Candidate | 1st Ballot | 2nd Ballot | 3rd Ballot | 4th Ballot | 5th Ballot [A] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % |
Murray Elston | 740 | 30.2 | 767 | 31.8 | 865 | 35.6 | 988 | 41.6 | 1153 | 49.8 |
Lyn McLeod | 667 | 27.2 | 744 | 30.9 | 873 | 35.9 | 1049 | 44.1 | 1162 | 50.2 |
Greg Sorbara | 345 | 14.1 | 380 | 15.8 | 402 | 16.6 | 341 | 14.3 | Released delegates | |
Charles Beer | 247 | 10.1 | 307 | 12.7 | 289 | 11.9 | Released delegates | |||
Steve Mahoney | 236 | 9.6 | 213 | 8.8 | Supported McLeod | |||||
David Ramsay | 216 | 8.8 | Released delegates | |||||||
Votes cast by ballot | ||||||||||
Total | 2451 | 100.0 | 2411 | 100.0 | 2429 | 100.0 | 2378 | 100.0 | 2315 | 100.0 |
- A There were 21 spoiled ballots on the final count.
1996 leadership convention
edit(Held November 30 – December 1, 1996 at the Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto)
- = Eliminated from next round
- = Withdrew nomination
- = Winner
Candidate | elected delegates | 1st Ballot (7:31pm) |
2nd Ballot (10:25pm)[A] |
3rd Ballot (12:39am) |
4th Ballot (2:35am) |
5th Ballot (4:25am) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % |
Gerard Kennedy | 703 | 29.5 | 770 | 30.1 | 775 | 30.9 | 803 | 31.9 | 968 | 40.1 | 1065 | 46.9 |
Joseph Cordiano | 497 | 20.8 | 557 | 21.8 | 570 | 22.7 | 601 | 23.9 | 696 | 28.8 | Supported McGuinty | |
Dwight Duncan | 393 | 16.5 | 464 | 18.1 | 474 | 18.9 | 509 | 20.3 | Supported Kennedy | |||
Dalton McGuinty | 410 | 17.2 | 450 | 17.6 | 440 | 17.6 | 601 | 23.9 | 750 | 31.1 | 1205 | 53.1 |
John Gerretsen | 129 | 5.4 | 152 | 6.0 | 124 | 5.0 | Supported McGuinty | |||||
Anna-Marie Castrilli | 110 | 4.6 | 141 | 5.5 | 122 | 4.9 | Supported McGuinty | |||||
Greg Kells | 17 | 0.7 | 24 | 0.9 | Released delegates | |||||||
Independent | 127 | 5.3 | ||||||||||
Total | 2386 | 100.0 | 2558 | 100.0 | 2505 | 100.0 | 2514 | 100.0 | 2414 | 100.0 | 2270 | 100.0 |
- A Castrilli initially withdrew from the 2nd ballot but subsequently returned, causing a delay in voting
2013 leadership election
edit(Held January 26, 2013 at the Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto)
- = Eliminated from next round
- = Withdrew nomination
- = Winner
Candidate | Committed[16] | Ballot 1 | Ballot 2 | Ballot 3 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Votes | Votes | Votes | /- (pp) | Votes | /- (pp) | |
Sandra Pupatello | 509 27.4% |
599 28.7% |
817 39.4% |
10.7 | 866 43.0% |
5.8% | |
Kathleen Wynne | 468 25.2% |
597 28.6% |
750 36.2% |
7.6 | 1,150 57.0% |
20.8 | |
Gerard Kennedy | 260 14.0% |
281 13.5% |
285 13.7% |
0.2 | Endorsed Wynne | ||
Harinder Takhar | 244 13.1% |
235 11.3% |
18 0.9% |
-10.4 | Endorsed Pupatello[A] | ||
Charles Sousa | 204 11.0% |
222 10.7% |
203 9.8% |
-0.9 | Endorsed Wynne | ||
Eric Hoskins | 105 5.7% |
150 7.2% |
Endorsed Wynne | ||||
Independent | 67 3.6% |
||||||
Glen Murray | Endorsed Wynne | ||||||
Votes cast and net change by ballot | |||||||
Total | 1,857 | 2,084 | 2,073 | -11 | 2,016 | -57 |
- A Takhar endorsed Pupatello before the second ballot voting took place, but after the deadline to drop off the ballot.
2020 leadership election
edit(Held March 6–7, 2020 at the International Centre, Mississauga)
Candidate | Delegate Elected[17] | First (final) ballot | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Steven Del Duca | 1,172 | 56.2% | 1,258 | 58.8% |
Michael Coteau | 370 | 17.8% | 363 | 16.9% |
Kate Graham | 273 | 13.1% | 299 | 13.9% |
Mitzie Hunter | 130 | 6.2% | 122 | 5.7% |
Alvin Tedjo | 72 | 3.4% | 74 | 3.5% |
Brenda Hollingsworth | 25 | 1.2% | 24 | 1.1% |
Independent | 42 | 2.0% | ||
Total | 2084 | 2140 |
There was one spoiled ballot.[18]
2023 leadership election
edit(Results announced December 2, 2023 at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre)
A leadership election was held December 2, 2023 due to the June 2, 2022 resignation of Steven Del Duca as party leader following his party's poor result in the 2022 Ontario general election.
- = Winner
Candidate | 1st round | 2nd round | 3rd round | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes cast | % | Points allocated | % | Votes cast | % | Points allocated | % | Votes cast | % | Points allocated | % | |||||
Bonnie Crombie | 5,559 | 42.96% | 6,047 | 46.73% | 6,911 | 53.40% | ||||||||||
Nathaniel Erskine-Smith | 3,320 | 25.66% | 3,792 | 29.30% | 6,029 | 46.59% | ||||||||||
Yasir Naqvi | 2,760 | 21.33% | 3,101 | 23.96% | Eliminated | |||||||||||
Ted Hsu | 1,300 | 10.05% | Eliminated | |||||||||||||
Total | 100% | 12,939 | 100% | 100% | 12,940 | 100% | 100% | 12,940 | 100% |
According to the party, 22,827 party members cast ballots[19] out of a total membership of over 100,000.[20]
References
edit- ^ "ONTARIO LIBERALS TO SELECT NEW LEADER AT ELEVEN TO-DAY: Four Now in Field, and Name of F. F. Pardee, M. P., May Also Be in Nomination ADVANCED POLICY TALK IS HEARD IN CONVENTION Likely to be Important Stand Taken on Labor Question-- To-day Momentous One for Party". The Globe. June 26, 1919.
- ^ "H. HARTLEY DEWART NEW LEADER; ELECTED ON THE SECOND BALLOT BY ONTARIO LIBERAL CONVENTION: Major Tolmie of Windsor Runs Second, and Mr. Elliott Third Progressive Policies for Party Are Determined Upon OVER THREE HUNDRED BALLOTS ARE MARKED Mr. Proudfoot Expostulates With Some Heat That No Man Who Voted Union Has Chance at Any Liberal Convention". The Globe. June 27, 1919.
- ^ "ONTARIO LIBERALISM KNOWS NO COALITION UNDER U.F.O. BANNER: Convention Today Will Demonstrate That "Class Political Movement" Has No Friends in Historic Party--All Farmers By No Means "Morrisonites" RECENT ELECTION STRENGTHENS CAUSE". The Globe. March 1, 1922.
- ^ "Race for Leadership, A People's Platform, To Enthuse Liberals: Three, Maybe Four, Aspire to High Office-- Sinclair's Intentions Not Definitely Known, But His Friends Say He Is "No Quitter" 1,200 DELEGATES AT GREAT RALLY Hon. Peter Heenan Said to Be Preparing a "Bill of Rights" for Labor-Tory Strongholds in Cities to Be Assailed". The Globe. December 15, 1930.
- ^ "Nixon Quits as Leader Of Ontario Liberals". Globe and Mail. December 11, 1944.
- ^ "A Sign of Party Bankruptcy". Globe and Mail. April 4, 1945.
- ^ "Hepburn Named Ontario Leader; Is Given Backing". Globe and Mail. April 3, 1945.
- ^ "Ontario Liberal Convention MAY I". Globe and Mail. April 4, 1945.
- ^ "Liberal Leadership Race Won By Oliver", Ottawa Citizen, May 17, 1947
- ^ a b "Name Oliver Leader By Almost 7 to 1 Margin". Toronto Daily Star. May 17, 1947.
- ^ "Brown Strongly Backed In Race Among Eight For Liberal Leadership". Globe and Mail. November 10, 1950.
- ^ "Only Half of Delegates Hear 3 Liberals Speak for Leadership: Call Rally Colorless". Globe and Mail. April 9, 1954.
- ^ "By-election Fight Wintermeyer Plan In Liberal Rebirth". Toronto Daily Star. April 21, 1958.
- ^ "Albert Wren: MRP for 10 Years In Northern Riding". Globe and Mail. November 2, 1961.
- ^ "Nixon pledges home owners tax relief". Toronto Daily Star. January 7, 1967.
- ^ Leadership Election Meeting Results 2013 Archived March 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. pantone201.ca
- ^ "Ontario Liberal News | Ontario Liberal Party". Archived from the original on January 19, 2013.
- ^ Gibson, Victoria (March 7, 2020). "Steven Del Duca named Ontario Liberal leader in first-ballot victory". iPolitics. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
- ^ "Ontario Liberal Leadership Second Ballot Results". Liberal Party of Ontario. December 2, 2023. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
- ^ "Ontario Liberal Leadership First Round Results". Liber. December 2, 2023. Retrieved December 2, 2023.