1915 Manitoba general election

The1915 Manitoba general electionwas held August 6, 1915 to elect members of theLegislative Assemblyof the Province ofManitoba,Canada. The Liberals under Norris won a landslide majority with 40 seats, replacing the Conservative government that had ruled the province since 1899.

1915 Manitoba general election

1914 August 6, 1915 1920

47 seats of theLegislative Assembly of Manitoba
24 seats needed for a majority
First party Second party
Leader Tobias Norris James Albert Manning Aikins
Party Liberal Conservative
Leader since 1910 1915
Leader's seat Lansdowne Brandon City(lost re-election)
Last election 20 28
Seats won 40 5
Seat change Increase20 Decrease23
Percentage 55.1% 33.0%
Swing Increase12.5pp Decrease13.9pp

Premier before election

Rodmond Roblin
Conservative

Premier after election

Tobias Norris
Liberal

This election was held only one year after the previousgeneral election of 1914.In that election, the governingConservativesofpremierRodmond Roblinwere confirmed in office with 28 seats out of 49. In early 1915, however, the Roblin administration was forced to resign from office after a commission appointed by theLieutenant Governorfound the government guilty of corruption in the tending of contracts for new legislative buildings.[1]

Roblin denied the charges, but resigned as premier on May 12. Three days later, oppositionLiberalleaderTobias Norriswas called upon to form a new administration. The house was quickly adjourned, and new elections were scheduled for August.[1]

The primary issue of the campaign was corruption. The pro-LiberalManitoba Free Pressran numerous articles criticizing the practices of the Roblin government, and alleging that the "Roblin machine" still controlled the Conservative Party. The Liberals claimed they would manage the province's affairs in a businesslike rather than a partisan manner, an approach typified byProvincial TreasurerEdward Browncall for the province to "forget party for five years and get down to business".

Women's suffrage and temperance were also important issues. The Liberal Party promised to introduce voting rights for women, and to hold a provincial referendum on temperance. The party's platform also promised direct legislation and plebiscites on other issues.

Facing unpopularity due to the corruption scandal, the Manitoba Conservatives chose federalMember of Parliament(MP)James Albert Manning Aikinsas their new leader on July 15. Aikins had never served in the Roblin government and was regarded by many as free from the controversy that had forced the Conservatives to resign. In a further effort to separate themselves from the Roblin government, the Conservative party tried to change its name, referring to itself as the "Independent-Liberal-Conservative" party for this election. Liberals ridiculed this name change and sarcastically described the "new" Conservatives as the "Purity Party".

The election results were a disaster for Conservatives. They won only five seats out of 47, and Aikins lost by a considerable margin inBrandon City.The Liberals under Norris won a landslide majority with 40 seats, the largest victory in Manitoba history, although with barely more than half the vote.

In theWinnipeg Centredistrict,Fred Dixonwas re-elected as an independent candidate with support from both Liberals and theLabour Representation Committee.

TheSocial Democratic Partyalso won its first ever seat in the province, taking one of the two seats in north-end Winnipeg.

This election (like the previous one in 1914) used two-member districts in Winnipeg, with each seat being filled in separate contests.

Manitoba's francophone constituencies rejected the provincial trend, and continued to support candidates of the Conservative party (four of the five Conservative MLAs were from francophone areas). Many francophone voters opposed Norris's plans to end provincial funding for denominationalCatholicschools.

The "Independent-Liberal-Conservative" name seems to have been dropped shortly after the election.

This was the last election before Winnipeg was made into asingle ten-seat district,andSingle transferable votingwas brought into use.[2]

Electoral system

edit

In this election Manitoba used a mixture of multi-member districts and single-member districts. In the multi-member districts -Winnipeg North,Winnipeg SouthandWinnipeg Centre- each member was elected in a separate contest throughFirst past the post.

In each single-member district the member was elected throughFirst past the post.

Results

edit

[3]

Party Party leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular vote
1914 Elected % Change # % % Change
Liberal Tobias Norris 20 40 +100% 55.1%
Conservative James Albert Manning Aikins 28 5 -82.1% 33.0%
Social Democratic 1 11.9%
Independent/others 1 1 -
Total 49 47 -4.1% 100%
Popular vote
Liberal
55.10%
Conservative
33.00%
Others
11.90%
Seats summary
Liberal
85.11%
Conservative
10.64%
Others
4.25%

Riding results

edit

Arthur:

Assiniboia:

Beautiful Plains:

Birtle:

Brandon City:

Carillon:

Cypress:

Dauphin:

Deloraine:

Dufferin:

Elmwood:

Emerson:

Gilbert Plains:

Gimli:

(Einar Jonassonhad been nominated as the official Liberal candidate, but withdrew.)[4]

Gladstone:

Glenwood:

Hamiota:

Iberville:

Kildonan and St. Andrews:

Killarney:

Lakeside:

Lansdowne:

La Verendrye:

Manitou:

Minnedosa:

Morden and Rhineland:

Morris:

Mountain:

Norfolk:

Portage la Prairie:

Roblin:

Rockwood:

Russell:

St. Boniface:

  • Joseph Dumas(L) 921
  • J.A. Beaupre (C) 790
  • J.P. Howden (Ind L) 640

St. Clements:

St. George:

Ste. Rose:

  • (incumbent)Joseph Hamelin(C) 443
  • Z.H. Rheaume (L) 414
  • A. McLeod (Ind) 266

Swan River:

Turtle Mountain:

Virden:

Winnipeg

edit

Winnipeg North"A":

Winnipeg North"B":

Winnipeg Centre"A":

Winnipeg Centre"B":

Winnipeg South"A":

Winnipeg South"B":

[3][5]

Deferred elections

edit

The Pas,August 25, 1915:

Horace Halcrow had been nominated by the Conservatives to contest this riding, but withdrew before the election. Halcrow had been Manitoba's chief game warden under the Roblin government.

Post-election changes

edit

Rupertsland(new constituency), September 16, 1916:

Iberville(res.Aime Benard,1917), November 1, 1917:

Roblin(res.Frederic Newton,1917), November 19, 1917:

(AWinnipeg Free Pressreport from November 20, 1917 shows Westwood winning by 186 votes, with one poll yet to declare. This was likely the first provincial election where Manitoba women cast votes.)

Morris(dep.Jacques Parent,1917; no by-election)

Minnedosa(George Griersonto cabinet, November 10, 1917), November 30, 1917:

Winnipeg North"B" (res.Richard Rigg,1917), January 15, 1918:

(Numbers taken from theWinnipeg Free Press.)

Rhineland(dec.Valentine Winkler,June 7, 1920; no by-election)

References

edit
  1. ^ab"Legislature Scandal".TimeLinks.Manitoba Historical Society.RetrievedNovember 29,2012.
  2. ^Parliamentary Guide
  3. ^ab"Historical Summaries"(PDF).Elections Manitoba. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on March 6, 2012.RetrievedSeptember 23,2012.
  4. ^"Manitoba Historical Society".The Voice.August 13, 1915. p. 4. Archived fromthe originalon January 15, 2013.RetrievedSeptember 23,2012.
  5. ^"Constituencies and Candidates".Brandon Daily Sun.July 28, 1915. p. 3. Archived fromthe originalon January 15, 2013.RetrievedDecember 19,2012.