1940 Canadian federal election

The1940 Canadian federal electionwas held March 26, 1940, to elect members of theHouse of Commons of Canadaof the19th ParliamentofCanada.Prime MinisterWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King'sLiberal Partywas re-elected to their second consecutive majority government.

1940 Canadian federal election

1935 March 26, 1940 1945

245 seats in theHouse of Commons
123 seats needed for a majority
Turnout69.9%[1](Decrease4.3pp)
First party Second party
Leader W. L. Mackenzie King Robert Manion
Party Liberal National Government
Leader since 1919 1938
Leader's seat Prince Albert London
candidate inFort William(lost)
Last election 173 39
Seats won 179 39
Seat change Increase6 Steady
Popular vote 2,365,979 1,348,260
Percentage 51.32% 29.24%
Swing Increase6.64pp Decrease0.60pp

Third party Fourth party
Leader William D. Herridge J. S. Woodsworth
Party New Democracy2 Co-operative Commonwealth
Leader since 1939 1932
Leader's seat Ran inKindersley(lost) Winnipeg North Centre
Last election 17 7
Seats won 10 8
Seat change Decrease7 Increase1
Popular vote 119,354 392,615
Percentage 2.59% 8.42%
Swing Decrease1.51pp Decrease1.07pp


The Canadian parliament after the 1940 election

Prime Minister before election

William Lyon Mackenzie King
Liberal

Prime Minister after election

William Lyon Mackenzie King
Liberal

The election was overshadowed by theSecond World War,which caused many Canadians to rally around the government. In response to this, theConservative PartyofRobert Manionran on a platform advocating the creation of an all-partynational unity governmentand ran under the name "National Government"in this election. Though Manion was personally opposed toconscription,the Liberals faced intense pressure inQuebecon the question and promised not to institute the measure. This promise was to haunt the Liberals as they faced increasing pressure from the military and especially from English Canada to bring in the measure. To release him from his September 1939 promise, King called aplebiscite in 1942on the question.See alsoConscription Crisis of 1944.It was the most successful election for theLiberal Partyin its history, in which it captured 73% of the seats in the House of Commons. By contrast, the Conservatives performed even worse than in the previous election, finishing with the same number of seats, a slightly lower share of the popular vote, and with Manion being defeated in his riding. This was the last election contested by the original incarnation of the Conservatives, who thereafter merged with remnants of the moribundProgressive Partyto form theProgressive Conservatives.

Social Creditran jointly with theNew Democracymovement ofWilliam Duncan Herridge.

Some candidates of the Conservative and Social Credit parties insisted on running under the traditional names, however.

TheCo-operative Commonwealth Federation(CCF) gained its first seat east of Manitoba, with the election ofClarence GillisfromCape Breton Island.This election was the last one for its ailing leader,J. S. Woodsworth.

National results

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Party Party leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular vote
1935 Elected % Change # % ppChange
Liberal W. L. Mackenzie King 242 173 179 +2.3% 2,365,979 51.32% +6.64
National Government1 Robert Manion 199 * 36 - 1,348,260 29.24% +0.57
Conservative1 8 39 3 53,799 1.17%
Co-operative Commonwealth J. S. Woodsworth 94 7 8 +14.3% 392, 615 8.51% -0.09
Social Credit2 J.H. Blackmore 9 17 7 -41.17% 46,271 1.00% -1.51
New Democracy23 W.D. Herridge 19 * 3 73,869 1.59%
Liberal–Progressive 4 4 3 -25.0% 27,815 0.60% -0.07
IndependentLiberal 32 1 2 +100% 147,216 3.19% +1.96
Independent 19 1 1 - 57,247 1.24% +0.85
IndependentConservative 5 1 1 - 10,431 0.23% +0.21
Unity 2 * 14 * 12,337 0.27% *
United Reform Movement 1 * 1 * 13,868 0.30% *
IndependentNational 2 * - * 12,710 0.28% *
Unknown 1 - - - 110 * -
Communist Tim Buck 8 - - - 8,699 0.19% -0.27
Farmer-Labour 2 * - * 8,126 0.18% *
National Unity 1 * - * 7,534 0.16% *
United Farmers of Ont.-Labour 1 - - - 4,761 0.10% -0.06
Labour 1 - - - 3,916 0.08% -0.25
United Progressive 1 * - * 2,727 0.06% *
National Liberal Progressive 1 * - * 2,434 0.05% *
National Labour 1 * - * 2,354 0.05% *
Anti-Conscriptionist 1 * - * 642 0.01% *
Canadian Labour 1 * - * 398 0.01% *
United Reform 1 * - * 269 0.01% *
Social Credit-National Unity 1 * - * 241 0.01% *
Total 657 245 245 -0.8% 4,610,603 100%
Sources:http:// elections.ca--History of Federal Ridings since 1867Archived2008-12-04 at theWayback Machine

Notes:

* The party did not nominate candidates in the previous election.

x - less than 0.005% of the popular vote

1"Change" and "% Change% figures compare total of" National Government "and" Conservative "to 1935 Conservative vote.

2New Democracy and Social Credit ran jointly under the New Democracy banner under the leadership of former ConservativeWilliam Duncan Herridgewho had founded New Democracy in 1939 to promote his ideas monetary and economic reform, though several candidates continued to run under the old Social Credit name. The 3 New Democracy MPs elected were all Social Credit incumbents, including Social Credit parliamentary leaderJohn Horne Blackmorewhile Herridge himself failed to win his seat. The party sat in the House of Commons under the New Democracy name until 1944 when its national convention voted to revert to the Social Credit name.

3One candidate appears to have run under the "New Democratic Party" banner. It is unlikely that this was related in any way to theCooperative Commonwealth Federation's adoption of this name in 1960. This may be a mis-reporting of party label - this may have been a "New Democracy" candidate.

4MP elected wasDorise Nielsenwho ran and was elected as a Progressive Unity candidate inNorth Battlefordbut was a covert member of theCommunist Party of Canada.When the Communist Party was refounded in 1943 as theLabor-Progressive Party,Nielsen openly joined the party and became an LPP MP.

Vote and seat summaries

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Popular vote
Liberal
51.32%
National Government
29.24%
CCF
8.42%
New Democracy
2.59%
Others
8.43%
Seat totals
Liberal
73.06%
National Government
15.91%
New Democracy
4.08%
CCF
3.26%
Liberal-Progressive
1.22%
Others
2.44%

Results by province

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Party name BC AB SK MB ON QC NB NS PE YK Total
Liberal Seats: 10 7 12 13 56 62 5 10 4 - 179
Popular Vote: 37.4 37.9 43.0 43.5 50.3 64.4 54.6 50.4 55.3 46.4 51.3
National Government Seats: 4 - 2 1 22 - 5 1 - 1 36
Vote: 28.8 13.0 14.1 26.2 40.2 18.0 43.4 40.1 44.7 53.6 30.0
Conservative Seats: - - 3 - 3
Vote: 0.2 1.7 2.2 1.1 1.2
Co-operative Commonwealth Seats: 1 - 5 1 - - - 1 8
Vote: 28.4 13.0 28.7 19.6 3.8 0.7 0.4 6.0 8.6
Social Credit Seats: 7 - 7
Vote: 16.5 0.6 1.0
New Democracy Seats: - 3 - - - 3
Vote: 0.1 18.0 3.3 0.4 0.9 1.6
Liberal-Progressive Seats: 2 1 3
Vote: 4.7 0.8 0.6
Independent Liberal Seats: - - 2 - - 2
Vote: xx 1.0 10.2 1.6 3.3 3.3
Independent Seats: 1 - - - - - - 1
Vote: 3.0 0.2 1.0 3.4 0.4 2.1 0.2 1.3
United Reform Movement Seats: 1 1
Vote: 3.7 0.3
Unity Seats: 1 1
Vote: 3.3 0.3
Independent Conservative Seats: 1 1
Vote: 0.9 0.2
Total Seats 16 17 21 17 82 65 10 12 4 1 245
Parties that won no seats:
Independent Nat. Gov. Vote: 0.1 1.1 0.3
Communist Vote: 0.4 0.3 0.6 xx 0.2 0.1 0.2
Farmer-Labour Vote: 0.5 0.2
National Unity Vote: 2.0 0.2
NDP (?) Vote: 1.6 xx 0.2
UFO-Labour Vote: 0.3 0.1
Unknown Vote: xx 0.1
Labour Vote: 0.3 0.1
United Progressive Vote: 1.0 0.1
National Liberal Progressive Vote: 0.2 0.1
National Labour Vote: 0.2 0.1
Anti-Conscriptionist Vote: 0.1 xx
Canadian Labour Vote: xx xx
United Reform Vote: 0.1 xx
  • xx - less than 0.05% of the popular vote

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Voter Turnout at Federal Elections and Referendums".Elections Canada.RetrievedMarch 10,2019.