- 2006 Liberal leadership bid by Stéphane Dion
On
December 2 ,2006 ,Stéphane Dion won the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada.With the defeat of the Liberals in the 2006 election, he was suggested as a potential leadership candidate for the Liberal Party.
He announced his candidacy on
April 7 at the Montreal Convention Centre at 7:30 am, the day of the official beginning of the race and the candidacy announcement byMichael Ignatieff . [ [http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060404.LIBERALS04/TPStory/?query=ignatieff Clark, Campbell and Howlett, Karen; "Globe and Mail": Ignatieff, Dion to launch bids this week; April 4, 2006] ] Stéphane Dion's leadership campaign was referred to as the three-pillar approach. This approach focused on social justice, economic prosperity, and environmental sustainability, and a claim that a combination of these pillars would bringCanada into the 21st century. He said that his campaign would focus onsustainable development of theeconomy and creating a "hyper-educated" Canadian workforce in order to compete withChina . [ [http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060217.LIBERALS17/TPStory/National Clark, Campbell; "Globe and Mail": Leadership contenders define issues; February 17, 2006] ] Dion has been able to draw from three factions of the party to date, with Chrétien Cabinet memberDon Boudria , former Martin BC Campaign ChairMark Marissen and formerJohn Manley Campaign ChairHerb Metcalfe agreeing to sign on to his campaign.Dion was a lower-key figure in the leadership race, with much of the media and political attention being centered on the race's two most high-profile candidates,
Michael Ignatieff and formerOntario New Democratic Party premierBob Rae . Federal NDP leaderJack Layton described Dion as "A man of principle and conviction and therefore almost certain not to be elected leader of the Liberal party." [Cite web |title=Jack Layton's keynote address to NDP convention | work=New Democratic Party of Canada|author=New Democratic Party |date=2006-09-12 |accessdate=2007-01-02 |url=http://www.ndp.ca/page/4283] For much of the campaign, front-runner Ignatieff had the strongest support in Dion's home province of Quebec. Dion's level of support was similar to that of former Ontario cabinet ministerGerard Kennedy , both candidates being in a distant third/fourth place, though still significantly higher than the other four leadership contestants.Nevertheless, some analysts argued that Dion had several advantages over other candidates. Dion was able to draw support from the two factions of the party. The Chrétien wing of the party was represented by Chrétien-era Cabinet member
Don Boudria , while formerJohn Manley Campaign ChairHerb Metcalfe also signed on to Dion's campaign. The Martin wing of the party was represented by former Martin BC Campaign ChairMark Marissen and two-time losing Liberal candidate inBurnaby—Douglas , Bill Cunningham. Others predicted that Dion had an edge as the onlyFrench Canadian in the race, as the Liberal Party has a famous tradition of rotating its leadership between francophones and anglophones, and it was arguably a francophone's "turn." Some analysts also felt Dion had an advantage because, unlike Ignatieff and Rae, he had served in Martin's Cabinet. Since1948 , every Liberal leader has been a minister under his predecessor.As of
October 1 ,2006 , Dion had captured approximately 17% of the delegate spots available for the December leadership convention in Montreal. This resulted in his entering the convention in fourth place behind Ignatieff, Rae and former Ontario Education MinisterGerard Kennedy .On
December 2 ,2006 at the Liberal Party leadership convention, he nevertheless managed to leapfrog Kennedy to finish third after the first ballot by two votes, garnering 17.8% compared to 17.7% for Kennedy. On the second ballot he took a 90-vote lead over Kennedy, after which Kennedy withdrew, throwing his support behind Dion.On the third ballot he was in first place with 37%, followed by Michael Ignatieff with 34.5%. Rae, with 28.5%—thus eliminated—freed his delegates to vote as they wished. Many threw their support behind Dion, as did former leadership candidates
Ken Dryden andJoe Volpe .On the fourth ballot, Dion captured roughly 54.7% and was declared the new leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.
References
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