- Canadian federal election, 1926
The Canadian federal election of 1926 was held on September 14 to elect members of the
Canadian House of Commons of the 16th Parliament ofCanada . The election was called following an event known as theKing-Byng Affair . In the 1925 federal election, Prime MinisterWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King 'sLiberal Party of Canada won fewer seats in theCanadian House of Commons than the Conservative Party ofArthur Meighen . Mackenzie King, however, was determined to continue to govern with the support of the Progressive Party. The combined Liberal and Progressive caucuses gave Mackenzie King a majority in the House of Commons.The coalition collapsed, however, following a scandal, and Mackenzie King approached the
Governor-General ,Baron Byng of Vimy , to seek dissolution of the Parliament. Byng refused on the basis that the Conservatives had won the largest number of seats in the prior election, and called upon Meighen to form a government.Prime Minister Meighen's government was soon defeated in a vote of non-confidence, and Byng agreed to dissolve Parliament and call new elections. Mackenzie King effectively campaigned against Byng in the election instead of against Meighen, and won the largest number of seats in the House of Commons despite receiving a smaller proportion of the popular vote than the Tories. (The Liberals did not run candidates in all ridings, with an informal electoral pact with the Progressives and Liberal-Progressives. Note in particular the election results in
Manitoba , where Meighen's party captured almost 40 percent of the vote, twice the vote share of any other party, but no seats.) He was able to govern with the support ofLiberal-Progressive Members of Parliament . Byng returned to Britain at the end of the year and was raised to the rank ofViscount as an expression of confidence in him.National results
Notes:
* not applicable - the party was not recognized in the previous electionx - less than 0.005% of the popular vote
Results by province
The results in the province of
Manitoba are used by supporters of electoral reform as a reason to abolish the "First Past the Post " electoral system. Note that with 40% of the vote, the Conservatives did not win a single seat in the province. The explanation for this bizarre occurrence is that only three ridings in Manitoba were three-way races - Springfield, St. Boniface, and Winnipeg North - and one acclamation - Provencher. The other 13 ridings were two-way races between the Conservatives and either the Liberals, Progressives, Liberal-Progressives, or Labour Party. Thus, the main reason for the disproportionality is that parties other than the Conservatives simply chose not to field candidates in ridings where a non-conservative candidate was already running - thus uniting the vote against the Conservatives in those thirteen Manitoba ridings.xx - less than 0.05% of the popular vote
ee also
*
16th Canadian Parliament External links
* [http://www.histori.ca/prodev/article.do?id=15374 Principles vs Puffiness, by J.L. Granatstein]
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