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1968 Canadian federal election

The 1968 Canadian federal election was held on June 25, 1968, to elect members of the House of Commons of Canada of the 28th Parliament of Canada.


264 seats in the House of Commons
133 seats needed for a majority

75.7%[1] (Increase0.9pp)

In April 1968, Prime Minister Lester Pearson of the Liberal Party resigned as party leader as a result of declining health and failing to win a majority government in two attempts. He was succeeded by his Minister of Justice and Attorney General Pierre Trudeau, who called an election immediately after becoming prime minister. Trudeau's charisma appealed to Canadian voters; his popularity became known as "Trudeaumania" and helped him win a comfortable majority. Robert Stanfield's Progressive Conservatives lost seats whereas the New Democratic Party's support stayed the same.

Background[edit]

Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson had announced in December 1967 that he would retire early in the following year, calling a new leadership election for the following April to decide on a successor. In February 1968, however, Pearson's government nearly fell before the leadership election could even take place, when it was unexpectedly defeated on a tax bill. Convention dictated that Pearson would have been forced to resign and call an election had the government been defeated on a full budget bill, but after taking legal advice, Governor General Roland Michener decreed that he would only ask for Pearson's resignation if an explicit motion of no confidence were called in his government. Ultimately, the New Democratic Party and Ralliement créditiste were not willing to topple the government over the issue, and even had they done so, Pearson would have been entitled to advise Michener not to hold an election until after the new Liberal leader had been chosen, but the incident made it clear that Pearson's successor could not feasibly hope to hold out until the next statutory general election date of November 1970, and would in all likelihood be forced to call an election much sooner.[2]


Pierre Trudeau, who was a relative unknown until he was appointed to the cabinet by Pearson, won a surprise victory over Paul Martin Sr., Paul Hellyer and Robert Winters in the party's leadership election on April 6. He was sworn in as prime minister on April 20.

Electoral system[edit]

In this election, for the first time since Confederation, all the MPs were elected as the single member for their district, through First past the post. Previously some had always been elected in multi-member ridings through Block Voting. From here on, single-winner First past the post would be the only electoral system used to elect MPs.[6]

: 75.7% of the eligible population voted.

Voter turnout

List of Canadian federal general elections

List of political parties in Canada

28th Canadian Parliament

Argyle, Ray (2004). . Toronto: White Knight Publications. ISBN 978-0-9734186-6-8.

Turning Points: The Campaigns that Changed Canada 2004 and Before

Beck, James Murray (1968). . Scarborough: Prentice-Hall of Canada. ISBN 978-0-13-655670-1.

Pendulum of Power; Canada's Federal Elections

Peacock, Donald (1968). . Toronto: The Ryerson Press. ISBN 978-0-7700-0253-4.

Journey to Power: The Story of a Canadian Election

, ed. (1969). Canadian Annual Review for 1968. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-1649-2.

Saywell, John

Stevens, Geoffrey (1973). . Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 9780771083587.

Stanfield

Sullivan, Martin (1968). . Toronto: Doubleday.

Mandate '68: The Year of Pierre Elliott Trudeau