2004 Canadian federal election

A Canadian federal election (more formally, the 38th general election) was held on June 28 2004. The Liberal Party of Canada government of Prime Minister Paul Martin lost its overall majority, but was able to form a minority government after the elections. The main opposition party, the Conservative Party of Canada, improved its position but did not win as many seats as it hoped.
- For seat-by-seat results, see Results of the Canadian federal election, 2004.
- For a timeline of major events and campaign stops, see Timeline of the Canadian federal election, 2004
On May 23, 2004, Governor General Adrienne Clarkson, on the advice of Martin, ordered the dissolution of the House of Commons (the lower house of Parliament of Canada). Following a 36-day campaign, voters elected 308 Members of the House of Commons.
All three major national parties had changed their leaders since the 2000 elections. Although the election was initially widely expected to be a relatively easy romp for Martin to a fourth consecutive Liberal majority government, during the campaign many began instead to predict a far more closely-fought election. Polls started to indicate the possibility of only a minority government for the Liberals, or even a minority Conservative government, fueling speculation of coalitions with the other parties. In the end, the Liberals fared better than the last-minute polls had led them to fear, but not well enough to govern alone.
The election took place on June 28, 2004. Polling times were arranged to allow results from most provinces to be announced more or less simultaneously, with the exception of Atlantic Canada, where results were known before the close of polling in other provinces.
Results
155 seats must be held by a party in order for it to form a majority government. The Liberals came short of this number, winning 135. Until extremely close ridings were decided on the west coast, it appeared as though the Liberals' seat total, if combined with that of the left-wing New Democratic Party (NDP), would be sufficient to hold a majority in the House of Commons. In the end, the Conservatives won Vancouver Island North, West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast, and New Westminster-Coquitlam, after trailing in all three ridings, as sub-totals were announced through the evening.
As a result, the combined seat count of the Liberals and the NDP was 154, while the other 154 seats belonged to the Conservatives, Bloquistes, and one independent Chuck Cadman (previously a Conservative). This could signal an evenly-split house; however, some indications suggested that, rather than forming an official coalition with the NDP, the Liberal party would attempt to lead with a minority government, obtaining majorities for their legislation on an ad hoc basis.
National
n.a. = not applicable - party was not recognized in previous election
Province by Province breakdown
Province and Territory tables
Showing change from the 2000 election. The votes and seats won by the Conservative Party are compared with the combined totals won by the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservative Party in 2000.
ALBERTA ============================================================ Registered voters: 2,141,144 Votes cast: 1,270,815 59.4 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 783,379 61.6 -10.7 26 +02 Liberal Party 279,219 22.0 +01.1 2 New Democratic Party 121,249 09.5 +04.1 - Other 86,968 06.8 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 1,270,815 28 +02 ------------------------------------------------------------
BRITISH COLUMBIA ============================================================ Registered voters: 2,713,421 Votes cast: 1,724,618 63.6 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 625,071 36.2 -20.5 22 -05 Liberal Party 492,865 28.6 +01.0 8 +03 New Democratic Party 457,815 26.6 +15.3 5 +03 Other 148,867 08.6 1 +01 ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 1,724,618 36 +02 ------------------------------------------------------------
MANITOBA ============================================================ Registered voters: 836,599 Votes cast: 472,796 56.5 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 185,022 39.1 -05.8 7 +02 Liberal Party 156,970 33.2 +00.7 3 -02 New Democratic Party 110,901 23.5 +02.7 4 Other 19,903 04.2 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 472,796 14 ------------------------------------------------------------
NEW BRUNSWICK ============================================================ Registered voters: 594,738 Votes cast: 369,407 62.1 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 114,962 31.1 -15.1 2 -01 Liberal Party 164,903 44.6 +02.9 7 +01 New Democratic Party 75,951 20.6 +08.9 1 Other 13,591 03.7 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 369,407 10 ------------------------------------------------------------
NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR ============================================================ Registered voters: 403,568 Votes cast: 198,366 49.2 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 64,120 32.3 -06.0 2 Liberal Party 95,178 48.0 +03.0 5 New Democratic Party 34,694 17.5 +04.5 - Other 4,374 02.2 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 198,366 7 ------------------------------------------------------------
NOVA SCOTIA ============================================================ Registered voters: 702,399 Votes cast: 433,577 61.7 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 121,398 28.0 -10.7 3 -01 Liberal Party 171,680 39.6 +03.1 6 +02 New Democratic Party 123,360 28.5 +04.6 2 -01 Other 17,139 03.9 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 433,577 11 ------------------------------------------------------------
ONTARIO ============================================================ Registered voters: 8,206,023 Votes cast: 5,060,308 61.7 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 1,592,724 31.5 -06.5 24 +22 Liberal Party 2,260,172 44.7 -06.8 75 -25 New Democratic Party 915,310 18.1 +09.8 7 +06 Other 292,102 05.8 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 5,060,308 106 +03 ------------------------------------------------------------
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ============================================================ Registered voters: 108,169 Votes cast: 76,421 70.7 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 23,478 30.7 -12.7 - Liberal Party 40,103 52.5 +05.5 4 New Democratic Party 9,558 12.5 +03.5 - Other 3,282 04.3 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 76,421 4 ------------------------------------------------------------
QUEBEC ============================================================ Registered voters: 5,803,390 Votes cast: 3,424,713 59.0 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 300,499 08.8 -02.9 - -01 Liberal Party 1,159,879 33.9 -10.3 21 -15 New Democratic Party 158,838 04.6 +02.8 - Quebec Bloc 1,672,184 48.8 +09.0 54 +16 Other 133,313 03.9 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 3,424,713 75 ------------------------------------------------------------
SASKATCHEWAN ============================================================ Registered voters: 721,357 Votes cast: 425,946 59.1 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 178,180 41.8 -10.7 13 +03 Liberal Party 115,671 27.2 +06.5 1 -01 New Democratic Party 99,479 23.4 -02.8 - -02 Other 32,616 07.6 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 425,946 14 ------------------------------------------------------------
TERRITORIES ============================================================
NORTH-WEST TERRITORIES ============================================================ Registered voters: 28,335 Votes cast: 13,471 47.5 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 2,314 17.2 +07.2 - Liberal Party 5,313 39.4 -06.2 1 New Democratic Party 5,261 39.1 +12.4 - Other 583 04.3 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 13,471 1 ------------------------------------------------------------
NUNAVUT ============================================================ Registered voters: 16,872 Votes cast: 7,243 42.9 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 1,049 14.5 +06.1 - Liberal Party 3,705 51.2 -17.3 1 New Democratic Party 1,108 15.3 -03.3 - Other 1,381 19.1 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 7,243 1 ------------------------------------------------------------
YUKON TERRITORY ============================================================ Registered voters: 19,655 Votes cast: 11,878 60.4 ------------------------------------------------------------ Party Votes % Change Seats ------------------------------------------------------------ Conservative Party 2,486 20.9 -14.3 - Liberal Party 5,449 45.9 +13.4 1 New Democratic Party 3,012 25.4 -06.5 - Other 931 07.8 - ------------------------------------------------------------ Total 11,878 1 ------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Adam Carr's Electoral Archive
Seat by Seat breakdown
Notes
- Number of Parties: 12
- First appearance: Conservative Party of Canada, Progressive Canadian Party
- Reappearance after hiatus: Christian Heritage Party of Canada, Libertarian Party of Canada
Major Parties
Main article: List of political parties in Canada
Liberal Party of Canada
Until the sponsorship scandal, most pundits were predicting that new Prime Minister Paul Martin would lead the Liberals to a fourth majority government, possibly setting a record for number of seats won.
However, polls released immediately after the scandal broke showed Liberal support down as much as 10% nationwide, with greater declines in its heartland of Quebec and Ontario. Although there was some recovery in Ontario and Atlantic Canada, Liberal hopes of making unprecedented gains in the west faded. The unopularity of some provincial Liberal parties may also have had an effect on federal Liberal fortunes. In Ontario, for instance, the provincial Liberal government introduced an unpopular budget the week of the expected election call, and their federal counterparts then fell into a statistical dead heat with the Conservatives in polls there. The Liberals were also been harmed by high profile party infighting.
The campaign was criticized openly by Liberal candidates, one incumbent Liberal comparing it to the Keystone Kops. The campaign was not helped by Martin being out of the country for the third week of the campaign attending the D-Day anniversary services and a meeting of the G8.
Conservative Party of Canada
In the final months of 2003, the Progressive Conservatives and the Canadian Alliance were running a distant third and fourth, respectively, in public opinion polls.
Many pundits predicted that the combination of the popular and fiscally conservative Martin, along with continued vote-splitting on the right, could have led to the almost total annihilation of the Progressive Conservatives and Canadian Alliance. This fear prompted those two parties to form a united Conservative Party of Canada, which was approved by the Canadian Alliance on December 5, 2003 and by the Progressive Conservatives on December 6, 2003.
The new Conservative Party pulled well ahead of the NDP in the polls just before the election, although its support remained below the combined support that the Progressive Conservatives and the Alliance had as separate parties. On March 20 the Conservatives elected Stephen Harper as their new leader.
The Conservatives gained more ground in polls after Harper became leader, and the poll results in the weeks before the election had them within one to two points of the Liberals, sometimes ahead, sometimes behind them. Party supporters hoped that the voters would react negatively to the Liberal attacks on Harper's agenda, and that anger over the sponsorship scandal and other Liberal failures would translate to success at the polls. Although on the eve of the election the party was polling slightly ahead of the Liberals everywhere west of Quebec, it had dropped in support, polling behind or at par with Liberals everywhere except Alberta and British Columbia, where it held onto its traditional support.
New Democratic Party
Before the announcement of the union of the right-of-centre parties, some were predicting an NDP official opposition, with the NDP polling ahead of both right-of-centre parties. A new leader (Jack Layton) and clear social democratic policies helped revitalize the NDP. Polls suggested that the NDP had returned to the 18% to 20% level of support it enjoyed in the 1984 Canadian election and 1988 Canadian election. Layton suggested that the NDP would win more than the 43 seats won under Ed Broadbent.
The NDP focused the campaign on winning ridings in Canada's urban centres, hoping especially to pick off seats in central Toronto, Hamilton, Ottawa and Winnipeg. The party's platform was built to cater to these regions and much of Layton's time was spent in these areas.
The campaign stumbled early when the Liberals attacked Layton for blaming the deaths of homeless people on Paul Martin. They accused the NDP of negative campaigning. The NDP did benefit from the decline in Liberal support, but not to the same extent as the Conservatives. There was an increasing prospect that NDP voters would switch to the Liberals to block a Conservative government. This concern did not manifest itself in the polls, however, and the NDP remained at somewhat below 20 percent mark in the polls for most of the campaign.
Bloc Québécois
The Bloc Québécois (BQ) continued to slide in the polls in most of 2003 after the election of the federalist Quebec Liberal Party at the National Assembly of Quebec under Jean Charest, and during the long run-up to Paul Martin becoming leader of the federal Liberals.
However, things progressively changed during 2003, partly because of the Charest government rapidly becoming quite unpopular and partly because the support for independence in Quebec rose again (49% in March). The tide took its sharp turn when, in February 2004, the sponsorship scandal (uncovered in considerable part by the Bloc) hit the liberal federal government.
These events led to a resurgence of the BQ, putting it ahead of the pack once again: according to an Ipsos-Reid poll carried out for the Globe and Mail and CTV between the 4th and the 8th of June, 50% of Quebecers intended to vote for the BQ against 24% for the Liberals.
Speculation was ongoing about the possibility of the Bloc forming alliances with other opposition parties or with an eventual minority government to promote its goals of social democracy and respect of the autonomy of provinces. Leader Gilles Duceppe stated that the Bloc, as before, would co-operate with other opposition parties or with the government when interests were found to be in common, but that the Bloc would not participate in a coalition government.
Minor Parties
Main article: List of political parties in Canada
The following parties did not hold seats in the House of Commons entering the election, and received considerably less media attention throughout the election than their larger competitors. The Greens ran candidates in all 308 ridings; the other parties were running far fewer candidates.
Green Party | Jim Harris | 308 candidates |
Marxist-Leninist Party | Sandra L. Smith | 76 candidates |
Marijuana Party | Marc-Boris St-Maurice | 71 candidates |
Christian Heritage Party | Ron Gray | 62 candidates |
Canadian Action Party | Connie Fogal | 44 candidates |
Communist Party | Miguel Figueroa | 35 candidates |
Progressive Canadian Party | Ernie Schreiber | 16 candidates |
Libertarian Party | Jean-Serge Brisson | 8 candidates |
Campaign Slogans
See Slogans of the 2004 Canadian election
Issues
Important issues in the election:
- Sponsorship scandal: badly hurt the Liberals in the polls and the theme of widespread corruption was used by all opposition parties, especially the Bloc.
- Health care: all parties support Canada's government-administered health care system but acknowledge that improvements must be made to meet new demographic challenges and to reduce long wait times. Transfer payments to the provinces have been cut substantially to 16% by the federal Liberal government and it was difficult for Paul Martin to reconcile these cuts with his plan to improve the system.
- Fiscal imbalance: all major parties except the Liberals claimed that there was a monetary imbalance between Ottawa and the provinces and spoke of plans to reduce it, the Bloc Québécois probably being the strongest denouncer of the situation.
- Taxation: for the Conservatives, significantly lowering taxes, to stimulate the economy, was a central issue. The Conservatives also promised to end "corporate welfare" and replace it with tax cuts for all businesses. The Liberals and NDP opposed large tax cuts and argued that money should instead be sent to improve social programs.
- Parliamentary reform: The Conservatives accused the Liberals of perpetuating "undemocratic practices" in parliament, by limiting the powers of MPs. Martin called for some reform, but not to the satisfaction of the Conservatives. The Conservatives promised an elected Senate and standing committee and provincial review of judicial appointments. The NDP spoke of abolishing the Senate.
- Electoral reform: Conservatives promised fixed election dates. The NDP and the Green Party promoted the idea of proportional representation voting.
- Same-sex marriage: the Bloc Québécois and NDP strongly favored same sex marriage. The Liberals sent the issue to be ruled upon by the Supreme Court and the Liberal caucus was publicly divided on the issue. The majority of Conservative candidates opposed it; the party's official stance was for the issue to be resolved by a free vote in the Commons.
- National Missile Defence: the Bush administration wanted Canada to join the missile shield. The Conservatives strongly supported such a plan while the Bloc and NDP opposed it. Although the Liberals reiterated past opposition to the weaponization of space, they did not have an expressed opinion on the shield.
- 2003 invasion of Iraq: the Conservatives supported the United States over Iraq, while the other parties generally opposed it.
- Gun registry: The Conservatives strongly opposed the gun registry while the other parties support it.
- Marijuana: The Liberals have introduced measures to decriminalize possession of small quantities of marijuana, a move generally supported by the other opposition parties. The Conservative Party opposes such legislation.
- Ontario budget: Dalton McGuinty's tax raises in Ontario proved highly unpopular, despite being necessitated by a holdover deficit from the previous Progressive Conservative government. The Conservative and the NDP capitalized on the broken promises to attack the Liberals at the federal level.
Timeline
See Timeline of the Canadian federal election, 2004
Leadership races of 2003 and 2004
- 2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership race
- 2003 Liberal Party of Canada leadership race
- 2003 PC Party of Canada leadership race
- 2003 New Democratic Party leadership race
Poll results
See Opinion polling for the 2004 Canadian election
See also
- Canadian federal election
- Lists of general elections in Canada
- List of elections in the Province of Canada (pre-Confederation)
- Canadian federal election results since 1867
- Politics of Canada
- List of political parties in Canada
- Minority governments in Canada
External links
- CBC - Canada Votes (includes video files of the whole English debate)
- CTV - Election 2004
- SRC - Élections (in French, includes video files of the whole French debate)
- Cyberpresse - Élections fédérales 2004 (in French, including a regularly updated vote intention graph)
- Elections Canada
- Elections Canada official numbers
- CBC