1948 Ontario general election













Ontario general election, 1948







← 1945
June 7, 1948
1951 →


90 seats in the 23rd Legislative Assembly of Ontario
46 seats were needed for a majority

















































































































 
First party
Second party
 

GeorgeDrew.jpg

Ted jolliffe 1942.jpg
Leader

George Drew

Ted Jolliffe
Party

Progressive Conservative

Co-operative Commonwealth
Leader since

December 9, 1938

April 3, 1942
Leader's seat

High Park (lost re-election)

York South
Last election
66
8
Seats won
53
21
Seat change

Decrease13

Increase13
Percentage
41.5%
27.0%
Swing

Decrease2.8pp

Increase4.6pp

 
Third party
Fourth party
 

Farquhar Oliver.JPG

LP
Leader

Farquhar Oliver

A. A. MacLeod
Party

Liberal

Labor-Progressive
Leader since

May 16, 1947
1945
Leader's seat

Grey South

Bellwoods
Last election
14
2
Seats won
14
2
Seat change
±0
±0
Percentage
29.8%
1.0%
Swing
±0.0pp

Decrease1.4pp








Premier before election

George Drew
Progressive Conservative



Premier-designate

George Drew
Progressive Conservative






George Drew (right) in the offices of the Ontario Department of Transportation the day after his party's election victory


The Ontario general election of 1948 was held on June 7, 1948, to elect the 90 members of the 23rd Legislative Assembly of Ontario (Members of Provincial Parliament, or "MPPs") of the Province of Ontario, Canada.


The Ontario Progressive Conservative Party, led by George Drew, won a third consecutive term in office, winning a solid majority of seats in the legislature—53, down from 66 in the previous election.


Despite winning a majority, Drew lost his own seat to temperance crusader Bill Temple. Instead of seeking a seat in a by-election, Drew left provincial politics to run for, and win, the leadership of the federal Progressive Conservative Party.


Drew was replaced as Ontario PC leader and premier by Thomas Kennedy on an interim basis, and then by Leslie Frost.


The Ontario Liberal Party, led by Farquhar Oliver, increased its caucus from 11 to 14, but lost the role of official opposition. Only one of the three Liberal-Labour MPPs sitting with the Liberal caucus, James Newman, was re-elected.


The social democratic Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (Ontario Section), led by Ted Jolliffe, formed the official opposition by increasing its caucus from 8 to 21 seats.


Two Toronto seats were won by Labor-Progressive Party MPPs J. B. Salsberg and A.A. MacLeod. The LPP was the official name of the Communist Party of Ontario. The LPP only ran two candidates, Salsberg and MacLeod, in 1948 down from 31 candidates in 1945.



Results







































































 
Party
Leader

1945
Elected
% change
Popular vote
%
change
 

Progressive Conservative

George Drew
66

53
-19.7%
41.5%
-2.8%
 

Co-operative Commonwealth

Ted Jolliffe
8

21
+163%
27.0%
+4.6%
 

Liberal

Farquhar Oliver
11

13
+18.2%
29.8%
-
 

Liberal-Labour
3

1
-66.7%


Labor–Progressive

A.A. MacLeod
2

2
-
1.0%
-1.4%

Total

90

90

-
100%
 


See also



  • Politics of Ontario

  • List of Ontario political parties

  • Premier of Ontario

  • Leader of the Opposition (Ontario)









Popular posts from this blog

U.S. state

Michael Jordan

Prague