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All 12 seats of the Yukon Territorial Council | ||
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Turnout | 64.4% (2.5pp) | |
The 1974 Yukon general election was held on 7 October 1974 to elect the twelve members of the 23rd Yukon Territorial Council. The council consisted of 10 non-partisan and two members elected for the Yukon NDP. It had merely an advisory role to the federally appointed Commissioner for some departments, but had full responsibility for several departments through the appointment of three councillors to an executive committee.
This was the last election in the territory to the legislative council; beginning with the 1978 election, all subsequent elections in the territory have been to the expanded Yukon Legislative Assembly.
There were 38 candidates. Out of a potential 9,542 electors, 6,145 people cast ballots for a voter turnout of 64.4 per cent.
Candidates by district | ||||||||
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District | Winner | Second | Third | Fourth | Fifth | |||
Hootalinqua | Robert Fleming 262 | John Owens 68 | Edward Whiffin 22 | |||||
Klondike | Fred Berger (NDP) 137 | Willie Asp 134 | Howard Tracey 120 | George Wing 32 | ||||
Kluane | Hilda Watson 123 | John Livesey 106 | Bob MacKinnon 97 | Ray Jackson 57 | Jack Brewster 43 | |||
Mayo | Gordon McIntyre 199 | V.B.P. Mills 154 | ||||||
Ogilvie | Eleanor Millard 173 | Chitzi Charlie Abel 52 | Curtiss Bruce Davis 34 | |||||
Pelly River | Stuart McCall (NDP) 187 | Paul White 177 | Barry Redfern 160 | |||||
Watson Lake | Don Taylor 223 | Johnny Friend 110 | Harry Godfrey 107 | |||||
Whitehorse North Centre | Ken McKinnon 458 | John Hoyt 182 | ||||||
Whitehorse Porter Creek | Daniel Lang 356 | Jack Burrows 144 | Joe Lindsay 105 | Alder Hunter 74 | ||||
Whitehorse Riverdale | Willard Phelps 439 | Don Branigan 340 | Steve Henke 81 | |||||
Whitehorse South Centre | Jack Hibberd 267 | Tony Penikett 143 | Ron Veale 130 | |||||
Whitehorse West | Flo Whyard 252 | John Watt 227 | Al Omotani 116 |
Dennis G. Fentie was a Canadian politician. He was the seventh premier of Yukon and leader of the Yukon Party, serving from 2002 to 2011, as well as the MLA for Watson Lake.
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The Yukon Legislative Assembly is the legislative assembly for Yukon, Canada. Unique among Canada's three territories, the Yukon Legislative Assembly is the only territorial legislature which is organized along political party lines. In contrast, in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, their legislative assemblies are elected on a non-partisan basis and operate on a consensus government model.
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Ogilvie was a territorial electoral district in the Canadian territory of Yukon, which was represented on the Yukon Territorial Council from 1974 to 1978. The district comprised part of Dawson City, extending northerly to the Ogilvie Mountains region, while the southerly part of Dawson City was in the separate district of Klondike. The idea of splitting Dawson City in this manner was controversial, however, due to a perceived risk that if both Ogilvie and Klondike elected councillors who lived in their districts' other, smaller communities, Dawson City itself would have been left effectively unrepresented on the council despite being the most important community in both districts; in the 1974 Yukon general election, however, Dawson City residents won both districts, with Eleanor Millard winning in Ogilvie while Fred Berger carried Klondike.
Whitehorse Riverdale was a territorial electoral district in the Canadian territory of Yukon, which was represented on the Yukon Territorial Council from 1974 to 1978. The district consisted primarily of the Riverdale area in the capital city of Whitehorse.
Whitehorse Porter Creek was a territorial electoral district in the Canadian territory of Yukon, which was represented on the Yukon Territorial Council from 1974 to 1978. The district consisted primarily of the Porter Creek area in the capital city of Whitehorse.
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