| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
16 seats of the Yukon Legislative Assembly 9 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Turnout | 70.43% [1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Popular vote by riding. As this is an FPTP election, seat totals are not determined by popular vote, but instead via results by each riding. Riding names are listed at the bottom. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The 1978 Yukon general election was held on November 20, 1978, was the first conventional legislative election in the history of Canada's Yukon Territory. Prior elections were held to elect representatives to the Yukon Territorial Council, a non-partisan body that acted in an advisory role to the Commissioner of the Yukon. Following the passage of the Yukon Elections Act in 1977, the 1978 election was the first time that voters in the Yukon elected representatives to the Yukon Legislative Assembly in an election organized along political party lines.
Hilda Watson, the first woman ever to lead a political party into an election in Canada, was the leader of the Progressive Conservatives. Although the party won the election, Watson herself was defeated in Kluane by Liberal candidate Alice McGuire, and thus did not become government leader. The position of government leader instead went to Chris Pearson.
New Democratic leader Fred Berger was also defeated in his own riding. He remained leader of the party until 1981, when he was succeeded by the party's sole elected MLA, Tony Penikett. Under Penikett's leadership, an MLA who had been elected as an independent in 1978 joined the NDP, and the party won a by-election. With its caucus increased to three members, the NDP had thus supplanted the Liberals as the official opposition by the time of the 1982 election.
Party | Party leader | Candidates | Seats | Popular vote | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1974 | Dissol. | 1978 | Change | # | % | Change | ||||
Progressive Conservative | Hilda Watson | 15 | 0 | 0 | 11 | +11 | 2,869 | 37.10% | N/A | |
Liberal | Iain MacKay | 14 | 0 | 0 | 2 | +2 | 2,201 | 28.46% | N/A | |
Independent | 9 | 12 | 12 | 2 | -10 | 1,096 | 14.17% | N/A | ||
New Democratic | Fred Berger | 14 | 0 | 0 | 1 | +1 | 1,568 | 20.27% | N/A | |
Total | 52 | 12 | 12 | 16 | +4 | 7,734 | 100.00% |
The following MLAs had announced that they would not be running in the 1978 election:
Independent
Bold indicates party leaders
† - denotes a retiring incumbent MLA
Electoral district | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PC | Liberal | NDP | Independent | |||||||
Campbell | Don McIntosh 61 | Blake Stirling Macdonald 120 | Margaret Thomson 65 | Robert Fleming 184 | New District | |||||
Faro | Stuart McCall 231 | Maurice Byblow 361 | New District | |||||||
Hootalinqua | Al Falle 209 | Mike Laforet 83 | Max Fraser 159 | Mack Henry 44 | Robert Fleming | |||||
Klondike | Meg McCall 152 | Fred Berger 130 | Eleanor Millard 114 | Fred Berger | ||||||
Kluane | Hilda Watson 150 | Alice McGuire 188 | John Livesey 49 | Hilda Watson | ||||||
Mayo | Swede Hanson 95 | Gordon McIntyre 84 | Alan McDiarmid 82 | David Harwood 85 | Gordon McIntyre | |||||
Old Crow | Grafton Njootli 62 | Edith Tizya 29 | Robert Bruce 19 | New District | ||||||
Tatchun | Howard Tracey 109 | Hugh Netzel 71 | Jerry Roberts 83 | New District | ||||||
Watson Lake | Don Taylor 226 | Grant Taylor 188 | Don Taylor | |||||||
Whitehorse North Centre | Geoff Lattin 153 | Dermot Flynn 83 | Doug Stephenson 131 | Ken McKinnon 141 | Ken McKinnon | |||||
Whitehorse Porter Creek East | Dan Lang 322 | Bill Webber 202 | Paul Warner 84 | New District | ||||||
Whitehorse Porter Creek West | Doug Graham 188 | Clive Tanner 142 | Kathy Horton 60 | New District | ||||||
Whitehorse Riverdale North | Chris Pearson 358 | Richard Rotondo 194 | Dave Dornian 59 | New District | ||||||
Whitehorse Riverdale South | Margaret Heath 354 | Iain MacKay 420 | Jim McCullough 113 | New District | ||||||
Whitehorse South Centre | Jack Hibberd 245 | Bert Law 197 | Ken Krocker 122 | Jack Hibberd | ||||||
Whitehorse West | Anthony Fekete 185 | John Watt 200 | Tony Penikett 230 | Al Omotani 81 Guy Julien 37 | Flo Whyard† |
After the election, four of the elected members in the Progressive Conservative Party, including Chris Pearson, were added to the Executive Committee headed by Commissioner Art Pearson. In October 1979, at the instruction of Jake Epp, Federal Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, the Commissioner withdrew from direct government administration; Chris Pearson became Government Leader (equal to Premier), added a fifth member of the PC Party caucus, and formed the Executive Council of Yukon, thus beginning responsible government with an elected head of government in The Yukon. Art Pearson would later resign as Commissioner after pleading guilty to charges related to improper mining claim transfers and was replaced with Frank Fingland. [3]
The Yukon New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Yukon territory of Canada.
The Yukon Party is a conservative political party in Yukon, Canada. It is the successor to the Yukon Progressive Conservative Party.
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.
Antony David John Penikett is a mediator and negotiator and former politician in Yukon, Canada, who served as the third premier of Yukon from 1985 to 1992.
Piers McDonald, OC is a Yukon politician and businessman. Born in Kingston, Ontario, McDonald, originally a miner by profession, is a long-time MLA, Cabinet minister, and the fifth premier of Yukon. He was leader of the Yukon New Democratic Party from 1995 to 2000.
Christopher "Chris" William Pearson was the second leader of the Yukon Progressive Conservative Party and the first premier of the Yukon in the Yukon.
Pat Duncan is a Canadian politician from Yukon. Duncan served as leader of the Yukon Liberal Party from 1998 to 2005 and as the sixth premier of Yukon from 2000 until 2002. Duncan was the first Liberal premier of the Yukon and the first female premier in the Yukon, the second woman in Canadian history to win the premiership of a province or territory through a general election, the first to do so by defeating an incumbent premier, and the first to do so by defeating a male opponent.
The 1996 Yukon general election was held on September 30, 1996 to elect the seventeen members of the 29th Yukon Legislative Assembly in Yukon Territory, Canada. The governing Yukon Party, a conservative party, was defeated by the social democratic New Democratic Party (NDP). The NDP formed a new majority government of the territory with 11 seats. Party leader Piers McDonald became Government Leader. The Yukon Party and the centrist Yukon Liberal Party each won three seats, although Liberal leader Ken Taylor failed to be elected.
Whitehorse West is an electoral district which returns a member to the Legislative Assembly of the Yukon Territory in Canada.
Hilda Pauline Watson was a Canadian schoolteacher and politician from the Yukon Territory. She was the first woman in Canadian history to lead a political party which was successful in having its members elected.
The 1982 Yukon general election was held on June 7, 1982, to elect members of the 25th Legislative Assembly of the territory of Yukon, Canada. It was won by the Progressive Conservatives.
Elaine Taylor is a Canadian politician. She is the former Deputy Premier of the Yukon and represented the electoral district of Whitehorse West in the Yukon Legislative Assembly. First elected in 2002, and re-elected in 2006 and 2011, she was defeated in the 2016 Yukon general election by Richard Mostyn of the Yukon Liberal Party.
Eric Fairclough is a Canadian politician, who was a Cabinet minister and Leader of the Official Opposition in the Yukon Legislative Assembly. He represented the rural Yukon electoral district of Mayo-Tatchun in the Yukon Legislative Assembly from 1996 to 2011 under both the Yukon New Democratic Party and the Liberals. He is also a former Chief of the Little Salmon/Carmacks First Nation.
The Yukon Progressive Conservative Party was a conservative political party in Yukon, Canada. It was succeeded by the Yukon Party.
Lois Moorcroft is a Canadian politician, who represented the electoral districts of Mount Lorne (1992-2000) and Copperbelt South (2011-2016) in the Yukon Legislative Assembly. She is a member of the Yukon New Democratic Party.
Elizabeth Hanson, also known as Liz Hanson, is a Canadian politician from the Yukon. She was the leader of the Yukon New Democratic Party from 2009 until 2019, and represented the electoral district of Whitehorse Centre in the Yukon Legislative Assembly from 2010 to 2021.
The 2011 general election in Yukon, Canada, took place on October 11, 2011, to return members to the 33rd Yukon Legislative Assembly.
Kate White is a Canadian politician, who was elected to in the Yukon Legislative Assembly in the 2011 election. She represents the Whitehorse electoral district of Takhini-Kopper King as a member of the Yukon New Democratic Party caucus.
Campbell was a territorial electoral district in the Canadian territory of Yukon, which was represented in the Legislative Assembly of Yukon from 1978 to 1992.