2004 Canadian federal election

Last updated

2004 Canadian federal election
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg
  2000 June 28, 2004 (2004-06-28) 2006  

308 seats in the House of Commons
155 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout60.9% (Decrease2.svg3.2pp)
 First partySecond party
  Paul martin 2004 (cropped).jpg Stephen Harper G8 2007 (cropped2).jpg
Leader Paul Martin Stephen Harper
Party Liberal Conservative
Leader since November 14, 2003 March 20, 2004
Leader's seat LaSalle—Émard Calgary Southwest
Last election172 seats, 40.85%78 seats, 37.68%1
Seats before16872
Seats won13599
Seat changeDecrease2.svg33Increase2.svg27
Popular vote4,982,2204,019,498
Percentage36.73%29.63%
SwingDecrease2.svg4.12pp Decrease2.svg8.05pp

 Third partyFourth party
  Gilles Duceppe 2011-04-01 (cropped).jpg Jack Layton-cr bl (cropped).jpg
Leader Gilles Duceppe Jack Layton
Party Bloc Québécois New Democratic
Leader since March 15, 1997 January 24, 2003
Leader's seat Laurier Toronto—Danforth
Last election38 seats, 10.72%13 seats, 8.51%
Seats before3314
Seats won5419
Seat changeIncrease2.svg21Increase2.svg5
Popular vote1,680,1092,127,403
Percentage12.39% [lower-roman 1] 15.68%
SwingIncrease2.svg1.67pp Increase2.svg7.17pp

2004 Canadian General Election.svg
Canada 2004 Federal Election.svg

Elec2004.PNG
The Canadian parliament after the 2004 election

Prime Minister before election

Paul Martin
Liberal

Prime Minister after election

Paul Martin
Liberal

The 2004 Canadian federal election was held on June 28, 2004, to elect members to the House of Commons of Canada of the 38th Parliament of Canada. The Liberal government of Prime Minister Paul Martin lost its majority but was able to continue in office as a minority government after the election. This was the first election contested by the newly amalgamated Conservative Party of Canada, after it was formed by the two right-of-centre parties, the Progressive Conservative Party and the Canadian Alliance.

Contents

On May 23, 2004, the governor general, Adrienne Clarkson, on the advice of Martin, ordered the dissolution of the House of Commons, triggering an early election despite the Liberals being only three and a half years into their five-year mandate. Earlier, the election result was widely expected to be a fourth consecutive majority government for the Liberals, but early in 2004 Liberal popularity fell sharply due to the emerging details of the sponsorship scandal. Polls even started to indicate the possibility of a Conservative minority government. In the end, the Liberals won a minority government, though they were well short of a majority and lost nearly three dozen seats.

On election day, polling times were arranged to allow results from most provinces to be announced more or less simultaneously, with the exception of Atlantic Canada, whose results were known before the close of polling in other provinces due to the British Columbia Supreme Court's decision in R v Bryan .

Major political parties

Liberal Party of Canada

Until the sponsorship scandal, most pundits were predicting that new Prime Minister Paul Martin would lead the Liberal Party of Canada 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 unpopularity 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 harmed by high-profile party infighting that had been plaguing the party since Martin's earlier ejection from Cabinet by now-former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien.

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 members of the Canadian Alliance on December 5, 2003, and controversially by the delegates of 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 what they called Harper's "hidden agenda", and that anger over the sponsorship scandal and other Liberal failures would translate to success at the polls.

Late in the campaign, the Conservatives began to lose some momentum, in part due to remarks made by MPs. Scott Reid, the party's language critic, said that the policy of official bilingualism was unrealistic and needed to be reformed. [1] Rob Merrifield, health critic, suggested that women ought to have mandatory family counseling before they choose to have an abortion. [2] Randy White was quoted as saying "to heck with the courts" in reference to Reference Re Same-Sex Marriage , suggesting the party would overturn same-sex marriage. [3] Cheryl Gallant drew controversy when she compared abortion to the beheading of Iraq War hostage Nick Berg, [4] and called for the repeal of recently amended hate laws that include sexual orientation as one of the protected groups. [5] Additionally, the Liberal Party began airing controversial TV ads. Harper was also criticized for his position supporting the American-led 2003 invasion of Iraq. The term "hidden agenda", used commonly in the 2000 election to refer to Stockwell Day, began surfacing with increasing regularity with regard to Harper's history of supporting privatized health care. Further damaging the Conservative campaign was a press release from Conservative headquarters that suggested that Paul Martin supported child pornography.

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 on par with Liberals everywhere except the West (Alberta, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba), where it held onto its traditional support.

All together the new Conservatives fell from the combined Canadian Alliance-Progressive Conservative vote in 2000 of 37%, to only 29% of the vote, yet still gained 21 extra seats, finishing in second-place with 99 seats.

New Democratic Party

Before the announcement of the union of the right-of-centre parties, some were predicting that the New Democratic Party (Canada) would form the official opposition because the NDP was 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 election and 1988 election. Layton suggested that the NDP would break their previous record of 43 seats won under former leader Ed Broadbent.

The NDP focused the campaign on winning ridings in Canada's urban centres, hoping especially to win 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 Layton blamed the deaths of homeless people on Paul Martin, prompting the Liberals to accuse the NDP of negative campaigning. The NDP benefited 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.

The NDP achieved 15% of the popular vote, its highest in 16 years. However, it only won 19 seats in the House of Commons, two less than the 21 won in 1997, and far short of the 40 predicted. There was criticism that Layton's focus on urban issues and gay rights marginalized the party's traditional emphasis on the poor, the working class, and rural Canadians. Long-time MP Lorne Nystrom and several other incumbents from the Prairie provinces were defeated, with the NDP being shut out of Saskatchewan for the first time since 1965. Layton won his own seat in a tight race, while Broadbent was returned to Parliament after many years of absence.

Bloc Québécois

The Bloc Québécois (BQ) had managed their best showing back in 1993, but they lost seats to the Liberals in 1997 and 2000, prompting pundits to suggest a decline in support for Quebec sovereignty. The Bloc 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 decline in popularity of the Liberal Party of Quebec government of Jean Charest, and partly because support for independence in Quebec rose again (49% in March).[ citation needed ] 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 June 4 and 8, 50% of Quebecers intended to vote for the BQ against 24% for the Liberals.

Jim Harris, Greens Leader Jim Harris of the Green Party - 2008 (cropped).jpg
Jim Harris, Greens Leader

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.

Green Party of Canada

The Greens ran candidates in all 308 ridings for the first time in its history. The party won twice as many votes in this election than it had over the previous 21 years of its history combined, although it failed to win a seat. It also spent more money than in the previous 21 years, and although much of this money was borrowed, the Greens' share of the popular vote enabled them to receive federal funding.

Campaign slogans

These are the official slogans for the 2004 campaigns. The optional parts of the mottos (sometimes not used for efficiency) are put in brackets.

Liberal Party English: Moving (Canada) Forward or Choose your Canada
French: Allons (or Aller) droit devant (avec l'Équipe Martin) (Moving forward with Team Martin)
Conservative Party English: Demand Better
French: C'est assez! (Enough!)
Bloc Québécois Un parti propre au Québec (A party belonging to Quebec or An honest party in Quebec)
Pre-election: Parce qu'on est différent (Because we're different)
New Democratic Party English: [New Energy.] A Positive Choice.
French: [Une force nouvelle.] Un choix Positif. (A New Force, A Positive Choice)
Green Party English: Someday is now
French: L'avenir c'est maintenant

Issues

Important issues in the election:

Opinion polls

Voting intentions during the 2004 Canadian federal election campaign Intentions de vote (Campagne de 2004, federal).svg
Voting intentions during the 2004 Canadian federal election campaign

National results

In 2004, a federal party required 155 of the 308 seats to form a majority government in Canada. 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 preliminary results 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). Rather than forming a coalition with the NDP, the Liberal party led a minority government, obtaining majorities for its legislation on an ad hoc basis. Nevertheless, as the showdown on Bill C-48, a matter of confidence, loomed in the spring of 2005, the Liberals and NDP, who wanted to continue the Parliament, found themselves matched against the Conservatives and the Bloc, who were registering no confidence. The bill passed with the Speaker casting the decisive tie-breaking vote.

Voter turnout nationwide was 60.9%, the lowest in Canadian history at that time, [6] with 13,683,570 out of 22,466,621 registered voters casting their ballots. The voter turnout fell by more than 3pp from the 2000 federal election which had 64.1% turnout. [7]

2004 Canadian parliament.svg
Summary of the 2004 House of Commons of Canada election results
PartyParty leader# of
candidates
SeatsPopular vote
2000 Dissol. Elected% Change#%Change
Liberal Paul Martin 308172168135-21.5%4,982,22036.73%-4.12pp
Conservative 1 Stephen Harper 308787299+37.5%4,019,49829.63%-8.05pp
Bloc Québécois Gilles Duceppe 75383354+42.1%1,680,10912.39%+1.67pp
New Democratic Jack Layton 308131419+46.2%2,127,40315.68%+7.17pp
 Independent and No Affiliation64-101-64,8640.48%+0.05pp
Green Jim Harris 308----582,2474.29%+3.48pp
Christian Heritage Ron Gray62*--*40,3350.30%
Marijuana Marc-Boris St-Maurice 71----33,2760.25%-0.27pp
Progressive Canadian Ernie Schreiber16*--*10,8720.08%*
Canadian Action Connie Fogal 44----8,8070.06%-0.15pp
Marxist–Leninist Sandra L. Smith76----8,6960.06%-0.03pp
Communist Miguel Figueroa 35----4,4260.03%-0.04pp
Libertarian Jean-Serge Brisson 8*--*1,9490.01%*
 Vacant4 
Total1,683301301308+2.3%13,564,702100%
Sources: Elections Canada Web Site -- History of Federal Ridings since 1867 Archived December 4, 2008, at the Wayback Machine

Notes:

"% change" refers to change from previous election

* Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election. In the case of the CHP, which did have 46 candidates in the previous election, the party did not have official status and is not officially compared.

1 Conservative Party results are compared to the combined totals of the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservative Party in the 2000 election.

Vote and seat summaries

Popular vote
Liberal
36.73%
Conservative
29.63%
NDP
15.68%
Bloc Québécois
12.39%
Green
4.29%
Others
1.28%


Seat totals
Liberal
43.83%
Conservative
32.14%
Bloc Québécois
17.53%
NDP
6.17%
Independents
0.32%

Results by province

Party name BC AB SK MB ON QC NB NS PE NL NU NT YK Total
     Liberal Seats:821375217645111135
Popular vote:28.622.027.233.244.733.944.639.752.548.051.339.445.736.7
     Conservative Seats:222613724-23-2---99
Vote:36.361.741.839.131.58.831.128.030.732.314.417.220.929.6
     Bloc Québécois Seats:     54       54
Vote:     48.9       12.4
     New Democratic Seats:5--47-12-----19
Vote:26.69.523.423.518.14.620.628.412.517.515.239.125.715.7
    No AffiliationSeats:1 - -        1
Vote:1.0 x x        0.1
Total seats:3628141410675101147111308
Parties that won no seats:
Green Vote:6.36.12.72.74.43.23.43.34.21.63.34.34.64.3
Christian Heritage Vote:0.30.20.30.90.5x 0.10.1   0.80.3
Marijuana Vote:0.20.2 0.40.20.40.10.1    2.40.2
  Progressive Canadian Vote: x  0.2 0.3      0.1
Marxist–Leninist Vote:0.1x  0.10.1 x     0.1
Canadian Action Vote:0.30.1 xxx0.1      0.1
Communist Vote:0.1x 0.9xx       x
Libertarian Vote:0.1   xx       x
 IndependentsVote:0.3x4.6x0.30.10.20.1 0.615.7  0.3

Source: Elections Canada

10 closest ridings

  1. Western Arctic, NT: Ethel Blondin-Andrew (Lib) def. Dennis Bevington (NDP) by 53 votes
  2. Jeanne-Le Ber, QC: Liza Frulla (Lib) def. Thierry St-Cyr (BQ) by 72 votes
  3. Simcoe—Grey, ON: Helena Guergis (Cons) def. Paul Bonwick (Lib) by 100 votes
  4. New Westminster—Coquitlam, BC: Paul Forseth (Cons) def. Steve McClurg (NDP) by 113 votes
  5. Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre, SK: Tom Lukiwski (Cons) def. Gary Anderson (Lib) by 122 votes
  6. Palliser, SK: Dave Batters (Cons) def. Dick Proctor (NDP) by 124 votes
  7. Edmonton—Beaumont, AB: David Kilgour (Lib) def. Tim Uppal (Cons) by 134 votes
  8. Cambridge, ON: Gary Goodyear (Cons) def. Janko Peric (Lib) by 224 votes
  9. Kildonan—St. Paul, MB: Joy Smith (Cons) def. Terry Duguid (Lib) by 278 votes
  10. Northumberland—Quinte West, ON: Paul Macklin (Lib) def. Doug Galt (Cons) by 313 votes

Allegations of coalition talks

On March 26, 2011, Gilles Duceppe stated that Harper had tried to form a coalition government with the Bloc and NDP two months after the 2004 election. He was responding to Harper's warnings in 2011 that the Liberals might form a coalition with the Bloc and the NDP. [8]

See also

Leadership elections of 2003 and 2004:

Articles on parties' candidates in this election:

Other articles:

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References

Notes

  1. Campbell Morrison, “Harper gov’t would overhaul bilingualism; Requirement for mandatory bilingual services would be eased under Tory gov’t: candidate.” Moncton Times and Transcript, May 27, 2004, p. A1.
  2. "Martin defends ministers' ambush of Harper". CBC News . June 2, 2004. Retrieved February 23, 2022.
  3. "Court ruling blasts mandatory minimums but fails to draw Conservative ire". Canadian Press. February 14, 2012. Retrieved May 11, 2015.
  4. "MP Gallant compares abortion to Iraq beheading". CTV.ca News. June 7, 2004. Archived from the original on February 3, 2007.
  5. "Conservative MP calls for repeal of hate law". CBC News . June 6, 2004. Retrieved February 23, 2022.
  6. "Elections Canada Online | Voter Turnout at Federal Elections and Referendums, 1867–2008". Elections.ca. Retrieved February 24, 2011.
  7. "Thirty-seventh General Election 2000: Official Voting Results: Synopsis: TABLE 3". www.elections.ca. Archived from the original on December 23, 2003.
  8. Payton, Laura (March 26, 2011). "Harper wanted 2004 coalition: Duceppe". CBC News. Retrieved March 26, 2011.
  1. Only contested seats in Quebec.

General

Further reading