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All 19 seats to the Legislative Assembly 10 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 64.44% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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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. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The 2021 Yukon general election was held on April 12, 2021, to return members of the 35th Yukon Legislative Assembly. [1] [3] The election resulted in a hung parliament where the incumbent governing Yukon Liberal Party and the opposition Yukon Party won 8 seats each, while the Yukon New Democratic Party held the remaining 3. As the incumbent party given the first opportunity to form government, a Liberal minority government was sworn in on April 23, 2021. [4] The Liberals and NDP announced the establishment of a formal confidence and supply agreement on April 28, 2021. [5]
During the 2016 election, the Liberals included a commitment in their platform to introduce fixed election dates in the territory. [6] In October 2020, the government introduced legislation to amend the Elections Act and create fixed election dates. [7] The legislation passed in December 2020, and took effect after the 2021 election. [8]
Voter turnout dropped almost twelve percentage points compared to 2016, caused to an extent by the introduction of a standing List of Electors, resulting in a higher percentage of Yukoners being registered. More votes were cast than in 2016, in part due to the territory's strong population growth since the last election.[ citation needed ]
The final seat standing for the election was only resolved on April 19, 2021, because of a 78–78 vote tie in the Vuntut Gwitchin riding, the territory's smallest by population. After the tie was upheld by a judicial recount, drawing of lots gave the seat to the NDP's Annie Blake, denying the Yukon Liberals a one-seat plurality over the Yukon Party. [9]
Party | Votes | % | +/– | Seats | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Dissolution | Elected | Change | ||||||
Yukon Party | 7,477 | 39.32 | +5.84 | 6 | 6 | 8 | +2 | ||
Liberal | 6,155 | 32.37 | -7.04 | 11 | 10 | 8 | -3 | ||
New Democratic | 5,356 | 28.17 | +1.94 | 2 | 2 | 3 | +1 | ||
Independents | 26 | 0.14 | -0.06 | 0 | 1 | 0 | ±0 | ||
Total | 19,014 | 100.00 | – | 19 | 19 | 19 | 0 | ||
Valid votes | 19,014 | 99.56 | |||||||
Invalid/blank votes | 84 | 0.44 | |||||||
Total votes | 19,098 | 100.00 | |||||||
Registered voters/turnout | 29,637 | 64.44 |
Each candidate stands in a single electoral district.
Bold indicates party leaders and cabinet members are italicized
† - denotes a retiring incumbent MLA
Electoral district | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Yukon | NDP | ||||||
Klondike | Sandy Silver 526 (47.2%) | Charlie Dagostin 364 (32.7%) | Chris Clarke 224 (20.1%) | Sandy Silver | ||||
Kluane | Luke Campbell 219 (28.0%) | Wade Istchenko 352 (45.0%) | Dave Weir 211 (27.0%) | Wade Istchenko | ||||
Lake Laberge | Tracey Jacobs 229 (17.8%) | Brad Cathers 799 (62.1%) | Ian Angus 259 (20.1%) | Brad Cathers | ||||
Mayo-Tatchun | Jeremy Harper 238 (37.7%) | Peter Grundmanis 186 (29.4%) | Patty Wallingham 208 (32.9%) | Don Hutton† | ||||
Mount Lorne-Southern Lakes | John Streicker 446 (39.0%) | Eric Schroff 406 (35.5%) | Erik Pinkerton 292 (25.5%) | John Streicker | ||||
Pelly-Nisutlin | Katherine Alexander 97 (13.6%) | Stacey Hassard 362 (50.8%) | George Bahm 254 (35.6%) | Stacey Hassard | ||||
Vuntut Gwitchin | Pauline Frost 78 (50.0%) | Annie Blake 78 (50.0%) | Pauline Frost | |||||
Watson Lake | Amanda Brown 237 (43.1%) | Patti McLeod 313 (56.9%) | Patti McLeod |
In Vuntut Gwitchin, both candidates each received 78 votes, resulting in a tie. A judicial recount took place and there remained a tie vote. Therefore, a random draw determined that Annie Blake would fill the seat. [11]
Electoral district | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Yukon | NDP | Other | |||||||
Copperbelt North | Ted Adel 346 (25.1%) | Currie Dixon 717 (51.9%) | Saba Javed 318 (23.0%) | Ted Adel | ||||||
Copperbelt South | Sheila Robertson 259 (20.3%) | Scott Kent 726 (57.0%) | Kaori Torigai 289 (22.7%) | Scott Kent | ||||||
Mountainview | Jeanie McLean 402 (38.2%) | Ray Sydney 268 (25.5%) | Michelle Friesen 356 (33.8%) | Coach Jan Prieditis 26 (2.5%) | Jeanie McLean | |||||
Porter Creek Centre | Paolo Gallina 646 (38.4%) | Yvonne Clarke 704 (41.8%) | Shonagh McCrindle 334 (19.8%) | Paolo Gallina | ||||||
Porter Creek North | Staci McIntosh 331 (28.9%) | Geraldine Van Bibber 562 (49.2%) | Francis van Kessel 250 (21.9%) | Geraldine Van Bibber | ||||||
Porter Creek South | Ranj Pillai 309 (47.2%) | Chad Sjodin 262 (40.0%) | Colette Acheson 84 (12.8%) | Ranj Pillai | ||||||
Riverdale North | Nils Clarke 469 (41.7%) | Cory Adams 280 (24.9%) | Vanessa Thorson 375 (33.4%) | Nils Clarke | ||||||
Riverdale South | Tracy-Anne McPhee 415 (39.3%) | Cynthia Lyslo 307 (29.1%) | Jason Cook 334 (31.6%) | Tracy-Anne McPhee | ||||||
Takhini-Kopper King | Raj Murugaiyan 198 (16.4%) | Morgan Yuill 244 (20.3%) | Kate White 763 (63.3%) | Kate White | ||||||
Whitehorse Centre | Dan Curtis 312 (29.5%) | Eileen Melnychuk 249 (23.5%) | Emily Tredger 498 (47.0%) | Liz Hanson† | ||||||
Whitehorse West | Richard Mostyn 398 (39.7%) | Angela Drainville 376 (37.5%) | Ron Davis 229 (22.8%) | Richard Mostyn |
The Yukon Green Party did not run any candidates in the election; as a result, the party has been deregistered by Elections Yukon. [12] [13]
Party | Name | Constituency | Year elected | Seat held by party since | Defeated by | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Ted Adel | Copperbelt North | 2016 | 2016 | Currie Dixon | Yukon | ||
Liberal | Paolo Gallina | Porter Creek Centre | 2016 | 2016 | Yvonne Clarke | Yukon | ||
Liberal | Pauline Frost | Vuntut Gwitchin | 2016 | 2016 | Annie Blake | NDP |
Polling firm | Last date of polling | Link | Liberal | Yukon | NDP | Green | Other | Margin of error | Sample size | Polling method | Lead |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Léger | February 7, 2021 | HTML | 31 | 32 | 33 | - | 4 | 600 | phone | 1 | |
DataPath Systems | December 20, 2017 | HTML | 47 | 36 | 11 | 5 | 1 | ±4.8 pp | 424 | online | 11 |
Election 2016 | November 7, 2016 | 39.4 | 33.4 | 26.2 | 0.8 | 0.2 | 6 | ||||
The election resulted in a hung parliament, with no party winning the requisite 10 seats to form a majority in the legislature. The Yukon Party and the Liberals, with 8 seats each, entered discussions with the NDP to determine support for a minority government. [14] The Liberals, as the incumbent governing party, were given the opportunity to continue as government and test the confidence of the legislature. The Yukon Party publicly stated that they were not included in any talks to form a coalition government or provide other support to the Liberals, while the NDP did not indicate the content of their leader's discussion with the Liberals. [15] On April 28, 2021, the Liberals and NDP announced a formal confidence and supply agreement to allow the Liberals to form a minority government. [5]
Following the tie vote in Vuntut Gwitchin, which declared NDP candidate Annie Blake as the winner following the drawing of lots, outgoing Liberal MLA Pauline Frost filed a legal challenge challenging the results; Frost initially claimed that two votes had been counted from the district that "should not have been cast." [16] Only one vote was actually formally challenged by Frost in court, on the grounds that as a prisoner in the Whitehorse Correctional Centre the voter should have registered to vote in Whitehorse rather than his home community; the challenge was rejected by Suzanne Duncan of the Supreme Court of Yukon in August, affirming Blake's victory. [17]
The Yukon New Democratic Party is a social democratic political party in the Yukon, Canada. It is the provincial section of the federal New Democratic Party.
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.
Patricia Jane 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 2000 Yukon general election was held on April 17, 2000 to elect members of the 30th Yukon Legislative Assembly in the Yukon Territory in Canada. The incumbent NDP government was defeated by the Liberal Party, which formed a majority government.
Peter William Jenkins was a Canadian politician, who served as deputy premier and health minister in the territorial government of the Yukon, and as mayor of Dawson City.
Vuntut Gwitchin is an electoral district which returns a member to the Legislative Assembly of Yukon in Canada. It is one of the Yukon's eight rural seats.
The 1992 Yukon general election was held on October 19, 1992 to elect members of the 28th Legislative Assembly of the territory of Yukon, Canada. It was won by the Yukon Party.
Darius Mortimer Elias was a Canadian politician. He represented the rural Yukon electoral district of Vuntut Gwitchin in the Yukon Legislative Assembly from 2006–2016 as a member of both the Yukon Liberal Party and the Yukon Party.
Lorraine Peter, is a Canadian politician. She represented the electoral district of Vuntut Gwitchin in the Yukon Legislative Assembly from 2000 to 2006. She was a member of the Yukon New Democratic Party.
Robert Bruce was a Canadian politician. He represented the electoral district of Vuntut Gwitchin in the Yukon Legislative Assembly from 1996 to 2000. He was a member of the Yukon New Democratic Party.
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.
Sidney Alexander "Sandy" Silver is a Canadian politician, who served as the ninth premier of Yukon from 2016 to 2023. He was first elected to the Yukon Legislative Assembly in the 2011 election, and was re-elected in 2016. He represents the electoral district of Klondike and previously served as Leader of the Yukon Liberal Party.
Currie Dixon is a Canadian politician, leader of the Yukon Party, and MLA for Copperbelt North. Dixon was a cabinet minister in the government of Darrell Pasloski and is the former MLA for Copperbelt North, having served from 2011 until 2016.
The 2016 general election in Yukon, Canada, took place on November 7, 2016, to return members to the 34th Yukon legislative assembly.
Pauline Frost is a Canadian politician who was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Yukon in the 2016 election. She represented the electoral district of Vuntut Gwitchin as a member of the Yukon Liberal Party and served one term.
Annie Blake is a Canadian politician, who was elected to the Yukon Legislative Assembly in the 2021 Yukon general election. She represents the electoral district of Vuntut Gwitchin as a member of the Yukon New Democratic Party.
The 2025 Yukon general election will be held on or before November 3, 2025 to elect members to the 36th Yukon Legislative Assembly. Under amendments to the territorial Elections Act passed in 2020, the first fixed election date following the 2021 Yukon general election is set as November 3, 2025. All subsequent elections will take place on the first Monday in November of the fourth calendar year following the previous election. The legislative assembly may be dissolved earlier by order of the Commissioner of Yukon due to a motion of no confidence in the current minority government or on the advice of the premier.
The next territorial election will be held no later than November 18, 2021.