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Canadian federal election, 2000

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Politics of Canada
Popular vote map with bar graphs showing seats by provicne and territory
Popular vote map with bar graphs showing seats by provicne and territory

On November 27, 2000, Canada held a federal election.

The governing Liberals won a third consecutive majority government easily, as they had been expected to do when the election was called in October, and throughout the campaign. The election was regarded as a great success by Prime Minister Jean Chrétien and the Liberal Party, but a failure for every other party. Without important issues or a very exciting campaign, voter turn-out reached a record low.

Voter turn-out: 64.1% (corrected from initial reporting of 61.2%)

Popular vote map with bar graphs showing seats by province and territory
Popular vote map with bar graphs showing seats by province and territory

The parties:

  • The Liberals campaigned on their successful economic record and their relatively scandal-free seven years in office. The Liberals increased their number of seats in the Canadian House of Commons from 155 seats to 172 seats. The Liberals also regained ground in eastern Canada that they lost during the 1997 election due to a change to unemployment rules that hurt seasonal workers.
  • The Canadian Reform Conservative Alliance (Canadian Alliance) went into the election with great hopes. New leader Stockwell Day was expected to appeal far more to the crucial Ontario voters, and the Canadian Alliance was hoping for major improvements. The Alliance campaigned on tax cuts, an end to the federal gun registration program, and family values. The campaign was dogged by accusations that the party would allow private health care to operate along-side the public Medicare system and introduce two-tier health care, and for threatening gay rights and abortion rights, all of which the party denied. Day's personal image also suffered, particularly due to gaffes along the campaign trail. The Alliance ended up winning only two Ontario ridings. This led to the eventual downfall of Day the next year. At one point, the Alliance was at 30.5% in the polls, and some thought they could take government. While they did not do so, they did, however, retain their official opposition status, and increased their numbers in the House of Commons by six seats, from 60 to 66.
  • The Bloc Québécois failed to attract much interest in their campaign, and Gilles Duceppe, despite performing well in the debates, was not a very popular leader in Quebec. The Bloc's seat total fell from 44 to 38. Many analysts thought the party would do worse, but the other parties split the federalist vote in Quebec, allowing the Bloc to win many seats that they would not have won if the federalist vote had been united.
  • The New Democratic Party campaigned intensely on the issue of medicare, but failed to make much headway with voters. Their seat count fell from 21 to 13. The NDP's vote remained high in eastern Canada, especially Nova Scotia, where it traditionally has not done so well.
  • The Progressive Conservatives, despite great hope of regaining their lost glory under former Prime Minister Joe Clark, had a very disappointing election, falling from 20 to 12 seats, and being almost exclusively confined to the Maritime provinces and Newfoundland. The party, however, in getting the 12 seats needed for Official party status in the House of Commons, and was able to stop the total implosion of the party.
37th Parliament
37th Parliament

One interesting sidenote was that the entire election was started, took place, finished, and a winner was chosen, all while the votes were being counted in the 2000 US presidential election. This made many satire TV shows in Canada, including This Hour has 22 Minutes.

Contents

Results

National


Party Party Leader # of cands Seats Popular Vote
Before After % Change # % Change
Liberal Jean Chrétien 301 161 172 6.8% 5,252,031 40.85% +2.39%
Canadian Alliance Stockwell Day 298 58 66 13.8% 3,276,929 25.49% +6.13%1
Bloc Québécois Gilles Duceppe 75 44 38 -13.6% 1,377,727 10.72% +0.04%
New Democratic Alexa McDonough 298 19 13 -31.6% 1,093,868 8.51% -2.54%
Progressive Conservative Joe Clark 291 15 12 -20.0% 1,566,998 12.19% -6.65%
Green Joan Russow 111 0 0 104,402 0.81% +0.38%
Marijuana Marc-Boris St-Maurice 73 0 0 66,258 0.52% n/a2
Canadian Action Paul T. Hellyer 70 0 0 27,103 0.21% +0.08%
Natural Law Neil Paterson 69 0 0 16,577 0.13% -0.16%
Marxist-Leninist Sandra L. Smith 84 0 0 12,068 0.09% 0.00%
Communist Miguel Figueroa 52 0 0 8,776 0.09% n/a2
Independent 29 4 0 17,445 0.14% -0.32%
No Affiliation 57 0 0 37,591 0.29% +0.28%
Vacant 0 301  
Total 1,808 301 12,857,773 100.0
Other elections: 1988, 1993, 1997, 2000 2004
Sources: http://www.elections.ca History of Federal Ridings since 1867


1 - percentage change from Reform Party of Canada in previous election
2 - party was not recognized in previous election

Province by Province breakdown


Party Name BC AB SK MB ON QC NB NS PE NL NU NT YK Total
Liberal Seats: 5 2 2 5 100 36 6 4 4 5 1 1 1 172
Popular Vote: 27.7 20.9 20.7 32.5 51.5 44.2 41.7 36.5 47.0 44.9 69.0 45.3 32.9 40.8
Canadian Alliance Seats: 27 23 10 4 2                 66
Vote: 49.4 58.9 47.7 30.4 23.6 6.2 15.7 9.6 5.0 3.9   17.6 27.0 25.5
Bloc Québécois Seats:           38               38
Vote:           39.9               10.7
New Democratic Seats: 2   2 4 1   1 3           13
Vote: 11.3 5.4 26.2 20.9 8.3 1.8 11.7 24.0 9.0 13.1 18.3 26.9 32.1 8.5
Progressive Conservative Seats:   1   1   1 3 4   2       12
Vote: 7.3 13.5 4.8 14.5 14.4 5.6 30.5 29.1 38.4 34.5 8.1 10.1 7.6 12.2
Green Seats:                            
Vote: 2.1 0.5 0.4 0.2 0.9 0.6   0.1 0.3   4.5     0.8
Marijuana Seats:                            
Vote: 0.7 0.2   0.1 0.3 1.0 0.1 0.4           0.5
Canadian Action Seats:                            
Vote: 0.8 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2                 0.2
Natural Law Seats:                            
Vote: 0.1       0.1 0.3 0.2   0.1 0.1       0.1
Marxist-Leninist Seats:                            
Vote: 0.1       0.1 0.2   0.1           0.1
Communist Seats:                            
Vote: 0.1     0.3 0.1 0.1               0.1
Other Seats:                            
Vote: 0.4 0.4   1.0 0.6 0.2   0.2 0.1 4.4     0.4 0.4
Total seats: 34 26 14 14 101 75 10 11 4 7 1 1 1 301


Source: Elections Canada

Seat by seat breakdown

Notes

Preceded by:
1997 Canadian election

Canadian federal elections

Followed by:
2004 Canadian election

External links

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