Manitoba Liberal Party

Manitoba Liberal Party
Active provincial party
LeaderCindy Lamoureux (interim)
PresidentTerry Hayward
Deputy LeaderWillard Reaves[1]
Founded1870; 154 years ago (1870)
Headquarters635 Broadway
Winnipeg, Manitoba
R3C 0X1
Youth wingManitoba Young Liberals
IdeologyLiberalism
Political positionCentre[2]
ColoursRed
Seats in Legislature
1 / 57
Website
www.manitobaliberals.ca

The Manitoba Liberal Party (French: Parti libéral du Manitoba) is a political party in Manitoba, Canada. Its roots can be traced to the late 19th century, following the province's creation in 1870.

History

Origins and early development (to 1883)

Originally, there were no official political parties in Manitoba, although many leading politicians were affiliated with parties that existed at the national level. In Manitoba's first Legislative Assembly (1871–1874), the leader of the opposition was Edward Hay, a Liberal who represented the interests of recent anglophone immigrants from Ontario. Not a party leader as such, he was still a leading voice for the newly transplanted "Ontario Grit" tradition. In 1874, Hay served as Minister of Public Works in the government of Marc-Amable Girard, which included both Conservatives and Liberals.

During the 1870s, a Liberal network began to emerge in the city of Winnipeg. One of the key figures in this network was William Luxton, owner of the Manitoba Free Press newspaper and himself a member of the Manitoba legislature on two occasions. Luxton was not initially supportive of Premier Robert A. Davis (1874–1878), but endorsed the Davis ministry after he brought John Norquay into cabinet (Davis' early supporters were primarily from the francophone community, and Norquay's presence gave the ministry greater credibility among the anglophone population). Luxton subsequently supported Davis and Norquay against Conservative Orangeman Thomas Scott, a leader of the local opposition (not to be confused with the figure executed by Louis Riel in 1870).

Although the Davis administration was on favourable terms with federal Liberal Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie (1873–1878), his successor Norquay was more closely aligned with the federal Conservatives. This was partly a matter of necessity. As a small province, Manitoba needed to be on favourable terms with whatever party was in power at the federal level. As such, when John A. Macdonald's Conservatives were returned to power in 1878, the local balance of power began to shift. Luxton's Liberal network supported Norquay against Scott in 1878 and 1879, but was subsequently marginalized by the Norquay government. In 1882, Norquay forged a new alliance with the province's Conservatives.

Leadership of Thomas Greenway (1883–1904)

In 1882, Thomas Greenway formed a new organization known as the Provincial Rights Party, which called for greater provincial control over resources and the railway.[3]

Based in the province's rural areas, this group soon surpassed the Winnipeg Liberals as the dominant opposition to Norquay. After the election of 1883, Greenway united the opposition MLAs into the Manitoba Liberals (which were soon recognized as a de facto political party). For the next 21 years, Greenway's control over the party would be unchallenged.

Following the 1888 general election, Greenway's Liberals took power and formed Manitoba's first declared partisan government.[4] As premier, Greenway ended federal disallowance of Manitoba railway legislation and the Canadian Pacific Railway's monopoly, bringing the Northern Pacific into the province to induce competition in freight rates.[3]

The Greenway government's most notable feat in office was curtailing the rights of Manitoba's French Canadian population. Manitoba had been founded as a bilingual province, but Greenway's government provoked the Manitoba Schools Question, ending the educational rights of (predominantly French) Catholics, and making the public school system entirely English and Protestant. English became the province's sole official language.

Greenway was able to win large majorities in 1892 and 1896, based largely on single-issue populism relating to the schools question. After this was resolved in 1897, his government became increasingly directionless.

In 1899, the Liberals were defeated by the Hugh John Macdonald-led Manitoba Conservative Party.[4]

The Liberals were unable to regain their previous support base in the decade that followed. Greenway continued to lead the party through a disastrous 1903 campaign, winning only 9 seats. He resigned in 1904 to run for federal office as MP for Lisgar.[3]

Early 20th century

Charles Mickle was chosen parliamentary leader on December 5, 1904, and led the party until a provincial convention was held in late March 1906. That convention acclaimed Edward Brown as the party's new leader. Brown failed to win a seat in the 1907 election, however, and resigned shortly thereafter. Mickle again became the party's legislative leader, and served as leader of the opposition until leaving politics in 1909.

Tobias Norris became Liberal leader in 1910. When the Tories under Rodmond Roblin resigned amid scandal in 1915, Norris became the province's premier, and retained the position until 1922. The Norris Liberals introduced temperance laws, suffrage for women, workers compensation, compulsory education, and minimum wage, as well as the establishment of a public-nursing system, rural farm credit, regulation of industrial conditions, and a mother's allowance for widowed dependent mothers.[5]

The Norris administration's relationship with the Liberal Party of Canada under Wilfrid Laurier was often antagonistic. Norris withdrew funding for French-language education in 1916, at a time when the federal Liberals were attempting to regain the support of Quebec nationalists. The Manitoba Liberals also supported Robert Borden's Union government in the election of 1917 (see Conscription Crisis of 1917), and were not reconciled with the "Laurier Liberals" until 1922. Even then, they refused to officially re-align themselves with the federal party.

The Liberals were swept from power in 1922 by the United Farmers of Manitoba, who were also known as the Progressive Party. Norris continued to lead the party through most of the 1920s, but was replaced by Hugh Robson before the 1927 election (which was again won by the Progressives). Robson, in turn, resigned on January 3, 1930. He was replaced as parliamentary leader by James Breakey. In 1931, Murdoch Mackay was selected as the party's official leader.

Liberal-Progressive Party: Merger with the Progressives

Pressured by William Lyon Mackenzie King, Mackay brought the Liberals into a coalition with Premier John Bracken's Progressives before the 1932 election. The national Progressive Party had been largely absorbed into the Liberal Party of Canada by this time, and King believed that it was foolish to divide the resources of the parties within Manitoba. He was especially concerned that the Conservatives could recapture the provincial government if the Liberals and Progressives were not united.

For the election of 1932, the provincial government referred to itself as "Liberal-Progressive" (effectively a fusion of the parties, albeit one dominated by Progressives). A small group of Liberals, led by St. Boniface mayor David Campbell, opposed the merger and ran as "Continuing Liberals". They were resoundingly defeated. After the election, the Liberals of Manitoba were absorbed into the Progressive Party. Two non-coalition Liberals were elected in 1936, but they were not intended to represent a rival party.

Despite being dominated by Progressives, the merged party soon became popularly known as the "Liberal Party of Manitoba". The federal Progressive Party had long since disappeared, and the "Progressive" name had little continued meaning in Manitoba politics.

1940s and 1950s

In 1940, Bracken's Liberal-Progressives forged an even broader coalition, bringing the Conservatives, Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, and Social Credit in a "non-partisan" government. This coalition governed the province until 1950, although the CCF left in 1943.

The Liberal-Progressive governments were cautious and moderate. Bracken's government undertook few major initiatives, and was unfriendly to labour issues even during its alliance with the CCF. Following World War II, the government of Stuart Garson (who replaced Bracken as premier in January 1943) led a program of rapid rural electrification, but was otherwise as cautious as Bracken's. Garson left provincial politics in 1948 to join the federal Liberal Cabinet of Louis St. Laurent.

The government of Garson's successor, Douglas Lloyd Campbell, was socially conservative and generally opposed to state intervention of any sort. The educational system remained primitive (it was dominated by one-room schoolhouses well into the 1950s), and no significant steps were taken on language or labour issues. The province did modernize its liquor laws during this period, however. Despite its Liberal-Progressive label, Campbell's government was one of the most right-wing provincial governments in Canada. It had somewhat frosty relations with the federal Liberals in the 1950s despite Garson being an influential cabinet minister.

The Liberal-Progressives lost their majority in the 1958 provincial election by the Progressive Conservatives under Dufferin Roblin. Campbell initially hoped to stay in office with a minority government supported by the CCF, but this was brought to nothing, and the CCF threw its support to a PC minority government. However, the Manitoba PCs were dominated by Red Tories, and Roblin's government was actually well to the left of Campbell's government.

Manitoba Liberal Party: Declining popularity (1960s–1970s)

Gildas Molgat, a protégé of Campbell, became party leader in 1961. Earlier that year, the party had formally renamed itself as simply the "Manitoba Liberal Party," over only scattered objections from Progressive diehards. Molgat prevented the Liberals from falling to third-party status during the 1960s, but never posed a serious threat to Roblin's government.

Robert Bend, a former minister under Campbell, came out of retirement to lead the party in 1969. However, Bend's rural populism did not play well with urban voters. Under his leadership, the party adopted a "cowboy"/"rodeo" theme for the campaign, which made it look and sound dated. The election that followed was an unmitigated disaster; the party dropped to only five seats, the fewest it had ever won. Bend himself was unsuccessful in his bid to succeed Campbell in his own riding. A succession of leaders, including Israel Asper (1970–1975), Charles Huband (1975–1978), and Doug Lauchlan (1980–1982) were unable to prevent the party's decline.

Well into the 1970s, the party was considered very right-wing for its time, despite the Liberal label. This was especially true under Asper's leadership; during his tenure as party leader Asper supported laissez-faire economics and an end to the welfare state—putting it to the right of the Tories. The party largely distanced itself from its right-wing past in the mid-1970s. By this time, however, the province was polarized between the Tories and the New Democratic Party of Manitoba (NDP, successor to the Manitoba CCF), and the Liberals were unable to present themselves as a viable alternative. The party bottomed out in the 1981 election, when it was completely shut out of the legislature for the first time ever.

1980s–1990

In 1984, the party chose Sharon Carstairs as its new leader. She was elected to the assembly in the 1986 election, and in the 1988 election, led the party to 20 seats—its best showing since 1953—and official opposition status. This was precipitated by the unpopularity of Howard Pawley's New Democratic government, which allowed the Liberals to win the support of many centre-left voters.

The Liberals' resurgence sparked hopes that they could win the next election. This proved to be a temporary recovery. The NDP revived under Gary Doer, and the Liberals slipped back into third place in the 1990 election with only seven seats, against 20 for the NDP and 30 for the Conservatives. Many in the party felt Carstairs had squandered their best chance of winning government in three decades.

Further decline (1993–2013)

Carstairs was replaced as leader by Paul Edwards in 1993. By the time the 1995 election was called, the party had managed to recover to a strong second-place position in the polls. They ran a poor campaign, however, and were again overtaken by the NDP well before election day. Despite having almost 24% of popular support, the Liberals won only three seats and lost official party status. Edwards, who was defeated in his own riding, stepped down as party leader in 1996.

The leadership convention of 1996 exposed deep divisions in the party, as Ginny Hasselfield defeated Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) Kevin Lamoureux by only 21 votes. Two of the party's three MLAs (Lamoureux and Gary Kowalski) subsequently sat as "Independent Liberals", and there were threats of legal action between Hasselfield and Lamoureux. The party was only reunited when Hasselfield resigned in 1998, replaced by former federal Member of Parliament (MP) Jon Gerrard.

Liberal Party support fell by 10% in the election of 1999, which allowed Gary Doer's New Democrats to regain centre-left support and win government. Gerrard became the party's only MLA, winning election in the upscale riding of River Heights, Carstairs' old riding. The party failed to recover much of its support base in the 2003 election, although Lamoureux was able to regain his seat in north Winnipeg to become the party's second MLA.

Despite Lamoureux's re-election, the Liberal popular vote fell in 2003 even through the party managed to field a full slate of candidates (they were 7 shy in 1999). The Liberals did have more second-place finishes than in the previous election, which appeared to be a sign of a rebound. If the party had any momentum to build upon, it was negated by a weak campaign in the 2007 provincial election. Gerrard and Lamoureux were both re-elected, but the party's popular support declined to just above 12%. They also had fewer second-place finishes than they had in 1999.

Rebuilding the party (2010s–present)

The 2011 provincial election resulted in Jon Gerrard being the only Liberal MLA being elected. He subsequently announced his intention to resign as party leader after serving in the position for 15 years.

On October 26, 2013, the Manitoba Liberal Party held a leadership convention in Winnipeg.[6] The contested nomination saw three individuals put their name forward: Bob Axworthy (younger brother of Lloyd Axworthy, former MP, federal Minister of various portfolios, and MLA), Rana Bokhari, and Dougald Lamont. Bokhari was elected leader of the party with 431 ballots cast.

In preparation of the 2016 Manitoba general election, the Liberals nominated candidates. The party initially had high hopes for the election after a strong showing by the federal Liberals in the 2015 federal election, in which they took all but one seat in Winnipeg. By the time of the writ, Elections Manitoba disqualified four candidates due to improper paperwork and a fifth for being an enumerator while collecting signatures for her candidacy. The Liberals found their pre-writ polling of approximately 25% fall to 14% on Election Day. On May 7, 2016, Bokhari announced that she would not lead the party into the next election but would remain on as leader until her successor was chosen.[7] Judy Klassen served as the interim leader of the Manitoba Liberal Party until June 13, 2017, when she stepped down to become a leadership candidate.[8] Dougald Lamont was elected Manitoba Liberal leader at the October 21, 2017 Liberal leadership election, defeating MLA Cindy Lamoureux on the second ballot by eight votes.[9]

On July 17, 2018, Lamont won a by-election in St. Boniface that gave the Liberals official party status for the first time in 23 years.[10] The vote followed the resignation of former NDP Premier Greg Selinger.[11]

Lamont led the Manitoba Liberals into the 2019 provincial election with four MLAs. He was one of three Liberal MLAs returned, being re-elected in St. Boniface, while Gerrard was re-elected in River Heights, and Cindy Lamoureux won in Tyndall Park.

Lamont remained the Liberal leader into the 2023 provincial election. Gerrard and Lamont lost their seats to New Democrats Mike Moroz and Robert Loiselle respectively, though Lamoureux improved her vote percentage by a small margin. Lamont would resign as leader of the Manitoba Liberal Party that evening.[12] Gerrard's defeat in River Heights would mark the first time a New Democrat held the seat, the first time since 1999 that a Liberal would not, and only the second time since 1986 that a Liberal would not hold the seat after PC MLA Mike Radcliffe held the seat from 1995 to 1999.

On October 17, 2023, Cindy Lamoureux was appointed as the interim party leader.[13]

Party leaders

Liberal Party leaders

  1. Thomas Greenway, 1882–1904
  2. Charles Mickle, December 5, 1904 – March 28, 1906 (parliamentary leader)
  3. Edward Brown, March 28, 1906 – 1908
  4. Charles Mickle, January 1908 – 1910 (parliamentary leader)
  5. Tobias Norris, 1910 – March 20, 1927
  6. Hugh Robson, March 20, 1927 – January 3, 1930
  7. James Breakey, January 3, 1930 – June 26, 1931 (parliamentary leader)
  8. Murdoch Mackay, June 26, 1931 – 1932

"Continuing Liberal" leaders

  1. David Campbell, 1932

Liberal-Progressive Party leaders

  1. John Bracken, 1932 – January 1943
  2. Stuart Garson, January 1943 – November 1948
  3. Douglas Campbell, November 1948 – April 19, 1961[14]

Liberal Party leaders (renewal)

  1. Gildas Molgat, April 20, 1961 – May 10, 1969
  2. Robert Bend, May 10, 1969 – June 25, 1969
  3. Stan Roberts (interim), June 25, 1969 – October 31, 1970
  4. Israel Asper, October 31, 1970 – February 22, 1975
  5. Charles Huband, February 22, 1975 – 1978
  6. Vacant 1978 - November 30, 1980 (Senator Gildas Molgat was party president)
    1. Lloyd Axworthy 1977 – 1979 (parliamentary leader)
    2. June Westbury 1979 – 1980 (parliamentary leader)
  7. Doug Lauchlan, November 30, 1980 – 1982
  8. Vacant 1982 - March 4, 1984 (Senator Gildas Molgat was party president)
  9. Sharon Carstairs, March 4, 1984 – June 4, 1993
  10. Paul Edwards, June 4, 1993 – October 19, 1996
  11. Ginny Hasselfield, October 19, 1996 – October 17, 1998
  12. Jon Gerrard, October 17, 1998 – October 26, 2013
  13. Rana Bokhari, October 26, 2013 – September 24, 2016
  14. Paul Hesse (acting), September 24, 2016 – October 21, 2016
    1. Jon Gerrard, September 24, 2016 – October 21, 2016 (parliamentary leader)
  15. Judy Klassen (interim), October 21, 2016 – June 13, 2017 (resigned to run for leader)
  16. Paul Brault (acting), June 13, 2017 – October 21, 2017
    1. Jon Gerrard, June 13, 2017 – October 21, 2017
  17. Dougald Lamont October 21, 2017 – October 3, 2023
  18. Cindy Lamoureux (interim), October 17, 2023 – present

(Note: Stan Roberts served as the party's acting leader from 1969 to 1970, after Robert Bend was defeated in the province's 1969 election. Although Lloyd Axworthy was the party's only MLA from 1977 to 1979, he was never party leader. Likewise Jon Gerrard remained the party's only MLA between 2013 and 2016 after relinquishing the party leadership in 2013.)

Election results

Election
Leader
Seats
won
Seat
change
Seats
place
Popular
vote
% of popular
vote
Government
1879
2 / 24
Steady 2nd Conservative Majority
1883 Thomas Greenway
10 / 30
Increase8 Steady2nd Conservative Majority
1886
15 / 35
Increase5 Steady2nd Conservative Majority
1888
33 / 38
Increase18 Increase1st Liberal Majority
1892
28 / 40
Decrease5 Steady1st Liberal Majority
1896
32 / 40
Increase4 Steady1st Liberal Majority
1899
17 / 40
Decrease15 Decrease2nd Conservative Majority
1903
8 / 40
Decrease9 Steady2nd 23,740 44.60% Conservative Majority
1907 Edward Brown
13 / 41
Increase5 Steady2nd 29,476 47.90% Conservative Majority
1910 Tobias Norris
13 / 41
Steady Steady2nd 35,353 47.1% Conservative Majority
1914
20 / 49
Increase7 Steady2nd 61,797 42.36 Conservative Majority
1915
40 / 47
Increase20 Increase1st 55.1% Liberal Majority
1920
21 / 55
Decrease19 Steady1st 35.1% Liberal Minority
1922
8 / 55
Decrease13 Decrease2nd 33.2% Progressive Majority
1927 Hugh Robson
7 / 55
Decrease1 Decrease3rd 20.7% Progressive Majority
1932 John Bracken
38 / 55
1st 39.6% Liberal-Progressive Majority1
1936
23 / 55
Decrease15 Steady1st 35.3% Liberal–Progressive Majority
1941
27 / 55
Increase4 Steady1st 35.1% Liberal–Progressive-led Coalition
1945
25 / 55
Increase2 Steady1st 32.2% Liberal–Progressive-led Coalition
1949 Douglas Lloyd Campbell
31 / 57
Increase6 Steady1st 38.7% Liberal–Progressive-led Coalition
1953
35 / 57
Increase4 Steady1st 117,887 44.05% Liberal–Progressive Majority
1958
19 / 57
Decrease16 Decrease2nd 34.7% PC Minority
1959
11 / 57
Decrease8 Steady2nd 94,799 30.0%% PC Majority
1962 Gildas Molgat
13 / 57
Increase2 Steady2nd 103,283 36.1% PC Majority2
1966
14 / 57
Increase1 Steady2nd 107,841 33.13% PC Majority
1969 Robert Bend
5 / 57
Decrease9 Decrease3rd 80,288 23.99% NDP Minority
1973 Izzy Asper
5 / 57
Steady Steady3rd 88,907 19.04% NDP Majority
1977 Charles Huband
1 / 57
Decrease4 Steady3rd 59,865 12.29% PC Majority
1981 Doug Lauchlan
0 / 57
Decrease1 Decreaseno seats 32,373 6.70% NDP Majority
1986 Sharon Carstairs
1 / 57
Increase1 Increase3rd 66,469 13.92% NDP Majority
1988
20 / 57
Increase19 Increase2nd 190,913 35.52% PC Minority
1990
7 / 57
Decrease13 Decrease3rd 138,146 28.15% PC Majority
1995 Paul Edwards
3 / 57
Decrease4 Steady3rd 119,677 23.72 PC Majority
1999 Jon Gerrard
1 / 57
Decrease2 Steady3rd 66,111 13.4% NDP Majority
2003
2 / 57
Increase1 Steady3rd 52,123 13.19% NDP Majority
2007
2 / 57
Steady Steady3rd 51,857 12.39% NDP Majority
2011
1 / 57
Decrease1 Steady3rd 32,420 7.52% NDP Majority
2016 Rana Bokhari
3 / 57
Increase2 Steady3rd 62,985 14.46% PC Majority
2019 Dougald Lamont
3 / 57
Steady Steady3rd 67,978 14.48% PC Majority
2023
1 / 57
Decrease2 Steady3rd 51,067 10.8% NDP Majority
1Liberals for alliance with the governing Progressive Party to run joint Liberal-Progressive candidates. The parties merge and become the Liberal-Progressive Party.
2Liberal-Progressive Party renames itself the Liberal Party of Manitoba.

See also

References

  1. ^ Froese, Ian (28 November 2023). "Manitoba Liberals pick former Blue Bomber Willard Reaves as deputy leader". CBC News. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  2. ^ Barber, Paul (2010). "Manitoba's Liberals: Sliding into Third". In Thomas, Paul G.; Brown, Curtis (eds.). Manitoba Politics and Government: Issues, Institutions, Traditions. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press. pp. 150–151. ISBN 978-0-88755-719-4. The Manitoba liberal Party today is a small-l liberal party similar to the moderate, centre-left federal liberal Party.
  3. ^ a b c Hall, David J. 2015 July 7. "Thomas Greenway." The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada.
  4. ^ a b Weir, T.R., and Erin James-Abra. 2023 March 23. "Politics in Manitoba." The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved 2023-04-18.
  5. ^ Bumsted, J.M. 2013 December 14. "Tobias Crawford Norris." The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada.
  6. ^ "Manitoba Liberal leadership race opens". Global News. May 27, 2013. Retrieved June 21, 2013.
  7. ^ "Manitoba Liberal Party Leader Rana Bokhari to step down". cbc.ca.
  8. ^ Manitoba Liberals will choose leader in October. Winnipeg Free Press, 2 February 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  9. ^ Dan Lett (October 22, 2017). "All systems go for Liberal reboot. Will they blow it?". Winnipeg Free Press.
  10. ^ "Manitoba Liberal Leader Dougald Lamont projected to win St. Boniface byelection". CBC Manitoba. 2018-07-17. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  11. ^ "BRODBECK: St. Boniface byelection a must-win for Liberals". Winnipeg Sun. 2018-04-02. Retrieved 2018-04-03.
  12. ^ "Dougald Lamont stepping down as Manitoba Liberal leader". Winnipeg. 2023-10-03. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  13. ^ Thompson, Sam (17 October 2023). "Cindy Lamoureux, sole Manitoba Liberal left in legislature, appointed interim party leader". Global News. Corus Entertainment. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  14. ^ "Memorable Manitobans: Members of the Twenty-Sixth Legislative Assembly of Manitoba (1959-1962)". mhs.mb.ca/. The Manitoba Historical Society. Retrieved 7 March 2015.

External links

  • Official website
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