- Source: 1894 Ontario general election
The 1894 Ontario general election was the eighth general election held in the Province of Ontario, Canada. It was held on June 26, 1894, to elect the 94 Members of the 8th Legislative Assembly of Ontario ("MLAs").
The main issues were the Liberals' "Ontario System", as well as French language schools, farmer interests, support for Toronto business, woman suffrage, the temperance movement, and the demands of labour unions.
The Ontario Liberal Party, led by Oliver Mowat, formed the government for the seventh consecutive parliament, even though some of its members were elected under joint banners: either with the Patrons of Industry or the Protestant Protective Association.
The Ontario Conservative Party, led by William Ralph Meredith, formed the official opposition.
The Patrons of Industry, a farmers' organization formed in 1890, cooperated with the urban labour movement to address the political frustrations of both groups with big business. Sixteen members of the Legislative Assembly were elected with Patrons of Industry support—12 Liberals, one Conservative, and three who ran only under the "Patrons of Industry" banner.
The Protestant Protective Association (PPA) was an anti-Catholic group, associated with the Orange Order. It campaigned against the rights of Catholics and French-Canadians, and argued that Roman Catholics were attempting to take over Ontario. Nine candidates were elected with PPA support, 6 Conservatives, 1 Liberal and 2 who ran only under the PPA banner. The PPA worked most closely with the Conservative opposition.
Unlike the previous two elections, this election strictly used First past the post to elect the members. The Toronto district was divided into separate single member districts, as part of the expansion of the Assembly.
Expansion of the Legislative Assembly
An Act passed just prior to the election increased the size of the Assembly from 91 to 94 seats:
Toronto, a riding that returned three MLAs, was divided into Toronto East, Toronto North, Toronto South and Toronto West.
Hamilton, a single-member constituency, was divided into Hamilton East and Hamilton West.
Ottawa became a two-member riding.
Results
Before the Legislature's first session opened, four by-elections were called. William Ralph Meredith (London) resigned to accept appointment as a judge, while the elections of James M. Savage (Algoma West), John Senn (Haldimand) and Edward H. Smythe (Kingston) were overturned on appeal. The Liberals won all four Conservative seats, thus securing a majority in the Assembly. That, together with the inability of the Patrons of Industry and the Conservatives to combine on any issue, ensured the Liberals' hold on power.
= Synopsis of results
== open seat
= turnout is above provincial average
= winning candidate was in previous Legislature
= incumbent had switched allegiance
= previously incumbent in another riding
= not incumbent; was previously elected to the Legislature
= incumbency arose from byelection gain
= incumbency arose from prior election result being overturned by the court
= other incumbents renominated
= joint Conservative candidate
= joint Independent Conservative candidate
= joint Liberal candidate
= joint Labour candidate
= previously an MP in the House of Commons of Canada
= multiple candidates
= Analysis
== MLAs elected by region and riding
=Party designations are as follows:
= Division of ridings
=The newly created ridings returned the following MLAs:
= Seats that changed hands
=Of the constituencies that were not altered, there were 38 seats that changed allegiance in the election:
See also
Politics of Ontario
List of Ontario political parties
Premier of Ontario
Leader of the Opposition (Ontario)
Notes and references
= Notes
== References
=Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Amerika Serikat
- New York (negara bagian)
- 1894 Ontario general election
- List of Ontario general elections
- 1898 Ontario general election
- 1890 Ontario general election
- List of elections in 1894
- List of premiers of Ontario
- List of political parties in Ontario
- George Frederick Marter
- Earl Desmond
- Timeline of Canadian elections