The Province of Canada was the union of Canada West (formerly Upper Canada and later Ontario) and Canada East (formerly Lower Canada and later Quebec).
The Province of Canada held 8 unique elections from 1841 to 1863 before Confederation. While party lines were somewhat blurred, there were political parties.
There are many examples of groups of MPs going against the party line, or splitting a party into two. A good example of this is when a number of Liberal MPs supported John A. Macdonald, a Conservative, and his idea for Canadian Confederation, while many other Liberal Party members were opposed to Confederation.
After the establishment of the double majority principle, any bill, in order to be passed, needed a majority of MPs from both Canada West and Canada East. This sometimes led to coalitions between Ontario Liberals and Quebec Tories, or vice versa. The elections listed below are divided into "Left" or "Reformer" camps, and "Right" or "Conservative" camps.
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reform Left-Wing | Reform - 29 | Patriotes - 21 | Total - 50 |
| Conservative Right-Wing | Family Compact - 10 | Tories - 17 | Total - 27 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | Independent - 1 | Independent - 4 | Total - 5 |
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative Right-Wing | Tories - 28 | Tories - 13 | Total - 41 |
| Reform Left-Wing | Reform - 12 | Patriotes - 23 Liberal-5 | Total - 40 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | Independent - 1 | Independent - 1 | Total - 2 |
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reform Left-Wing | Reform - 23 | Patriotes - 23 Liberal - 9 | Total - 55 |
| Conservative Right-Wing | Tories - 18 | Tories - 6 | Total - 24 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | Independent - 1 | Independent - 1 | Total - 2 |
Due to the problems of the last parliament, the Governor General was ordered to sign everything that came from this legislature, marking the birth of responsible government in Canada.
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Status Quo Reform Left-of-Center | Reform - 20 | Ministeralists - 23 Liberal-9 | Total - 62 |
| Conservative Right-Wing | Tories - 20 | Tories - 3 | Total - 24 |
| Radical Reform Left-Wing | None | Rouges - 4 | Total - 4 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | Independent - 1 | Independent - 3 | Total - 4 |
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Status Quo Reform Centrist | Reform - 19 | Ministeralists - 35 | Total - 54 |
| Radical Reform Left-Wing | Clear Grits - 14 Left-wing Reform - 6 | Rouges & Liberals - 19 | Total - 39 |
| Conservative Right-Wing | Conservative - 25 | Conservative - 9 | Total - 34 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | Independent - 1 | None | Total - 1 |
In order to stay in government, the moderate reformers formed a coalition with the Conservatives. The better-formed Conservative party took over the Reform Party, and the remaining Reformers left for the Clear Grits, renaming the party, the Liberal Party. The Liberal Party is still known as the 'Grits' in most of English speaking Canada today.
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal Left-Wing | Liberal - 34 | Rouges - 10 Liberal - 5 | Total - 49 |
| Conservative Right-Wing | Conservative - 24 | Conservative - 15 | Total - 39 |
| Former Reformer Centrist | Moderate Reformer - 5 | Bleu - 33 | Total - 38 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | Independent - 1 | None | Total - 1 |
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal Left-Wing | Liberal - 29 | Liberal - 29 | Total - 58 |
| Conservative Right-Wing | Conservative - 29 | Conservative - 8 | Total - 37 |
| Former Reformer Centrist | Moderate Reformer - 6 | Bleu - 27 | Total - 33 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | None | None | None |
| Movement | Canada West | Canada East | Total Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal Left-Wing | Liberal - 41 | Liberal - 25 | Total - 66 |
| Conservative Right-Wing | Conservative - 24 | Conservative - 11 | Total - 35 |
| Former Reformer Centrist | Moderate Reformer - 2 | Bleu - 25 | Total - 27 |
| Non-Aligned Independent | None | Independent - 1 | Total - 1 |
This election was followed by the first federal election, the Canadian federal election, 1867, and later on the first provincial elections. 1867 marked the beginning of two founding myths: the founding of the Canadian nation in English Canada and the pact between two founding peoples in French Canada.
When Canada became a Dominion of the British Empire, the Conservatives and Liberals retained their names, while the former Reformers became Liberal-Conservatives, and continued to work very closely with the Conservative Party.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"List of elections in the Province of Canada".
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