1923 Ontario general election

The 1923 Ontario general election was the 16th general election held in the Province of Ontario, Canada. It was held on June 25, 1923, to elect the 111 Members of the 16th Legislative Assembly of Ontario ("MLAs").[1]

1923 Ontario general election

June 25, 1923
  LIB
Party Conservative United Farmers Liberal
Percentage 49.8% 21.1% 21.8%

 
Party Labour
Percentage 4.8%

Premier before election

Ernest Charles Drury
United Farmers

Premier after election

Howard Ferguson
Conservative

The Ontario Conservative Party, led by George Howard Ferguson, was elected to power with a majority in the Legislature (although taking less than half the votes cast).

This election ended the rule of the United Farmers of Ontario-Labour coalition government of Ernest C. Drury.

The 1923 election was plagued by low turn-out, and all the parties took fewer voters than they had in 1919.

The UFO actually took a larger proportion of the vote than it had in 1919 but took just a fraction of the seats it had taken in 1919 due to much of the anti-UFO vote concentrating behind Conservative Party candidates. The UFO had held power by virtue of a coalition with Labour and three other MLAs. Together they had received 34 percent of the votes cast in 1919. The Conservatives after the 1923 election took majority government based on taking 34 percent of the vote by that one party alone.

The Ontario Liberal Party, led by Wellington Hay, lost close to half its caucus in the Conservative landslide. Labour (the Independent Labour Party) too lost most of its MLAs in this turn-around election.

The Conservative party was the most popular, taking 34 percent of the vote. Its candidate was the leading one in a large proportion of the districts, giving it a large majority of seats in the legislature (more than its due proportionally) under the First past the post system in use at the time.

In the election, the UFO again did not run candidates where a Labour candidate was running - and also not in 20 other districts as well. The UFO received the third-most number of votes overall but only ran in about two-thirds of the districts so its vote count likely does not measure its actual support. Together Labour and the UFO ran in 93 seats so the two did not cover all the districts in the province.

The UFO did not receive as many votes as it had in 1919 but still got fairly good numbers considering it did not run candidates in a third of the districts. As the 1923 election was plagued by low turn-out, the UFO received a higher percentage of votes cast than it had received in 1919.

The UFO government had introduced a bill to re-distribute the districts and to establish proportional representation (Single transferable voting), but withdrew it after it met with vehement opposition from the Conservative MLAs and it was found that even some government members were ambivalent.[2]

Under First past the post, the UFO received about a third of the seats that it was due proportionally overall. Looking at the 71 districts where the UFO ran candidates, it received about half the votes there so was due 35 of those seats but received only eight. In many districts, Conservative candidates took rural seats away from incumbent UFO MLAs by taking just a few hundred more votes than them in each district. In Prince Edward, Conservative candidate Horace Stanley Colliver took just 17 more votes than his closest contender to win the seat.[3][4]

Voter turnout

The election saw a voter turnout of just 54.7%, the lowest voter turnout in Ontario history until the 2007 election.[5]

The low election turn-out was in part caused by the worst wind, rain and lightning storm in years inundating the western part of the province. [6]

Results

Elections to the 16th Parliament of Ontario (1923)
Political party Party leader MPPs Votes
Candidates 1919 Dissol. 1923 ± # % ± (pp)
Conservative Howard Ferguson 103 25 24 75 50 471,196 49.56% 15.47
United Farmers E.C. Drury 71 44 44 17 27 200,762 21.11% 0.14
Liberal Wellington Hay 78 27 27 14 13 203,079 21.36% 4.15
Labour Walter Rollo 23 11 11 4 7 45,213 4.76% 4.33
Independent 12 1 1 15,426 1.62% 2.45
Independent Liberal 2 1 1 1 5,041 0.53% 0.08
Progressive 3 10,122 1.06% New
Farmer–Labour 1 1 1 Did not campaign
Farmer-Liberal 1 1 1 Did not campaign
Soldier 1 1 1 Did not campaign
Vacant 1
Total 292 111 111 111 950,839 100.00%
Blank and invalid ballots 8,886
Registered voters / turnout 1,662,160 57.74% 27.79
Seats and popular vote by party
PartySeatsVotesChange (pp)
 Conservative
75 / 111
49.56%
15.47 15.47
 
 United Farmers
17 / 111
21.11%
0.14 0.14
 
 Liberal
14 / 111
21.36%
-4.15
 
 Labour
4 / 111
4.76%
-4.33
 
 Independent
1 / 111
1.62%
-2.45
 
 Other
0 / 111
1.59%
-4.68
 

Seats that changed hands

Elections to the 16th Parliament of Ontario – seats won/lost by party, 1919–1923
Party 1919 Gain from (loss to) 1923
Con UFO Lib Lab Ind I-Lib F-Lab F-Lib Sol
Conservative 252913(2)9(1)1175
United Farmers 44(29)3(2)117
Liberal 272(13)2(3)(1)14
Labour 111(9)14
Independent 11
Independent-Liberal 1(1)
Farmer–Labour 1(1)
Farmer-Liberal 1(1)
Soldier 1(1)
Total1113(53)31(4)17(4)9(2)(1)1111111

There were 64 seats that changed allegiance in the election.

See also

Notes

    References

    1. "1923 General Election". Elections Ontario. Elections Ontario. Retrieved January 3, 2021.
    2. Edmonton Bulletin, April 20, 1923
    3. Edmonton Bulletin, June 26, 1923
    4. Canadian Parliamentary Guide 1925
    5. "Boring campaign behind poor voter turnout: analysts". CTV News. Bell Media. October 11, 2007. Retrieved January 3, 2021.
    6. Edmonton Bulletin, June 26, 1923

    Further reading

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