1914 Ontario general election

The 1914 Ontario general election was the 14th general election held in the Province of Ontario, Canada. It was held on June 29, 1914, to elect the 111 Members of the 14th Legislative Assembly of Ontario (MLAs).[1]

1914 Ontario general election

June 29, 1914

111 seats in the 14th Legislative Assembly of Ontario
56 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader James P. Whitney Newton Rowell
Party Conservative Liberal
Leader since 1896 1911
Leader's seat Dundas Oxford North
Last election 83 22
Seats won 84 24
Seat change Increase1 Increase2
Percentage 55.3% 38.6%

Premier before election

James P. Whitney
Conservative

Premier after election

James P. Whitney
Conservative

The Ontario Conservative Party, led by Sir James P. Whitney, won a fourth consecutive term in government. Whitney died three months after the election and was succeeded by William Howard Hearst. The Conservatives contested 109 of the 111 ridings, deciding not to have candidates stand in Glengarry (where the Liberal Hugh Munro was acclaimed) and Norfolk North (where the Liberal incumbent Thomas Robert Atkinson was up against a Liberal anti-Temperance candidate).[2] However, dissension within the Tory ranks resulted in a significant number of them campaigning as either independent or temperance candidates.[2]

The Ontario Liberal Party, led by Newton Rowell, formed the official opposition.

Independent Labour MLA Allan Studholme was re-elected in Hamilton East. He had held the seat since a 1906 by-election.

The campaign was seen to turn more significantly on the matter of Regulation 17 (which limited instruction in French-language Catholic separate schools), in comparison to temperance issues, and that worked against the Liberals,[3] who placed Prohibition of sales in bars and clubs as a main plank in their platform.[4]

Expansion of the Legislative Assembly

Toronto ridings, as constituted in 1914

An Act passed prior to the election expanded the number of members from 106 to 111, and the number of ridings from 103 to 107.[5] The following changes were made:

The Patricia Portion acquired in 1912 was divided between Cochrane and Kenora.

Results

Elections to the 14th Parliament of Ontario (1914)
Political party Party leader MPPs Votes
Candidates 1911 Dissol. 1914 ± # % ± (pp)
Conservative James P. Whitney 109 82 84 2Increase 268,548 54.02% 1.57Decrease
Liberal Newton Rowell 90 22 24 2Increase 186,168 37.45% 1.06Decrease
Labour 4 1 1 Steady 6,535 1.31% 1.12Decrease
Independent-Liberal 2 1 1Increase 2,236 0.45% New
  Temperance 9 13,064 2.63% New
Liberal-Temperance 1 1 1Increase 2,733 0.55% New
Conservative-Temperance 2 2,222 0.45% 0.02Increase
Prohibitionist 1 1,302 0.26% New
Liberal–Conservative 1 1Decrease Did not campaign
Independent 5 4,837 0.97% 0.07Increase
Socialist 12 4,532 0.91% 0.04Increase
Independent-Conservative 4 4,270 0.86% 0.11Decrease
Liberal-Anti-Temperance 1 691 0.14% New
Vacant
Total 240 106 106 111 497,138 100.00%
Blank and invalid ballots 7,304
Registered voters / turnout 697,935 72.28% 8.02Increase
Seats and popular vote by party
PartySeatsVotesChange (pp)
Conservative
84 / 111
54.02%
-1.57
 
Liberal
24 / 111
37.45%
-1.06
 
  Temperance factions
1 / 111
3.89%
3.86 3.86
 
Other
2 / 111
4.64%
-1.23
 

Results summary by region

Distribution of seats and popular vote %, by party by region (1914)
Region Candidates Seats Vote share (%)
Con Lib Temp Soc Lab Ind Ind-Con Ind-Lib Lib-Anti-T Con Lib Lab Ind-Lib L-Temp Con Lib Temp Lab Ind Soc Ind-Con Ind-Lib
Central Ontario 1914411116358.3433.075.892.130.160.42
Eastern Ontario 1613111122124149.6339.122.020.452.020.093.223.46
Hamilton, Halton and Niagara 9611271154.3126.014.1114.101.47
Midwestern Ontario 2017441137150.7838.448.062.01
Northeastern Ontario 981127250.7740.692.914.031.61
Northwest Ontario 431453.9038.317.79
Southwestern Ontario 1616119749.1147.940.532.42
Toronto 108241063.9429.874.591.61
York, Peel and Ontario 65654.0046.00
Total 10990131245421842411154.5037.453.971.310.970.910.860.45

Reorganization of ridings

The newly created ridings returned the following MLAs:

1911 1914
Riding Party Riding Party
Essex North  Conservative Essex North  Liberal
Windsor  Liberal
Monck  Liberal Lincoln  Liberal
Lincoln  Conservative
Withdrawn from Lincoln St. Catharines  Conservative
Welland  Conservative Niagara Falls  Conservative
Welland
Timiskaming  Conservative Timiskaming  Conservative
Cochrane  Liberal
Bruce Centre  Liberal Bruce West  Liberal
Toronto ridings:  Conservative
(8 MLAs)
Parkdale  Conservative
Riverdale  Conservative
Toronto Northeast A  Conservative
B  Conservative
Toronto Northwest A  Conservative
B  Conservative
Toronto Southeast A  Conservative
B  Conservative
Toronto Southwest A  Conservative
B  Conservative

Seats that changed hands

Elections to the 12th Parliament of Ontario – unaltered seats won/lost by party, 1911–1914
Party 1911 Gain from (loss to) 1914
Con Lib Lab I-Lib L-Tmp L-Con
Conservative 718(8)(1)171
Liberal 208(8)(1)19
Labour 11
Independent-Liberal[a 1] 11
Liberal-Temperance 11
Liberal–Conservative[a 2] 1(1)
Total939(9)9(9)(1)(1)193
  1. Gustave Évanturel (Prescott) was originally elected as a Liberal in 1911.
  2. James Arthur Mathieu (Rainy River) campaigned as a Conservative and won.

There were 20 seats that changed allegiance in the election:

Acclamations

Candidates returned by acclamation
PartyRidingCandidate
 ConservativeKenoraHarold Arthur Clement Machin
Renfrew SouthThomas William McGarry
York WestForbes Godfrey
Liberal GlengarryHugh Munro

When nominations closed, three candidates were acclaimed.[2] A later withdrawal in Kenora enabled the acclamation of Harold Arthur Clement Machin.[6]

Forbes Godfrey (York West) was acclaimed because the Liberal candidate was held to have missed the deadline by one minute.[2] In Wellington East, the Liberals opted not to press a similar case against the Conservative candidate, whose nomination papers were filed 90 minutes after the deadline.[7]

See also

References

  1. "1914 General Election". Elections Ontario. Elections Ontario. Retrieved January 3, 2021.
  2. "The Ontario Campaign is Hotly Contested". The Daily British Whig. Kingston. June 23, 1914. p. 8.
  3. "Sir James' Triumph". The Toronto World. June 30, 1914. p. 6.
  4. Hopkins 1915, p. 440.
  5. The Representation Act, S.O. 1914, c. 4
  6. "Pith of the News". The Daily British Whig. Kingston. June 24, 1914. p. 1.
  7. "Provincial Election: Only 3 Elected by Acclamation". Newmarket Era. June 26, 1914. p. 2.

Further reading

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