Saskatchewan New Democratic Party/Co-operative Commonwealth Federation leadership elections
This page shows the results of leadership elections in the New Democratic Party (known as the Farmer-Labour Party from 1932 to 1934, and the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation from 1934 to 1967). Prior to 2001, the leader was elected via a delegated convention. Following the resignation of Roy Romanow, the leader was chosen through a One Member One Vote election.
1932 Farmer-Labour Party leadership convention
(Held on July 27, 1932.)
- M.J. Coldwell acclaimed
Note: The Farmer-Labour Party was launched as a merger of Coldwell's Independent Labour Party of Saskatchewan and George Williams's United Farmers of Canada (Saskatchewan Section). Williams was nominated as a candidate, but withdrew in favour of Coldwell.
Developments, 1932-1936
In 1933, the Saskatchewan Farmer-Labour Party became the Saskatchewan branch of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation. Coldwell was elected to the Canadian House of Commons in 1935, and Williams was chosen as the Saskatchewan CCF's acting leader on December 16, 1935. Coldwell's resignation from the party leadership was not made official until July 17, 1936.
1936 Cooperative Commonwealth Federation leadership convention
(Held on July 17, 1936.)
- George Williams acclaimed
Note: Hugh MacLean was also nominated as a candidate, but withdrew.
Developments, 1936-1942
In 1940, Carlyle King challenged George Williams for the presidency of the party (Williams was both party president and leader) but received only about one-third of the vote.[1][2]
Williams joined the Canadian Forces in early 1941, and subsequently saw overseas action in World War II. On February 12, 1941, John Brockelbank was chosen to lead the party in the legislature. Williams still retained the position of party president until 1941, when Tommy Douglas successfully challenged Williams for the party presidency. The next year, Douglas also unseated Williams as party leader.[3]
1942 Cooperative Commonwealth Federation leadership convention
(Held on July 17, 1942.)
Note: The vote totals were not announced. There are conflicting reports as to whether or not Brockelbank withdrew before voting began.
1943 Cooperative Commonwealth Federation leadership challenge
(Held on July 16, 1943.)
Note: The vote totals were not announced. Valleau was again a candidate, but withdrew before balloting; Douglas won in landslide.
1961 Cooperative Commonwealth Federation leadership convention
(Held on November 3, 1961.)
- Woodrow Lloyd 425
- Ole Turnbull 109
1970 New Democratic Party leadership convention
(Held on July 4, 1970.)
First ballot:
- Roy Romanow 300
- Allan Blakeney 286
- Don Mitchell 187
- George Taylor 78
Second ballot:
- Roy Romanow 320
- Allan Blakeney 311
- Don Mitchell 219
Third ballot:
- Allan Blakeney 407
- Roy Romanow 349
1987 New Democratic Party leadership convention
(Held on November 7, 1987.)
- Roy Romanow acclaimed
2001 New Democratic Party leadership convention
(Held on January 27, 2001.)
First ballot:
- Lorne Calvert 6,542
- Chris Axworthy 5,344
- Nettie Wiebe 3487
- Maynard Sonntag 1,459
- Scott Banda 1,269
- Joanne Crofford 699
- Buckley Belanger 665
(Crofford and Belanger eliminated at under 5%)
Second ballot:
- Lorne Calvert 6,877
- Chris Axworthy 5,646
- Nettie Wiebe 3,749
- Maynard Sonntag 1,712
- Scott Banda 1,309
(Banda eliminated, Sonntag withdraws)
Third ballot:
- Lorne Calvert 7,831
- Chris Axworthy 6,686
- Nettie Wiebe 4,216
(Wiebe eliminated)
Fourth ballot:
- Lorne Calvert 10,289
- Chris Axworthy 7,575
2009 New Democratic Party leadership convention
A leadership convention was held on June 5–7, 2009. The vote for leader took place on June 6, 2009 and all 13051 members of the Saskatchewan NDP were eligible to cast ballots in person, by mail, by phone or online. There was a $200,000 spending limit for candidates.[4][5]
There were four declared candidates for the leadership: MLA Deb Higgins, former Deputy Premier Dwain Lingenfelter, physician and community health activist Ryan Meili, and former party president Yens Pedersen.[6]
First ballot
- Dwain Lingenfelter 4,360 (46.17%)
- Ryan Meili 2,401 (25.42%)
- Yens Pedersen 1,380 (14.61%)
- Deb Higgins 1,303 (13.8%)
(Higgins eliminated, Pedersen withdrew) [7]
Second ballot
- Dwain Lingenfelter 5,028 (55.07%)
- Ryan Meili 4,102 (44.93%)
Total votes cast: 9,130[8]
2013 New Democratic Party leadership convention
(held on March 9, 2013)
A leadership convention was called following the resignation of Dwain Lingenfelter after losing his seat in the 2011 general election.
The candidates were:Cam Broten, MLA for Saskatoon Massey Place;[9] Ryan Meili, doctor, author and community advocate;[10] Trent Wotherspoon, MLA, Regina Rosemont.[11] A fourth candidate, economist Erin Weir[12] withdrew prior to the convention and endorsed Meili.
First ballot
- Ryan Meili 3,384 (38.8%)
- Cam Broten 2,942 (33.5%)
- Trent Wotherspoon 2,120 (24.3%)
- Other 273 (3.1%)[spoiled ballots and any Weir votes cast before Weir withdrew]
(Weir withdrew February 20 to support Meili, too late to be removed from the mail ballot; Wotherspoon withdraws following the first ballot without endorsing a candidate.)
Second ballot
- Cam Broten 4,164 (50.3%)
- Ryan Meili 4,120 (49.7%)
Next New Democratic Party leadership convention
(date and location TBD)
Cam Broten announced on April 11, 2016 that he will be resigning as leader after losing the seat he contested in the provincial election.
Prospective candidates to succeed him include:
- Danielle Chartier - MLA for Saskatoon Riversdale since 2009.[13]
- Noah Evanchuk - Regina lawyer and past federal candidate.[13]
- Ryan Meili - Saskatoon doctor who was the runner-up in the 2009 and 2013 leadership elections.[13]
- Nicole Sarauer - newly elected MLA for Regina Douglas Park.[13]
- Erin Weir - NDP MP for Regina—Lewvan and a past leadership candidate.[13]
Declined:
- Trent Wotherspoon - Leader of the Opposition since 2016, MLA for Regina Rosemont since 2007 and third-place finisher in 2013 leadership election.[13][14]
References
- ↑ http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/king_carlyle_1907-88.html
- ↑ http://books.google.ca/books?id=lOX4Cal-54EC&pg=PA174&lpg=PA174&dq=%22carlyle+king%22+saskatchewan+1940&source=bl&ots=U_0ZwAPohO&sig=rq6AS0Nb8z4ddU7xHj3zrOl973w&hl=en&sa=X&ei=yCS2U5-vFoTL8QGlmIHwAg&ved=0CCcQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=%22carlyle%20king%22%20saskatchewan%201940&f=false
- ↑ http://books.google.ca/books?id=Y746xOWGfcUC&pg=PA119&lpg=PA119&dq=%22carlyle+king%22+saskatchewan+1940&source=bl&ots=YIjLtBrQmD&sig=JUmXDRr3zvi1W0cB7cfgnC5TgcY&hl=en&sa=X&ei=yCS2U5-vFoTL8QGlmIHwAg&ved=0CDAQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=%22carlyle%20king%22%20saskatchewan%201940&f=false
- ↑ NDP council sets leadership contest rules, Saskatchewan Star-Phoenix, October 29, 2008
- ↑ "Former Saskatchewan premier steps down as leader of NDP", Canadian Press, October 17, 2008. Archived October 22, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ NDP council sets leadership contest rules, Declared Candidates
- ↑ The Moose Jaw Times Herald - Moose Jaw
- ↑ 2009 Saskatchewan NDP Convention - Convention Voting
- ↑ "1st candidate declares in Sask. NDP leadership race". CBC News. September 5, 2012. Retrieved September 11, 2012.
- ↑ "Meili Declares candidacy for Sask. NDP leadership race". Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. September 12, 2012. Retrieved December 19, 2012.
- ↑ "Wotherspoon, Meili declare candidacy". Regina Leader-Post. September 15, 2012. Retrieved December 19, 2012.
- ↑ "Weir joins race to lead Saskatchewan NDP". CBC News. September 7, 2012. Retrieved September 11, 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "After Cam Broten, here's a list of potential candidates for the Sask. NDP's next leader", Regina Leader-Post, April 12, 2016
- ↑ http://leaderpost.com/news/politics/ndps-trent-wotherspoon-elected-leader-of-the-opposition-in-legislature