1890_Ontario_general_election

1890 Ontario general election

1890 Ontario general election

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The 1890 Ontario general election was the seventh general election held in the Province of Ontario, Canada. It was held on June 5, 1890, to elect the 91 members of the 7th Legislative Assembly of Ontario ("MLAs").[1]

Quick Facts 91 seats in the 7th Legislative Assembly of Ontario 46 seats were needed for a majority, First party ...

The Assembly had been increased from 90 members after the passage of an Act in 1889 creating Nipissing as a riding.[2]

The election was a victory for the Ontario Liberal Party, led by Oliver Mowat.[3] The party won a sixth consecutive term in government, despite losing a small number of seats in the Legislature.

The Ontario Conservative Party, led by William Ralph Meredith won two additional seats.

This election was held partially using the Limited voting system where each Toronto voter had two votes for the three MPPs in the district. This produced mixed representation in that district and thus a degree of minority representation.[4]

A key issue in the election was the segregation of schools for Catholic and Protestant students, with the Liberal Party supporting the segregation and the Conservatives opposing it.[3]

An 1887 Act had renamed the riding of Cornwall and Stormont as Stormont.[5]

Results

[1]

More information Political party, Party leader ...
More information Party, Seats ...
  1. Straight party support only. Other MLAs sponsored by Equal Rights Party are allocated to the latter, to show extent of influence.

Synopsis of results

More information Riding, Winning party ...
  1. excluding Toronto, a multi-member constituency
  2. order is as given in EO reports
  3. the incumbent William Henry Hammell was the winning candidate
  4. John Barr (Conservative/Equal Rights) was the winning candidate
  5. the incumbent Gaspard Pacaud received 1,266 votes
  6. the incumbent Frederick John French received 1,199 votes
  7. the incumbent Robert Ferguson was the winning candidate
  8. the Liberal incumbent William Clyde Caldwell ran as a Liberal/Equal Rights candidate
  9. the incumbent Richard Harcourt was the winning candidate
  10. William Arnson Willoughby was elected in 1886, but was unseated by the court
  11. the winning candidate John Francis Dowling had been previously elected to the Legislature
  = 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/Equal Rights candidate
  = joint Liberal/Equal Rights candidate
  = previously an MP in the House of Commons of Canada
  = multiple candidates


[1]

More information Political party, Candidate ...
  1. plurality for third winning candidate


Analysis

More information Party in 1st place, Party in 2nd place ...
  1. excluding Toronto seats
More information Parties, Accl ...
More information Source, Party ...

MLAs elected by region and riding

Party designations are as follows:

  Liberal
  Conservative
  Conservative/Equal Rights
  Liberal/Equal Rights



    Seats that changed hands

    In its first election, Nipissing returned the Liberal candidate John Loughrin as its MLA.

    More information Party, Gain from (loss to) ...

    In the election, 20 seats changed their allegiance.

    See also


    Notes and references

    Notes

    1. Election declared void because of corrupt practices. Writ for new election issued. Campbell was reelected in the subsequent byelection.[6]
    2. Election declared void because of corrupt practices. Writ for new election issued. David Porter (Liberal) was elected in the subsequent byelection.[6]
    3. Election declared void because of corrupt practices. Writ for new election issued. John Morison Gibson (Liberal) was elected in the subsequent byelection.[6]
    4. Died before assuming office. Writ for new election issued. Edwin Clarendon Carpenter (Liberal) was elected in the subsequent byelection.[6]
    5. Election declared void because of corrupt practices. Writ for new election issued. Charlton was reelected in the subsequent byelection.[6]
    6. Election declared void because of corrupt practices. Writ for new election issued. Thomas Magwood (Conservative) was elected in the subsequent byelection.[6]

    References

    1. "1890 general election results". Elections Ontario. Retrieved November 22, 2023.
    2. Dunning, Wm. A. (1890). "Record of Political Events". Political Science Quarterly. 5 (4): 741. doi:10.2307/2139551. JSTOR 2139551.
    3. 1921 Special House of Commons Committee on pro-rep. report, p. 12
    4. Journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Ontario. Vol. XXIV. Toronto: Legislative Assembly of Ontario. 1891. pp. 7–27, 35.

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