1956_British_Columbia_general_election

1956 British Columbia general election

1956 British Columbia general election

Add article description


The 1956 British Columbia general election was the 25th general election in the Province of British Columbia, Canada. It was held to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. The election was called on August 13, 1956, and held on September 19, 1956. The new legislature met for the first time on February 7, 1957.

Quick Facts 52 seats of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia 27 seats were needed for a majority, First party ...

The conservative Social Credit of Premier W.A.C. Bennett was re-elected with a majority in the legislature to a third term in government with over 45% of the popular vote.

The social democratic CCF formed the official opposition.

The British Columbia Liberal Party lost two of its four seats despite winning over 20% of the popular vote.

The Progressive Conservative Party lost its single seat in the legislature, and would not win a seat again until the 1972 election.

One seat was won by a Labour candidate, Tom Uphill of Fernie.

Changes to election laws

In 1953, as part of a revision to the Provincial Elections Act, the voting age was reduced from 21 to 19.[1] As well, the instant runoff voting system that was in effect for the 1952 and 1953 elections was abolished and the previous first past the post rules were revived.

In 1955, a further Act was passed that increased the Legislative from 48 members to 52 through the following changes:[2]

Results

More information Political party, Party leader ...
  1. Measured against 1953 first-preference votes.
More information Party, Seats ...

MLAs elected

  1. Died before the opening of the new Legislative Assembly. His son-in-law Cedric Cox won the subsequent byelection.

Synopsis of results

More information Riding, Winning party ...
  1. Lois Haggen accepted the nomination after her husband Rupert Haggen chose to retire because of health problems.
  2. Campaigned as People's Party of BC.
  = 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
  = other incumbents renominated
  = campaigned as Independent SC
  = multiple candidates
More information Riding, Winning party ...
  1. George Henry Tomlinson Jr., a Socred MLA in the previous Legislature.
  2. George Frederick Thompson Gregory (Liberal)won the seat in a 1953 byelection, taking it from the Socreds.

Bold indicates incumbent in last Legislature.

  = winning candidate

See also

Further reading

  • Electoral History of British Columbia, 1871–1986 (PDF). Elections BC. 1988. ISBN 0-7718-8677-2.

References

  1. Provincial Elections Act, 1953, S.B.C. 1953 (2nd session), c. 5, s. 3
  2. Elections BC 1988, pp. 243, 265.
  3. Elections BC 1988, pp. 267–271.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article 1956_British_Columbia_general_election, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.