Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Leadership Reviews Have Produced Dramatic Moments In Canadian Politics

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2016 11:30 AM
    OTTAWA — Some 20 years ago, University of Saskatchewan political scientist John Courtney wrote that it's "inherently destabilizing" for a political party to conduct periodic leadership reviews.
     
    Tom Mulcair, who faces a leadership review vote this weekend, would no doubt agree with Courtney that such a process "invites dissension."
     
    Technically, delegates to this weekend's convention will be asked in a secret ballot to decide whether the party should hold a leadership convention. It amounts to a vote of confidence in Mulcair's leadership after he led the party to a disappointing third-place finish in last fall's federal election.
     
    The NDP conducts such votes at every convention, though they rarely generate the kind of tension attending this one.
     
    Both the Liberals and Conservatives put their leaders to similar tests — but only at the first national convention following an election in which the leader does not become prime minister. Some provincial parties also subject their leaders to leadership reviews.
     
    Herewith, with the help of Courtney, a brief history of leadership reviews and some of the most dramatic moments they've produced:
     
    — The Liberal Party of Canada was the first to adopt a leadership review process, in 1966, with the implicit understanding that it would not be used until after then-leader Lester Pearson stepped down. That process was first employed in 1970, when Pierre Trudeau's leadership was handily endorsed.
     
     
    — Also in 1966, the Progressive Conservatives were waging a bitter internal war over John Diefenbaker's leadership. Dalton Camp ran for party president on the promise that he'd hold a leadership convention within a year. He won, the leadership convention was held in 1967 (electing Robert Stanfield). Leadership reviews were entrenched in the party's constitution in 1969.
     
    — 1983, Progressive Conservative leader Joe Clark's leadership is endorsed by 66.9 per cent of delegates, with 33.1 per cent voting for a leadership convention. Clark decides that's insufficient to silence his critics within the party and resigns. He runs in the subsequent leadership race but loses to Brian Mulroney.
     
    — 1986, Liberal leader John Turner faces a vigorous effort to dump him, led in part by supporters of Jean Chretien, runner-up to Turner in the party's 1984 leadership race. An organized campaign, dubbed the Friends of John Turner, spends almost a full year and pulls out all the stops to win the leadership review. Turner is endorsed by 76 per cent of delegates, remaining leader until 1990.
     
    — August 2002, Liberal leader and prime minister Chretien announces his intention to retire in 18 months, heading off a potentially humiliating result in a leadership review scheduled for February 2003. The party, controlled by erstwhile leadership rival Paul Martin at the time, eventually pressures him to move up his retirement date to November 2003.
     
    — 2005, Parti Quebecois leader Bernard Landry quits in a huff during a party convention after winning a 76-per-cent endorsement, which he deems insufficient.
     
    — 2006, Alberta premier and Conservative leader Ralph Klein is endorsed by just 55 per cent of delegates, even though he'd previously announced his intention to retire in 2008. He resigns a few months later.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Convicted Murderer Dennis Oland Again Denied Bail By New Brunswick Appeal Court

    Convicted Murderer Dennis Oland Again Denied Bail By New Brunswick Appeal Court
    FREDERICTON — A New Brunswick court has denied bail to Dennis Oland for a second time, following his conviction of second-degree murder in the death of his father Richard Oland.

    Convicted Murderer Dennis Oland Again Denied Bail By New Brunswick Appeal Court

    Push For NDP To Embrace, Debate Leap Manifesto Intensifies Ahead Of Convention

    The manifesto calls for dramatic change, urging a transition away from fossil fuels, a rejection of new pipelines, and an upending of the capitalist system on which the economy is based.

    Push For NDP To Embrace, Debate Leap Manifesto Intensifies Ahead Of Convention

    Bank Of Canada Names Panel To Pick Short List Of Women For New Bank Note

    Bank Of Canada Names Panel To Pick Short List Of Women For New Bank Note
    The bank has already issued an open call for nominations, which runs to April 15 and has had more than 18,000 submissions.

    Bank Of Canada Names Panel To Pick Short List Of Women For New Bank Note

    Stories Of Residential School Abuse Can Be Shredded After 15 Years, Court Says

    Survivors of Canada's notorious residential school system have the right to see their stories archived if they wish, but their accounts must otherwise be destroyed in 15 years, Ontario's top court ruled in a split decision Monday.

    Stories Of Residential School Abuse Can Be Shredded After 15 Years, Court Says

    No Respite For Property Sales In Vancouver-Area's Scalding Housing Market

    No Respite For Property Sales In Vancouver-Area's Scalding Housing Market
    Metro Vancouver's blistering housing market shows no signs of cooling as March home sales reach record-breaking figures.

    No Respite For Property Sales In Vancouver-Area's Scalding Housing Market

    Girl, 5, Killed In Collision Between Horse-Drawn Carriage And Minivan In Ontario

    Girl, 5, Killed In Collision Between Horse-Drawn Carriage And Minivan In Ontario
    Police say the crash took place Sunday morning north of Orangeville, Ont., when both vehicles were travelling southbound on Highway 10

    Girl, 5, Killed In Collision Between Horse-Drawn Carriage And Minivan In Ontario