British Columbia general election, 1996

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British Columbia general election, 1996
British Columbia
1991 ←
May 28, 1996
→ 2001

75 seats of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia
38 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
  Gordon Campbell 2.jpg
Leader Glen Clark Gordon Campbell Jack Weisgerber
Party New Democrat BC Liberal Reform
Leader since 1996 1993 1995
Leader's seat Vancouver Kingsway Vancouver-Point Grey Peace River South
Last election 51 17 0
Seats won 39 33 2
Seat change -12 +16 +2
Popular vote 624,395 661,929 146,734
Percentage 39.45 41.82 9.27
Swing -1.26 +8.58 +9.09

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Stuart Parker St Paul's NDP 2009.jpg
Leader Gordon Wilson Stuart Parker Larry Gillanders
Party Progressive Democrat Green Social Credit
Leader since 1993 1993 1994
Leader's seat Powell River-Sunshine Coast Ran in Vancouver-Little Mountain (lost) Ran in West Vancouver-Capilano (withdrew)
Last election New party 0 7
Seats won 1 0 0
Seat change +1 0 -7
Popular vote 90,797 31,511 6,276
Percentage 5.74 1.99 0.40
Swing +5.74 +1.33 -23.65

Premier before election

Glen Clark
New Democrat

Elected Premier

Glen Clark
New Democrat

The British Columbia general election of 1996 was the thirty sixth provincial 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 April 30, 1996, and held on May 28, 1996. Voter turnout was 59.1 per cent of all eligible voters.

New Democratic Party leader and provincial premier Mike Harcourt had resigned as the result of a fundraising scandal involving one of the members of his caucus. Glen Clark was chosen by the party to replace Harcourt. Clark led the party to a second majority government, defeating the Liberal Party of Gordon Campbell. Campbell had become leader of the Liberal Party after Gordon Wilson had been forced out of the position because of his relationship with another Liberal member of the legislature, Judi Tyabji.

After Wilson was defeated by Campbell in the convention to choose a new leader, he and Tyabji left the Liberal Party to establish the Progressive Democratic Alliance. Wilson was able to win re-election, but Tyabji was not, going down to defeat with all of the other candidates fielded by the new party.

The once-dominant Social Credit Party collapsed. Between 1991 and 1996, four of its members defected to Reform BC and two other seats were lost in by-elections. The remaining Socred MLA retired before the election, leaving the party with no incumbents. Party leader Larry Gillanders withdrew from the race while the campaign was in progress, saying that all right wing parties should unite to topple the ruling NDP. The Socreds won only 0.4 percent of the vote and was completely shut out of the legislature, never to return.

Reform BC won two seats.

Although the Liberal Party won a larger share of the popular vote, most of their votes were wasted in the outer regions of the province; they only won eight seats in the Vancouver area. This allowed the NDP to win reelection, eking out a six-seat majority government.

[edit] Results

Party Party leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular vote
1991 Elected % Change # % % Change
     New Democrats Glen Clark 75 51 39 -23.53% 624,395 39.45% -1.26%
     BC Liberal Gordon Campbell 75 17 33 +94.12% 661,929 41.82% +8.58%
     Reform Jack Weisgerber 75 - 2   146,734 9.27% +9.09%
     Progressive Democratic Gordon Wilson 66 * 1 * 90,797 5.74% *
     Green Stuart Parker 71 - - - 31,511 1.99% +1.13%
     Independent/No affiliation 23 - - - 10,067 0.64% -0.07%
     Social Credit Larry Gillanders 38 7 - -100% 6,276 0.40% -23.65%
     Family Coalition   14 - - - 4,150 0.26% +0.17%
     Natural Law   38 * - * 2,919 0.18% *
     Libertarian   17 - - - 2,041 0.13% +0.07%
     Conservative Peter B. Macdonald 8 - - - 1,002 0.06% +0.03%
     Western Canada Concept Doug Christie 5 - - - 374 0.02% -0.02%
     Common Sense, Community, Family   5 * - * 291 0.02% *
     Communist   3 - - - 218 0.01% +0.01%
Total 513 75 75 - 1,582,704 100%  
Source: Elections BC

Notes:

* Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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