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Talk:Lillooet (electoral district)

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Tables needed and stuff

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Can someone please do the tables here; I spent a few hours working the data out from Elections BC and calculating the turnout myself (votes + rejected ballots/total registered voters); but please check the math (not sure about which voters list is used sometimes; there's voters list the same year as some elections, but these may have been compiled after the election in some cases). Geographic description is basic, census information forthcoming; poll breakdown I just can't find. Requested maps on map-request page but riding boundaries may change over period of its existence (certainly did, in fact); but Elections BC doesn't have the same online descriptions that Elections Canada online does. And I'm just no good with Wikitables; if there's a way to do them easily please point me in the right direction, or if you're so inclined take the data that's here and table-ize it.

There were some irregularities in voting and the like in this district which are part of its electoral history; writeups later tonight (maybe); at least one election was overturned because of balloting irregularities. Notes on population fluctuations to be written later; NB although Chinese were banned from voting in BC in the 1871 election Lillooet's Chinese merchants voted, and were solicited for their votes by candidates nonetheless.Skookum1 04:12, 24 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Note on party colours used in non-party period

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Please note party colors to be used to 1900 shown are borrowed from modern parties; there were no provincial parties in BC until the 1903 election; "Reform" is the Reform Caucus or Reform slate, "Government" or "Opposition" indicates the member's leanings/sitting. I also improvised current-party colours for 20th Century parties no longer extant such as the Soldier-Farmer Party, the Non-Partisan Investment Group, and George Murray's Progressive Liberal flop/startup. There's probably a colour for the Liberal-Conservative Coalition but I didn't know the abbree for the colour line; and also for the Social Credit Party of BC's predecessor the Social Credit Alliance (OK, OK, there was the BC Social Credit League, too...) Skookum1 09:16, 24 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Didn't know what to do with preferential ballot years

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Can someone more familiar with templates fix these two elections?Skookum1 19:38, 24 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]