Minority governments in Canada
In Canada's parliamentary system of responsible government, minority governments occur when no party has a majority of seats in the legislature. Typically, but not necessarily, the party with a plurality of seats forms the government. In a minority situation, governments must rely on the support of other parties to stay in power, providing less stability than a majority government. In Canada, political parties rarely form official coalition governments to form a majority.
Canada's plurality voting system means that minority governments are relatively rare in comparison with countries that have a proportional representation voting system. There have, however, been several minority governments at the federal level and in nine of Canada's 10 provinces at various times.
Federal level
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Canada has had 13 minority governments, most recently experiencing its longest period of minority government with three successive minority governments between 2004 and 2011. here are the Lists.
- Alexander Mackenzie (1873–1874, Liberal)
- William Lyon Mackenzie King (1921–25, 1925–26, Liberal)
- Arthur Meighen (1926, Conservative)
- John Diefenbaker (1957–58, 1962–63, Progressive Conservative)
- Lester Pearson (1963–65, 1965–68, Liberal)
- Pierre Trudeau (1972–74, Liberal)
- Joe Clark (1979–80, Progressive Conservative)
- Paul Martin (2004–06, Liberal)
- Stephen Harper (2006–08, 2008–11, Conservative)
Provincial and territorial level
Of Canada's 10 provinces, only Alberta has never had a minority government. The territories of Northwest Territories and Nunavut do not have political parties and are instead governed under the consensus government system.
- British Columbia (1924–28, 1952–53)
- Manitoba (1936–41, 1958–59, 1969–73, 1988–90)
- New Brunswick (1920–25)
- Newfoundland and Labrador (1971–72)
- Nova Scotia (1970–74, 1998–99, 2003–06, 2006–09)
- Ontario (1867–71, 1943–45, 1975–77, 1977–81, 1985–87, 2011–14)
- Quebec (1878–79, 2007–08, 2012–14)
- Prince Edward Island (1873–76, 1876–79, 1890–93)
- Saskatchewan (1929–34, 1999–2003)
- Yukon (1985–89, 1992–96)
Bibliography
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