请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Cariboo (provincial electoral district)
释义

  1. Demographics

  2. Political geography

  3. Notable elections

  4. First Nations

  5. Towns and industry

  6. Major Communities

  7. Notable MLAs

  8. Electoral history

  9. Sources

{{about||the federal electoral district|Cariboo (electoral district)|the historical-geographic region|Cariboo}}

Cariboo was one of the twelve original electoral districts created when British Columbia became a Canadian province in 1871. Roughly corresponding to the old colonial electoral administrative district of the same name, it was a three-member riding until the 1894 election, when it was reduced through reapportionment and became a two-member riding until the 1916 election, after which it has been a single-member riding. It produced many notable Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs), including George Anthony Boomer Walkem, third and fifth holder of the office of Premier of British Columbia and who was one of the first representatives elected from the riding; John Robson, ninth Premier of British Columbia; and Robert Bonner, a powerful minister in the W.A.C. Bennett cabinet, and later CEO of MacMillan Bloedel and BC Hydro.

Demographics

Population, 1871Population, 1961
Population change,
Area (km²)
Population density

Political geography

When the riding was created, the bulk of its population was in the Cariboo goldfields district around Barkerville, although its boundaries extended to the Yukon boundaries - the original Cariboo riding at its creation included all of the former New Caledonia fur district, north of those parts of it now in the Lillooet Land District which formed the Lillooet riding.1 As mining exploration and other settlement spread northwards from the Cariboo mining areas, the Omineca, Fort George and Peace River (British Columbia electoral district)|ridings were split off by the end of the 19th Century, and the Cariboo riding was reduced to the Cariboo Plateau, south from Quesnel to just south of Williams Lake and 150 Mile House, and including the Barkerville, British Columbia region as well as the remote Chilcotin region, which had no voting (settler) population when the riding was formed other than isolated traders and trappers who may have had time or means to vote. Nearly all of the 785 voters in the first election were in the goldfield towns, Quesnel (then Quesnellemouthe), Williams Lake or towns and ranches south along the Cariboo Road and other routes of the era, and those along the West Fraser from the Chilcotin River, including the Gang Ranch south to just north of Big Bar, an isolated canyon ranching, river-crossing and wagon-trail town in the Fraser Canyon, which was in the Lillooet riding.

Following the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR), increased settlement on the Cariboo Plateau south of the goldfields region shifted the population weight of the riding to that area, which was increasingly centred on the town of Williams Lake and the plateau between there and Kamloops, British Columbia. The southern Cariboo region, later added in a redistribution and division of the Cariboo riding into Cariboo South and Cariboo North, which exist today, was originally part of the Lillooet riding. The Lillooet and Cariboo provincial ridings combined formed the original definition of the Cariboo federal riding.

1 New Caledonia's southern boundary was vague, but it was generally accepted to include the Thompson area although its heartland is the Fort Saint James-Fraser Lake region northwest of Prince George.

Notable elections

{{Empty section|date=July 2010}}

First Nations

When the riding was created its boundaries stretched from the Quesnel Lake and Chilcotin areas, flanking the great plateau of central BC on its east and west, all the way north to the Yukon border. At that time, although irrelevant to the issue of electoral representation, the riding's population included members of the Shuswap, Carrier, Chilcotin, Sekani and other more northerly nations. As the riding was reduced to roughly correspond with the Cariboo district (excluding Lillooet-Ashcroft, which were in the Lillooet electoral district, at least until the mid-20th century) the native population became only Shuswap, along the Fraser and east of it, and the Chilcotin people, who lived to the west of it. First Nations people, even in the reduced riding area, mostly outnumbered the total figure for non-natives until the early 20th century, but were not allowed to vote or run for office.

Towns and industry

{{Empty section|date=July 2010}}

Major Communities

{{Empty section|date=July 2010}}

Notable MLAs

  • Alexander Edmund Batson Davie, became the eighth premier of British Columbia
  • Alex Fraser, held the seat for 20 years

Electoral history

Note: Winners of each election are in bold.

{{Election FPTP begin | title=1st British Columbia general election, 1871}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Cornelius Booth
|align="right"|155
|align="right"|19.74%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|John Evans
|align="right"|107
|align="right"|13.63%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Joseph Hunter
|align="right"|162
|align="right"|20.64%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|John Spencer Thompson
|align="right"|132
|align="right"|16.82%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|George Anthony Boomer Walkem 1
|align="right"|229
|align="right"|29.17%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes785100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|- bgcolor="white"
1Premier 1874-1876
|}{{CANelec/top|BC|November 27, 1871|Cariboo (provincial electoral district)|Cariboo|by=yes}}{{CANelec|BC|Independent|George Anthony Boomer Walkem|Acclaimed}}{{CANelec/note|The byelection was called due to Walkem's resignation upon appointment to the Executive Council (cabinet) on November. This byelection was one of a series held to confirm appointments to the Executive Council, which was the old parliamentary convention. As this byelection writ was filled by acclamation, no polling day was required and the seat was filled within two weeks. The stated date is the date the return of writs was received by the Chief Electoral Officer.}}{{end}}{{Election FPTP begin | title=British Columbia byelection: Cariboo, June 22, 1872 3}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Abraham Barlow
|align="right"|23
|align="right"|9.35%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|John George Barnston
|align="right"|132
|align="right"|53.66%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Edward Pearson
|align="right"|91
|align="right"|36.99%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votesn/a-.- %
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|- bgcolor="white"
3 Caused by resignation of C. Booth 23 April 1872 upon appointment as Clerk to the Bench at Kootenay 19 April 1872.
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=2nd British Columbia election, 1875}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Alexander Edmund Batson Davie |199 |23.36% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |John Evans |173 |20.31% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Edward Pearson |117 |13.73% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |John Johnston Robertson |68 |7.98% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |George Anthony Boomer Walkem 4 |254 |29.81% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Samuel Walker |41 |4.81% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes852100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout
|- bgcolor="white"
4 Incumbent Premier from 1874; term ended in 1876
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=3rd British Columbia election, 1878}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |George Cowan |238 |30.20% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |John Evans |230 |29.19% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Jonathan Nutt |68 |8.63% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |George Anthony Boomer Walkem 5 |252 |31.98% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes788100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout
|- bgcolor="white"
5 Elected Premier
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=British Columbia byelection: Cariboo, August 3, 1878 6}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |George Anthony Boomer Walkem |Acclaimed | -.- % |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votesn/a-.- %
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|- bgcolor="white"
6 Byelection caused by Walkem's resignation upon appointment to the Executive Council June. Date is that of return of writ, as a polling day was not necessary.
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=British Columbia byelection: Cariboo, October 29, 18797}}{{CANelec|BC|Unknown|George Ferguson|94|41.23%}}{{CANelec|BC|Unknown|John Glasson|55|24.12%}}{{CANelec|BC|Unknown|Robert McLeese|79|34.65%}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes228
|- bgcolor="white"
7 Cause of byelection was the death of John Evans August.
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=4th British Columbia election, 1882}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|George Cowan
|align="right"|217
|align="right"|24.46%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |George Ferguson |117 |13.19% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Daniel McKay |82 |9.25% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Robert McLeese |169 |19.05% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Samuel Walker |107 |12.06% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Charles Wilson |195 |21.98% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes887100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=5th British Columbia election, 1886}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Neil R. Campbell |39 |5.17% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |George Cowan |111 |14.70% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |George Ferguson |90 |11.92% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Robert McLeese |113 |14.97% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Joseph Mason |125 |16.56% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Denis Murphy |88 |11.65% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Robert Lauderdale Shaw |38 |5.03% |– |unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Samuel Walker
|align="right"|61
|align="right"|8.08%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Government |Charles Wilson |90 |11.92% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes755100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=6th British Columbia election, 1890}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Government |Joseph Mason |187 |29.13% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |John Robson 8 |158 |24.61% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Samuel Augustus Rogers |163 |25.39% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |William Pinchbeck |134 |20.87% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes642100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|- bgcolor="white"
8 Incumbent Premier since 1889; term ended in 1892
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=7th British Columbia election, 1894}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Government |William Adams |147 |21.33% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |John Charlton Kinchant |95 |13.79% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Robert McLeese |142 |20.61% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Samuel Augustus Rogers |167 |24.24% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Hugh Watt |138 |20.03% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes689100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=8th British Columbia election, 1898}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |Hans Lars Helgesen |218 |28.76% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Joseph Hunter |173 |22.82% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Opposition |John Charlton Kinchant |195 |25.73% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Government |Samuel Augustus Rogers |172 |22.69% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes758100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{British Columbia provincial election, 1900/Cariboo}}{{Election FPTP begin | title=10th British Columbia election, 1903}}
|-{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|William Adams
|align="right"|411
|align="right"|23.76%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|Harry Jones
|align="right"|439
|align="right"|25.37%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|James Murphy
|align="right"|501
|align="right"|28.96%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|Samuel Augustus Rogers
|align="right"|379
|align="right"|21.91%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes1,730100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=11th British Columbia election, 1907}}
|-{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|Leon Frederick James Champion
|align="right"|135
|align="right"|20.64%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|Harry Jones
|align="right"|184
|align="right"|28.14%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|Charles Wilson
|align="right"|152
|align="right"|23.34%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|John McKay Yorston
|align="right"|183
|align="right"|27.98%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes654100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=12th British Columbia election, 1909}}
|-{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|Michael Callanan
|align="right"|273
|align="right"|31.86%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|John Anderson Fraser
|align="right"|267
|align="right"|31.15%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Harry Jones |159 |18.55% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |John McKay Yorston |158 |18.54% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes857100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=13th British Columbia election, 1912}}
|-{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|Michael Callanan
|align="right"|310
|align="right"|37.48%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|John Anderson Fraser
|align="right"|335
|align="right"|40.51%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |John Holt |182 |22.01% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes827100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=14th British Columbia election, 1916}}
|-{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|John Anderson Fraser
|align="right"|207
|align="right"|31.36%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|John McKay Yorston
|align="right"|453
|align="right"|68.64%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes660100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=15th British Columbia election, 1920}}
|-{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|John Anderson Fraser
|align="right"|349
|align="right"|38.35%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|John McKay Yorston
|align="right"|561
|align="right"|61.65%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes910100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=16th British Columbia election, 1924}}
|-{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|John Anderson Fraser
|align="right"|397
|align="right"|30.44%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Provincial |David Alexander Stoddart |561 |61.65% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |John McKay Yorston |414 |31.75% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes1,304100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=17th British Columbia election, 1928}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Robert Neil Campbell |400 |28.25% |– |unknown}}{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|Roderick Mackenzie
|align="right"|623
|align="right"|44.00%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|David Alexander Stoddart
|align="right"|393
|align="right"|27.75%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes1,416100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots157
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=18th British Columbia election, 1933}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth Fed.
|Rupert Williams Haggen
|align="right"|398
|align="right"|19.92%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|Donald Morrison MacKay
|align="right"|1,089
|align="right"|54.50%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |NPIG |Roderick Mackenzie |511 |25.58% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes1,998100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots38
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=19th British Columbia election, 1937}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Jennie E. Clarke
|align="right"|655
|align="right"|25.43%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|Louis LeBourdais
|align="right"|1,921
|align="right"|74.57%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes2,578100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots62
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=20th British Columbia election, 1941}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth Fed.
|Richmond Charles Biss
|align="right"|338
|align="right"|11.86%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Truman Charles Docherty
|align="right"|404
|align="right"|14.18%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|John Hargreaves
|align="right"|257
|align="right"|9.02%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|Louis LeBourdais
|align="right"|1,429
|align="right"|50.16%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}
|Conservative
|Christy McDevitt
|align="right"|257
|align="right"|9.02%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes2,849100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots92
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=21st British Columbia election, 1945}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Coalition |Louis LeBourdais |1,370 |57.93% |– |unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth Fed.
|Charles Archibald Thomas
|align="right"|995
|align="right"|42.07%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes2,365100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots67
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=22nd British Columbia election, 1949}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth
|Nicholas Charles Bird
|align="right"|1,314
|align="right"|33.12%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Coalition |Angus MacLean |2,653 |66.88% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes3,967100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots110
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election Pref begin | title=23rd British Columbia election, 19529}}{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit League |William Ralph Talbot Chetwynd |2,684 |51.84% |2,684 |51.84%}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|Angus McLean
|align="right"|1,029
|align="right"|19.88%
|align="right"|1,029
|align="right"|19.88%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth Fed.
|Roland Riley
|align="right"|689
|align="right"|13.31%
|align="right"|689
|align="right"|13.31%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|PC|row}}
|Progressive Conservative
|Kenneth Winston Thibaudeau
|align="right"|775
|align="right"|14.97%
|align="right"|775
|align="right"|14.97%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes5,177%5,177100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots216
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout77.94%
|- bgcolor="white"
9 Preferential ballot; only one count necessary due to majority on first count
|}{{Election Pref begin | title=24th British Columbia election, 1953 10}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|PC|row}}
|Progressive Conservative
|Jack Gardner Boultbee
|align="right"|509
|align="right"|9.63%
|align="right"|509
|align="right"|9.63%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit League |William Ralph Talbot Chetwynd |2,733 |51.73% |2,733 |51.73%}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|Liberal|row}}
|Liberal
|Gideon Earl Malcolm
|align="right"|1,050
|align="right"|19.87%
|align="right"|1,050
|align="right"|19.87%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth Fed.
|Joseph Wilson McConnell
|align="right"|992
|align="right"|18.77%
|align="right"|992
|align="right"|18.77%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes5,284100.00%5,284%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots288
|- bgcolor="white"
Total Registered Voters
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|- bgcolor="white"
10 Preferential ballot; only one count shown due to majority on first count
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=25th British Columbia election, 1956}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |William Ralph Talbot Chetwynd |3,014 |60.86 |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Felix Rudolph Kohnke |1,141 |23.04% |– |unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth Fed.
|James Lehman
|align="right"|797
|align="right"|16.09%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes4,952100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots45
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=26th British Columbia election, 1960}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|CCF|row}}
|Co-operative Commonwealth Fed.
|Stanley Doubleday Crowe
|align="right"|1,842
|align="right"|24.37%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Felix Rudolph Kohnke |2,073 |27.43% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |William Collins Speare |3,091 |40.90% |– |unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|PC|row}}
|Progressive Conservative
|Celian Orvian Tingley
|align="right"|552
|align="right"|7.30%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes7,558100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots112
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=27th British Columbia election, 1963}}
|-{{Canadian party colour|BC|PC|row}}
|Progressive Conservative
|John Alfred Vernon Cade
|align="right"|1,551
|align="right"|21.60%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Stanley Doubleday Crowe|1,482|20.63%||unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Felix Rudolph Kohnke |1,134 |15.79% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |William Collins Speare |3,015 |41.98% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes7,182100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots49
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=28th British Columbia election, 1966}}
|-{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Hartley Douglas Dent|2,530|35.74%||unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Ronald Charles MacKay |719 |10.16% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |William Collins Speare |3,830 |54.10% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes7,079100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots74
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=29th British Columbia election, 1969}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |Alex Fraser |5,766 |52.05% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Kirby Gerald Seabrook|2,961|26.73%||unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |David Zirnhelt |2,351 |21.22% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes11,078100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots85
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=30th British Columbia election, 1972}}
|-{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Ronald Hjalmar Anderson|5,435|38.68%||unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |Alex Fraser |6,780 |48.25% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Lawrence Albert Gladue |1,837 |13.07% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes14,052100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots220
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=31st British Columbia election, 1975}}
|-{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Grethyl Verda Adams|6,122|30.13%||unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |Alex Fraser |14,194 |69.87% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes20,316100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots235
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=32nd British Columbia election, 1979}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |Alex Fraser |13,736 |64.09% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Byron Ralph Kemp|7,233|33.75%||unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Brian Hartley Mayne
|align="right"|462
|align="right"|2.16%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes21,431100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots315
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=33rd British Columbia election, 1983}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |Alex Fraser |16,446 |61.82% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Steven Edward Hilbert|8,990|33.80%||unknown}}{{CANelec|BC|Green|Jeremie Louis LeBourdais 11|212|0.80%|–|unknown}}{{CANelec|BC|Western Canada Concept|Harold Alexander Paley|405|1.52%||unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Quintin Robert McAdam Robertson |549 |2.06% |– |unknown}}
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes26,602100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots393
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|- bgcolor="white"
11 Son of former MLA Louis Lebourdais
|}{{Election FPTP begin | title=34th British Columbia election, 1986 12}}
|-{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Michael George D'Arcy |1,738 |3.61% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec|BC|NDP|John Dressler|8,386|17.41%||unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|PC|row}}
|Progressive Conservative
|Peter V. Epp
|align="right"|555
|align="right"|1.15%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |Alex Fraser |14,954 |30.312% |– |unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|Independent|row}}
|Independent
|Jeremie Louis LeBourdais
|align="right"|214
|align="right"|0.44%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown{{CANelec|BC|NDP|Christine M. Slater|8,250|17.13%||unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Social Credit |T. Neil Vant |12,715 |26.40% |– |unknown}}{{CANelec |BC |Liberal |Sylvia Anne Louise Warn |927 |1.93% |– |unknown}}{{Canadian party colour|BC|PC|row}}
|Progressive Conservative
|Charles Richard Wyse
|align="right"|778
|align="right"|1.62%
|align="right"|
|align="right"|unknown
|- bgcolor="white"
Total valid votes48,157100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
Total rejected ballots778
|- bgcolor="white"
Turnout%
|- bgcolor="white"
12 Seat increased to two members from one.
|}

Sources

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20081004023944/http://www.elections.bc.ca/index.php/resource-centre/electoral-history-of-bc/ Elections BC website - historical election data]
{{British Columbia provincial electoral districts 1979-1991}}{{British Columbia provincial electoral districts 1966-1979}}{{British Columbia provincial electoral districts 1956-1966}}{{British Columbia provincial electoral districts 1941-1956}}

1 : Defunct British Columbia provincial electoral districts

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/21 12:34:39