Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, 1971

Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, 1971
Date February 12, 1971
Convention Maple Leaf Gardens,[1]
Toronto, Ontario
Resigning leader John Robarts
Won by Bill Davis
Ballots 4
Candidates 6

The 1971 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election was held on February 12 of that year to replace retiring premier John Robarts. The party selected Bill Davis on the fourth ballot.

Background

The change in leadership came about when John Robarts announced his retirement plans on December 1, 1970.[2] Five sitting members quickly announced their intention to vie for the leadership. Bill Davis was the early front runner and was seen as the candidate of the party establishment. He had support of 14 cabinet ministers and 42 Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs). Allan Lawrence was viewed as suave and a bit of a maverick. He attracted supporters who disliked Davis' education expenditures. Darcy McKeough, Bob Welch and Bert Lawrence had less support and were viewed as compromise candidates.[3] Robert Pharand was a late entry into the race. He was a 26-year-old graduate student from Ottawa who announced his intention to run on January 31, 1971. He represented a small group of young Conservative members who felt the five established candidates were not speaking clearly enough about the issues.[4]

The convention

The convention was held at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto between February 11–12, 1971. On the first night speeches were made by the candidates. Davis defended his record at the Ministry of Education. He described himself as resolute decisive and steadfast. The text read well but he spoke in a monotone that lessened the impact. Some argued that the speech 'fell flat'. Darcy McKeough spoke next. He gave an aggressive speech. He tried to cast himself as the compromise candidate, neither for the establishment (Davis) nor for the dissidents (A. Lawrence). Bob Welch discarded his prepared speech and gave a fierce rendering of his vision. He pledged himself to a more open party. Allan Lawrence ignored his previous arguments about excessive spending on education and government services. Instead he described himself as natural successor to Robarts, a preserver of Canadian unity and Ontario's greatness. Some observers felt his speech was cheeky and presumptuous but it went down well with his organizers. Bert Lawrence who realized that he was well behind in the polls, promised an improved relationship between government and people, structural reform of the cabinet, an enlarged role for backbenchers, and better coordination of the work of the civil service.[3][5]

Voting procedure

On the second day, voting took place. 15 large voting machines were placed in the middle of the floor. Alan Eagleson, a key organizer of the convention, explained to delegates how the voting machines would work. Voting began at 3:15 pm but after an hour it was announced that 12 of the 15 machines had failed work properly. During the next two hours conference organizers met with the manufacturer of the machines and candidates. The manufacturers claimed that nothing was wrong with their machines and it was the delegates who had failed to use them properly. After a meeting with the candidates, there was unanimous agreement that the first ballot be scrapped and that it be redone using paper ballots. This was announced to the delegates at about 6:15 pm. Voting didn't take place until about 7:45 pm and the results were announced about 9 pm.

In the meantime, unofficial results from the machine vote had leaked out and there was intense discussions between candidates and their organizers. When the first paper ballot results were announced, Davis was in the lead by 117 votes. Both Robert Pharand and Bert Lawrence dropped out and refused to endorse anyone. The second ballot began at about 10 pm and the results had Bob Welch in last place. Darcy McKeough tried to make a deal with him but he was turned down. Welch felt that to make a deal with McKeough would go against his principles for an open party. He refused to make an endorsement. After the third ballot, McKeough was in last place and he gave his endorsement to Davis. The fourth ballot results were announced at 2 am. It gave Davis the victory by only 44 votes.

Analysis of the results focused on why Davis almost lost. Some argued that Davis' moderate stance was almost outshone by Lawrence who curried favour with more right-wing Conservatives. In terms of delegates, Lawrence and Davis were virtually tied. The deciding factor was the sitting MPPs who voted almost entirely for Davis.[3][5]

Ballot results

Delegate support by ballot
Candidate 1st ballot (cancelled) 1st ballot 2nd ballot 3rd ballot 4th ballot
Name Votes cast % Votes cast % Votes cast % Votes cast % Votes cast %
Bill Davis 502 32.2 548 33.1 595 36.0 669 41.3 812 51.4
Allan Lawrence 379 24.3 431 26.0 498 30.1 606 37.4 768 48.6
Darcy McKeough 260 16.7 273 16.5 288 17.4 346 21.3 Endorsed Davis
Bob Welch 252 16.2 270 16.3 271 16.4 No endorsement
Bert Lawrence 154 9.9 128 7.7 No endorsement
Robert Pharand 13 0.8 7 0.4 No endorsement
Total 1,560 100.0 1,657 100.0 1,652 100.0 1,621 100.0 1,580 100.0

References

  1. "McKeough eliminated after third ballot, endorses Davis". 13 February 1971.
  2. "Party acting as if Robarts had resigned: Tories ask to reserve leadership convention site". The Globe and Mail. December 2, 1970. p. 1.
  3. 1 2 3 Peter Oliver (1975). John Saywell, ed. Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs (1971). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 99–102.
  4. "Student to run for leadership". The Globe and Mail. February 1, 1971. p. 8.
  5. 1 2 Manthorpe, Jonathan (1974). The Power & the Tories. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada. pp. 115–116.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.