1915 Manitoba general election
The 1915 Manitoba general election was held August 6, 1915 to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Manitoba, Canada. Liberals under Norris took a slight majority of votes and won a landslide majority in the Legislature. They replaced the Conservative government that had ruled the province since 1899 but had lost power after investigation for corruption.
This election was held only one year after the previous general election of 1914. In that election, the governing Conservatives of premier Rodmond Roblin were confirmed in office with 28 seats out of 49. In early 1915, a commission appointed by the Lieutenant Governor found the government guilty of corruption in the tending of contracts for new legislative buildings.
Roblin denied the charges, but resigned as premier on May 12. Three days later, the lieutenant-governor called upon Tobias Norris, leader of the official opposition Liberals, to form a new administration. The house was quickly adjourned, and new elections were scheduled for August.
The primary issue of the campaign was corruption of the Roblin government. The pro-Liberal Manitoba Free Press ran numerous articles criticizing the practices of the Roblin government, and alleging that the "Roblin machine" still controlled the Conservative Party.
Liberals claimed they would manage the province's affairs in a businesslike rather than a partisan manner, an approach typified by Provincial Treasurer Edward Brown call for the province to "forget party for five years and get down to business".
Female suffrage was an issue in the campaign. Norris's Liberals promised they would enact female adult suffrage if elected to office. Due to this, Nellie McClung, who had returned to Manitoba from her home in Alberta, campaigned on behalf of Liberal candidates. The government gave votes to women in 1916, becoming the first province in Canada where women could vote. The Liberal party's platform also promised direct legislation and plebiscites on public issues.
The question of prohibition was an issue at the time. The Liberal Party promised to hold a provincial referendum on the question. A referendum was held on March 3, 1916, and a majority voted in favour.
Facing unpopularity due to the corruption scandal, the Manitoba Conservatives chose federal Member of Parliament James Albert Manning Aikins as their new leader on July 15. Aikins had never served in the Roblin government and was regarded by many as free from the controversy that had forced the Conservatives to resign. In a further effort to separate themselves from the Roblin government, the Conservative party tried to change its name, referring to itself as the "Independent-Liberal-Conservative" party for this election. Liberals ridiculed this name change and sarcastically described the "new" Conservatives as the "Purity Party". The "Independent-Liberal-Conservative" name seems to have been dropped shortly after the election.
The election results were a disaster for Conservatives. They won only five seats out of 47, and Aikins lost by a considerable margin in Brandon City. The Liberals under Norris won a landslide majority with 40 seats, the largest victory in Manitoba history, although with barely more than half the vote.
Labourites made advances in the legislature. In the Winnipeg Centre district, Fred Dixon was re-elected, this time as an independent candidate with support from both Liberals and the Labour Representation Committee. The Social Democratic Party also won its first seat in the province, electing Richard Rigg to one of the two seats in north-end Winnipeg. The other seat was taken by Solomon Hart Green, the first Jew to serve in the Manitoba Legislature.
For this election Winnipeg was divided into three districts, each having used two members, with each seat being filled in separate contests.
The Manitoba francophone-dominated constituencies continued to support candidates of the Conservative party. Four of the five Conservative MLAs were from francophone areas. Many francophone voters opposed Norris's plans to end provincial funding for denominational Catholic schools. Many also opposed Norris's plans for Prohibition and equal suffrage.
This was the last election before Winnipeg was made into a single ten-seat district, and Single transferable voting was brought into use.
Electoral system
In this election Manitoba used a mixture of multi-member districts and single-member districts.In the multi-member districts - Winnipeg North, Winnipeg South and Winnipeg Centre - each member was elected in a separate contest through First past the post. There is little variance in the parties' vote tallies between the twin contests in each district.
In each single-member district the member was elected through First past the post.
Riding results
Arthur:- John Williams 815
- W.S. Kenner 632
- John Wilton 828
- William Bayley 773
- John Thomas Haig 590
- William Wood 1115
- J. Harry Irwin 918
- George Malcolm 873
- S. Arnold 422
Carillon:
- Albert Prefontaine 629
- Thomas B. Molloy 605
- Andrew Myles 851
- George Steel 789
- William Harrington 739
- William Buchanan 637
- J.M. McQuay 233
- Robert Thornton 1146
- John C. Walker Reid 851
- Edward August 1134
- Andrew S. Argue 848
- Thomas Glendenning Hamilton 2319
- Donald Munro 866
- John David Baskerville 1181
- G. Coulter 460
- William Findlater 1383
- Sam Hughes 792
- Taras Ferley 1172
- Sveinn Thorvaldson 562
- James Armstrong 1154
- A. Singleton 484
- James Breakey 1091
- John Perdue 636
- John Henry McConnell 1063
- J. Moss Fraser 596
- Aime Benard 527
- James H. Black 400
- George Prout 1295
- R. Sanders 754
- Samuel Hayden 779
- George Lawrence 656
Lansdowne:
- Tobias Norris 1334
- W.J. Cundy 592
Manitou:
- George Thomas Armstrong 1090
- W.H. Sharpe 1006
- George Grierson 1173
- James Muir 654
Morris:
- Jacques Parent 740
- William Molloy 683
- James Baird 1331
- John T. Dale 419
- John Graham 933
- Robert F. Lyons 770
- Ewan McPherson 1065
- Fawcett Taylor 807
- Frederic Newton 714
- William Angus 609
- Arthur Lobb 1275
- Thomas Scott 639
- William Wilber Wilfred Wilson 1033
- J.P. Laycock 614
- Joseph Dumas 921
- J.A. Beaupre 790
- J.P. Howden 640
- Donald Ross 1014
- Thomas Hay 489
- Skuli Sigfusson 1291
- Paul Reykdal 831
- Joseph Hamelin 443
- Z.H. Rheaume 414
- A. McLeod 266
- William Sims 626
- Daniel D. McDonald 414
Virden:
- George Clingan 1181
- R.A. Knight 772
Winnipeg
Winnipeg North "A":- Robert Newton Lowery 2443
- Arthur Beech 2248
- Joseph P. Foley 1490
- Richard Rigg 2494
- Solomon Hart Green 2263
- E.R. Levinson 1248
- Thomas Herman Johnson 6763
- A.J. Norquay 2346
- Fred Dixon 6443
- H.M. Hanneson 2048
- George Armstrong 804
- Albert Hudson 5986
- W.J. Boyd 2011
- William Parrish 5635
- Lendrum McMeans 2303
Deferred elections
The Pas, August 25, 1915:- Edward Brown accl.
Post-election changes
Rupertsland, September 16, 1916:- John Morrison accl.
- Arthur Boivin elected
- William Westwood elected
- Irwin L. Mitchell
Minnedosa, November 30, 1917:
- George Grierson elected
- Robert Jacob 2923
- E.R. Levinson 2251