Referendums in Canada
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National referendums are seldom used in Canada, and have tended to fail. The first two saw voters in Québec and the rest of Canada take dramatically opposing stands, the third saw most of the voters take a stand dramatically opposed to that of the politicians in power.
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[edit] National referendums
[edit] Referendum on prohibition
Jurisdiction | For Prohibition | Percent For | Against Prohibition | Percent Against |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alberta and Saskatchewan | 6,238 | 68.8 | 2,824 | 31.2 |
British Columbia | 5,731 | 54.6 | 4,756 | 45.4 |
Manitoba | 12,419 | 80.6 | 2,978 | 19.4 |
New Brunswick | 26,919 | 72.2 | 9,575 | 27.7 |
Nova Scotia | 34,368 | 87.2 | 5,370 | 12.8 |
Ontario | 154,498 | 57.3 | 115,284 | 42.7 |
Prince Edward Island | 9,461 | 89.2 | 1,146 | 10.8 |
Quebec | 28,436 | 18.8 | 122,760 | 81.2 |
Canada | 278,380 | 51.2 | 264,693 | 48.8 |
[edit] Plebiscite on conscription
- See also: Conscription Crisis of 1944
The Question:
- Are you in favour of releasing the Government from any obligations arising out of any past commitments restricting the methods of raising men for military service?
Jurisdiction | Voted Yes | Percent Yes | Voted No | Percent No |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alberta | 186,624 | 71.1 | 75,880 | 28.9 |
British Columbia | 253,844 | 80.4 | 62,033 | 19.6 |
Manitoba | 218,093 | 80.3 | 53,651 | 19.7 |
New Brunswick | 105,629 | 69.8 | 45,743 | 30.2 |
Nova Scotia | 120,763 | 77.1 | 35,840 | 22.1 |
Ontario | 1,202,953 | 84.0 | 229,847 | 16.0 |
Prince Edward Island | 23,568 | 82.9 | 4,869 | 17.1 |
Quebec | 375,650 | 27.9 | 971,925 | 72.1 |
Saskatchewan | 183,617 | 73.1 | 67,654 | 26.9 |
Yukon | 847 | 74.4 | 291 | 25.6 |
Total civilian vote | 2,670,088 | 63.3 | 1,547,724 | 36.7 |
Military vote | 251,118 | 80.5 | 60,885 | 19.5 |
Canada | 2,921,206 | 64.5 | 1,608,609 | 35.5 |
[edit] Referendum on the Charlottetown Accord
The Question:
- Do you agree that the Constitution of Canada should be renewed on the basis of the agreement reached on August 28, 1992?
Jurisdiction | Voted Yes | Percent Yes | Voted No | Percent No |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alberta | 483,275 | 39.8 | 731,975 | 60.2 |
British Columbia | 525,188 | 31.8 | 1,126,761 | 68.2 |
Manitoba | 198,230 | 38.0 | 322,971 | 62.0 |
New Brunswick | 23,010 | 61.7 | 145,096 | 38.3 |
Newfoundland | 133,193 | 63.1 | 77,881 | 36.9 |
Northwest Territories | 14,750 | 61.0 | 9,416 | 39.0 |
Nova Scotia | 218,618 | 48.7 | 230,182 | 51.3 |
Ontario | 2,410,119 | 50.1 | 2,397,665 | 49.9 |
Prince Edward Island | 48,687 | 74.0 | 17,124 | 26.0 |
Quebec | 1,710,117 | 43.4 | 2,232,280 | 56.6 |
Saskatchewan | 203,361 | 44.6 | 252,459 | 55.4 |
Yukon | 5,354 | 43.6 | 6,922 | 56.4 |
Canada | 6,185,902 | 45.0 | 7,550,732 | 55.0 |
[edit] Proposed referendums
During the Canadian Federal election of 2004, the NDP stated that it would require the federal government to hold a national referendum on electoral reform (specifically Proportional Representation) for support from the NDP should the Liberals win a minority government. The Liberals won a minority, and the NDP announced they would press for electoral reform through a referendum (the two other parties in the House of Commons, the Conservatives and Bloc Québécois, have historically supported electoral reform and are expected to support NDP legislation on a national referendum). The possibility of a national referendum on electoral reform was made more likely through the throne speech that opened Parliament in October, 2004, in which Prime Minister Paul Martin included electoral reform in his plan for the next Parliament. So far Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper has not made any moves towards reform of the electoral system.
There had been discussion regarding a national referendum over the issue of same-sex marriage, which is a highly divisive issue in Canada (and most other countries). A national plebiscite had been suggested by Alberta Premier Ralph Klein and some Conservatives and Liberal backbenchers. However, Paul Martin's Liberal government, with the support of the NDP and Bloc Quebecois, passed the Civil Marriage Act, legalizing same-sex marriage through Parliament in July 2005 without holding a plebiscite.
The government of Ontario has announced that if the Ontario Citizens Assembly suggests a different electoral system for the province than a referendum will be held in conjunction with the Ontario general election, 2007. See - Ontario electoral reform referendum, 2007
[edit] Provincial referendums
[edit] British Columbia
In British Columbia, a Treaty Referendum was held on First Nations treaty rights in 2002. The referendum proposed eight questions that voters were asked to either support or oppose. Critics claimed the phrasing was flawed or biased toward a predetermined response. Critics, especially First Nations and religious groups, called for a boycott of the referendum, and only about one third of ballots were returned, significantly less than the usual turnout in provincial general elections. The ballots that were returned showed enthusiastic support, with over 80 per cent of participating voters agreeing to all eight proposed principles.
A referendum on electoral reform on May 17, 2005 was held in conjunction with the provincial election that year. British Columbian voters were asked to approve a new electoral system based on the Single Transferable Vote called BC STV. It passed with the support of a majority of voters (57%), but failed to meet the required "supermajority" threshold of 60%. Premier Gordon Campbell announced due to the large support shown for electoral reform a second referendum will be held in correspondance with the British Columbia general election, 2009. This referendum will also require approval by 60% of the electorate.
[edit] Newfoundland and Labrador
The island of Newfoundland, then a British colony, held two referendums in 1949 to determine its future. An initial referendum was held on June 3, 1948 to decide between continuing with the British appointed Commission of Government that had ruled the island since the 1930s, revert to dominion status with responsible government, or join Canadian Confederation. The result was inconclusive, with 44.6% supporting the restoration of dominion status, 41.1% for confederation with Canada, and 14.3% for continuing the Commission of Government. A second referendum on July 22, 1948, which asked Newfoundlanders to choose between confederation and dominion status, was decided by a vote of 52% to 48% for confederation with Canada. Newfoundland joined Canada on March 31, 1949.
A referendum was held in Newfoundland and Labrador in 1995 that approved replacing the province's system of parochial schools with a largely public school system. In 1997, a second referendum to amend the Terms of Union to allow for the Catholic and Pentecostal school systems to be disbanded and brought into the public system.
[edit] Nova Scotia
In 2004, Nova Scotia held a referendum on whether to allow "Sunday shopping." The result was a slight victory for the No side, although the government went ahead and legalized Sunday Shopping the following year.
[edit] Prince Edward Island
The small province of Prince Edward Island (under 150,000 people and therefore in scale more like a municipal government) has had several referendums in its past, although the correct terminology in the province is a plebiscite. The last provincial plebiscite was held to determine if Islanders were in favour of a fixed link to the mainland. It passed 60% to 40%. This allowed the provincial and federal governments to attract contractors to build what is now the Confederation Bridge. On November 28th, 2005, Islanders were asked to vote by plebiscite whether or not they wanted mixed member proportional representation - partly "party list-based" - electoral system. Islanders decided, 64% to 36%, to keep the status quo first-past-the-post based electoral system that was already in place.
[edit] Quebec
Two famous referendums have been held in Quebec on the issue of sovereignty: the 1980 referendum and the 1995 referendum. In both cases the people of Quebec have voted to remain within Canada.