Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, 2009

Liberal leadership election, 2009
Date April 30 - May 2, 2009
Convention Vancouver Convention Centre
Vancouver, British Columbia
Campaign
to replace
Stéphane Dion
Won by Michael Ignatieff
Ballots 1
Candidates 1
Entrance Fee $90,000
Spending limit $1,500,000

Liberal leadership elections
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The Liberal Party of Canada leadership election of 2009 was prompted by Stéphane Dion's announcement that he would not lead the Liberal Party of Canada into another election, following his party's defeat in the 2008 federal election in Canada. The Liberals, who captured just slightly over 26 per cent of the total votes, scored their lowest percentage in the party's history.

The party's national executive met on November 8, 2008, to set rules for the contest, and chose a date and location for the convention. A biennial and leadership convention was held in Vancouver, British Columbia from April 30 to May 3, 2009, with the new leader being chosen on May 2.[1] Delegates to the convention were chosen from March 6-10, 2009 by those Liberal Party members who joined on or before February 6, 2009.

As a result of the 2008 Canadian parliamentary crisis, culminating in Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper's successful appeal on December 4, 2008, to Governor General Michaëlle Jean to prorogue Parliament until January 26, 2009, there were calls by a number of prominent Liberals, including Michael Ignatieff and Bob Rae, for the leadership election process to be accelerated, so that there would be a new permanent leader in place by the time that Parliament resumed. Former Deputy Prime Minister and former Finance Minister John Manley, writing in The Globe and Mail on December 6, 2008, called for Dion to resign immediately.[2] Dion issued a statement on December 8 agreeing to move up his resignation.

Rae and Ignatieff disagreed on how to accelerate the process, with Ignatieff favouring a vote by caucus on December 10, 2008, to select an interim leader who would then be confirmed as permanent leader in May 2009, and Rae calling for a One Member One Vote method involving the entire Liberal Party membership, to be conducted in January 2009.[3]

On December 8, 2008, Dominic LeBlanc withdrew from the race and threw his support to Michael Ignatieff.[4][5] That evening the party executive agreed to a compromise proposal that would widen the leadership consultation process to include riding association presidents, defeated election candidates and others but rejected Rae's OMOV proposal. On December 9, 2008, Bob Rae withdrew from the race, leaving Michael Ignatieff as the presumed victor.[6]

As well as ratifying Ignatieff's leadership with the support of 97% of delegates, the convention approved an amendment to the party's constitution to institute a One Member One Vote system for the election of future leaders.[7] A proposal to adopt a weighted system where 25% of the vote in leadership elections would be reserved for members of the party's youth wing was defeated.

Contents

Declared candidates

The following candidates declared their intention to run for the leadership:

Michael Ignatieff

Member of Parliament for Etobicoke—Lakeshore; first elected in 2006; former leadership front-runner in 2006.[8]

Confirmed supporters in caucus prior to withdrawal of other candidates: 48
MPs: 46: Scott Andrews, Larry Bagnell, Navdeep Bains, Mauril Belanger, Maurizio Bevilacqua, Gerry Byrne, John Cannis, Siobhan Coady, Denis Coderre, Bonnie Crombie, Jean-Claude D'Amours, Sukh Dhaliwal, Kirsty Duncan, Wayne Easter, Raymonde Folco, Judy Foote, Marc Garneau, Albina Guarnieri, Mark Holland, Andrew Kania, Jim Karygiannis, Dominic LeBlanc, Derek Lee, Gurbax Malhi, Keith Martin, John McCallum, David McGuinty, John McKay, Dan McTeague, Maria Minna, Rob Oliphant, Glen Pearson, Yasmin Ratansi, Geoff Regan, Pablo Rodriguez, Todd Russell, Francis Scarpaleggia, Mario Silva, Scott Simms, Michelle Simson, Judy Sgro, Paul Szabo, Alan Tonks, Frank Valeriote, Bryon Wilfert, Lise Zarac.[9]
Senators: 2: Larry Campbell,[10] David Smith
Other high profile supporters: Liberal organizers Steven MacKinnon, Michael Eizenga, Mark Marissen, Warren Kinsella, and Don Guy; party executives Marc-André Blanchard, Brigitte Legault, and Ryan Ward; former MPs and candidates Omar Alghabra, Tyler Banham, and Penny Collenette; Dwight Duncan, Ontario Minister of Finance.
Date campaign launched: November 13, 2008
Date officially registered:
Website: michaelignatieff.ca
Result: Winner

Withdrawn candidates

Dominic LeBlanc

Member of Parliament for Beauséjour, first elected in 2000, fluently bilingual Acadian with deep roots in the party. His father, Roméo, was press secretary to Pierre Trudeau, later an MP and cabinet minister, and eventually became Governor General.[11] On October 27, LeBlanc became the first candidate to declare his candidacy for the Liberal Party leadership.[12] On December 8, 2008, LeBlanc withdrew from the leadership race and endorsed Michael Ignatieff.

Confirmed supporters in caucus prior to withdrawal: 1
MPs: 0
Senators: 1 Sen. Percy Downe.[10]
Other high profile supporters: party advisers and organizers Scott Reid, Tim Murphy, Steven Hogue, Mark Watton, and Janice Nicholson; current and former New Brunswick cabinet ministers Premier Shawn Graham, Victor Boudreau, Greg Byrne and Doug Tyler.

Bob Rae

Member of Parliament for Toronto Centre; first elected in 2008; former NDP Premier of Ontario; former leadership contender. Rae had been under increasing pressure to bow out of the leadership contest. On December 9, 2008, Bob Rae officially withdrew from the race, leaving Michael Ignatieff the winner by default.[13]

Confirmed supporters in caucus prior to withdrawal: 25
MPs: 10 Hedy Fry, Lawrence MacAulay, Shawn Murphy, Mike Savage, Alexandra Mendes, Gerard Kennedy, Anita Neville, Irwin Cotler, Joe Volpe, Carolyn Bennett.
Senators: 15 Sharon Carstairs,[14] Mobina Jaffer, Gerard Phalen, Joan Cook, William Rompkey, Peter Stollery, Mac Harb, Lorna Milne, Pierre De Bane, Serge Joyal, Michel Biron, Yoine Goldstein, Robert Peterson, Pierrette Ringuette-Maltais, Raymond Setlakwe.
Other high profile supporters: Former federal cabinet ministers Lloyd Axworthy, Anne McLellan, and Reg Alcock;[15] former MPs Diane Marleau and Raymond Chan, retired Sen. Jack Austin; Jonathan Goldbloom, Montreal communications consultant; Karl Littler, former senior Paul Martin strategist; John Duffy, Martin strategist, political author, and consultant;[16] Power Corporation executive and former Chrétien advisor John A. Rae; George Smitherman, deputy premier of Ontario; Greg Sorbara, former Ontario finance minister.[17] former Young Liberals of Canada President Richard Diamond, Manitoba MLA from Inkster Kevin Lamoureux, Gulzar Singh Cheema, Nick Taylor, Colin MacDonald, Chris Axworthy, Roy Bluehorn, Monica Lysak, Walter Noel, Ronald St.-Onge Lynch, Jake Gray.

Potential candidates who did not run

Timeline

Results

First Ballot

Total votes cast 2,023

References

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  2. ^ The Globe and Mail, December 6, 2008, p. A25.
  3. ^ Canada (2008-12-08). "Ignatieff makes his move". Toronto: The Globe and Mail. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081207.wdion1207/BNStory/politics/home. Retrieved 2010-04-28. 
  4. ^ "CBC News - Canada - LeBlanc to drop out of Liberal leadership race, support Ignatieff". Cbc.ca. 2008-12-07. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/12/07/liberals-leblanc.html. Retrieved 2010-04-28. 
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  7. ^ Bruce Campion-Smith Ottawa bureau chief (2009-05-02). "Liberals adopt one-member-one-vote system". Toronto: thestar.com. http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/628077. Retrieved 2010-04-28. 
  8. ^ Jane Taber (2008-11-12). "globeandmail.com: Ignatieff's in, Kennedy's out". Toronto: Globe and Mail. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081112.wiggy1112/BNStory/politics/home?cid=al_gam_mostemail. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
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  10. ^ a b "This page is available to GlobePlus subscribers". Toronto: Theglobeandmail.com. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20081113.wliberals13/BNStory/politics/?page=rss&id=RTGAM.20081113.wliberals13. Retrieved 2010-04-28. 
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