Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, 2013

Liberal leadership election, 2013
Date April 14, 2013
Convention Westin Hotel,
Ottawa, Ontario
Resigning leader Michael Ignatieff
Won by Justin Trudeau
Ballots 1
Candidates 6
Entrance Fee $75,000 CDN
Spending limit $950,000 CDN

An election for the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada was triggered by Michael Ignatieff's announcement on May 3, 2011, of his intention to resign as leader following the party's result in the 2011 federal election. On May 25, 2011, Bob Rae was selected to serve as interim leader. The party announced Justin Trudeau as its new leader on April 14, 2013, in Ottawa.[1][2]

Leadership election timing

Michael Ignatieff in April 2011

Michael Ignatieff declared on May 3, 2011, that he intended to resign as leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, but his statement was worded so as not to be an actual resignation to avoid immediately triggering a leadership vote under party rules; he tendered a letter of resignation to the party's National Board of Directors on May 11.[3][4] Under the provisions of the party's constitution, the Board was required to set a date for a leadership vote to be held within five months thereafter.[5] However several MPs expressed their reluctance to hold a third leadership election in eight years and instead wanted to take the four years of electoral stability provided by a majority parliament as an opportunity to rebuild under an interim leader for as much as two years before selecting a permanent leader.

The Board met as required on May 19 and set the election for October 28 and 29, 2011, but adopted a proposed constitutional amendment allowing this leadership election to be held between March 1 and June 30, 2013, with the exact date to be announced no sooner than five months in advance.[6] The next convention of the party adopted the amendment on June 18, 2011.[7] On June 13, 2012, the Board decided to call the leadership vote for April 2013 with a specific date to be confirmed during the summer.[8] The Board subsequently established April 14, 2013, as the date the leadership election winner is to be announced and November 14, 2012, as the official start of the race. It also set a spending limit of $950,000 and a debt limit of $75,000, both considerably lower figures than allowed in 2006.[1]

Interim leader

Bob Rae in 2007

In the case of a vacancy in the leadership, the Board is required to meet to appoint an interim leader "in consultation" with the parliamentary caucus, i.e., its 34 MPs and 46 senators.[5] Before this meeting, the Board determined it would not consider anyone unless that person has the support of a majority of MPs and of the caucus as a whole, was bilingual, and promised in writing not to seek the permanent leadership and not to discuss or negotiate significant changes to the party, which would include a merger with the New Democratic Party (NDP). This was taken as intended to exclude Bob Rae a potential leadership candidate who had significant support among Liberal senators and had talked about a merger shortly after the general election loss, as well as Deputy Leader Ralph Goodale, who is not bilingual, and any other MP who may intend to run in the leadership campaign.[9][10] Nonetheless, after the caucus discussed the interim leadership on May 11, 2011, it met again on May 25 and voted to recommend Rae as interim leader over Marc Garneau; the Board subsequently confirmed the appointment.[11][12][13]

In June 2012, the Board was expected to release Rae from his promise and allow him to run for the party leadership provided he stepped down as interim leader when Parliament rose for the summer.[14] However, Rae announced on June 13, 2012, that he would not be running for the permanent leadership, and remained interim leader until Trudeau was announced as the new leader April 14, 2013.[15]

Process

130,774 Liberal Party members and supporters registered to vote in the election[16] of almost 300,000 who were eligible.[17] General voting took place from April 7 to April 14, 2013, by preferential ballot online and by phone. Each electoral district was allocated 100 points with points in a district allocated in proportion to each candidate by the number of first preference votes received. All points were then aggregated nationally for a "national count". If no candidate received 15,401 points on the first count, then the candidate with the least number of points would be eliminated and his/her votes are distributed in each electoral district among the remaining leadership contestants according to the next preference indicated. This process would then continue until one candidate has more than 15,401 points.[18] Trudeau was selected on the first ballot.

Timeline

Candidates

Candidates who appeared on the ballot.

Martin Cauchon

Martin Cauchon
Background

Martin Cauchon, 49, was the former member of Parliament for the riding of Outremont in Montreal, Quebec. He served as an MP from 1993 to 2004 and served in the cabinet of Jean Chrétien, his most prominent post was as Minister of Justice. Cauchon was the Liberal candidate in Outremont in the 2011 federal election but was defeated by the New Democrat Thomas Mulcair.

Date campaign launched: January 13, 2013[30]
Campaign website: www.martincauchon.ca
Supporters
Other information

Deborah Coyne

Deborah Coyne
Background

Deborah Coyne, 58, was a Toronto lawyer, professor and author who ran for the Liberals in the riding of Toronto—Danforth in the 2006 federal election. She worked in the Prime Minister's Office in 1980s and between 1989 and 1991 she was constitutional adviser to Newfoundland Premier Clyde Wells.

Date campaign launched: June 27, 2012[33]
Campaign website: www.deborahcoyne.ca
Supporters
Other information

Martha Hall Findlay

Martha Hall Findlay
Background

Hall Findlay, 53, was the former MP for Willowdale, Ontario (2008–2011)
Candidate for the Liberal leadership in 2006
Official Opposition Critic Transport, Infrastructure and Communities (2008–2009)
Official Opposition Critic for Public Works (2009–2010)
Official Opposition Critic for International Trade (2010–2011)

Date campaign launched: November 14, 2012[36]
Campaign website: www.marthahallfindlay.ca
Supporters
Other information

Karen McCrimmon

Karen McCrimmon
Background

McCrimmon is a retired Canadian Forces Lieutenant colonel who was the first woman to command a Royal Canadian Air Force squadron (429 Transport Squadron). She was the Liberal candidate in Carleton—Mississippi Mills during the 2011 election. McCrimmon served in the Gulf War, with NATO forces during the Yugoslav Wars, and the War in Afghanistan, and in 1995 was admitted to the Order of Military Merit in the rank of Officer.[43]

Date campaign launched: November 14, 2012
Campaign website: karenmccrimmon.ca
Supporters
Other information

Joyce Murray

Joyce Murray
Background

Murray, 58, had been the Liberal MP for Vancouver Quadra, British Columbia since 2008 and served as Opposition Critic for Small Business and Tourism, Asia — Pacific Gateway and Western Economic Diversification (2011–present). BC Liberal MLA for New Westminster (2001-2005). BC Minister of Water, Land and Air Protection (2001-2004). BC Minister of Management Services (2004-2005)[44]

Date campaign launched: November 26, 2012
Campaign website: joycemurray.ca
Supporters

Other information

Justin Trudeau

Justin Trudeau
Background

Trudeau, 41, had been Member of Parliament for Papineau, since 2008, Liberal Post Secondary Education, Youth and Amateur Sport Critic (2011–present) and son of former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. Trudeau had ruled out a bid but reconsidered in the wake of Bob Rae's announcement that he was not running.[63][64]

Date campaign launched: October 2, 2012[65]
Campaign website: www.justin.ca
Supporters
Other information

Withdrawn candidates

Candidates who filed nomination papers and paid the required installments of their registration fee,[28] but withdrew from the ballot.

David Bertschi

David Bertschi
Background

Bertschi is an Ottawa lawyer and was the federal Liberal candidate in Ottawa—Orléans during the 2011 election. In 2012, he established an exploratory committee to assess his leadership prospects, and announced his candidacy on November 7,[107][108] before ending his campaign on March 21, 2013 without endorsing another candidate.[109]

Date campaign launched: November 7, 2012[108]
Date campaign ended: March 21, 2013[109]
Campaign website: davidbertschi.ca
Supporters

Marc Garneau

Marc Garneau
Background

MP for Westmount—Ville-Marie, Quebec (2008–present)
Liberal House Leader (2011–2012)
Retired astronaut
Retired Captain in the Royal Canadian Navy
Former President of the Canadian Space Agency (2001-2005)
Garneau stood for the position of interim leadership but was passed over in favour of Bob Rae.[36]
Garneau withdrew on March 13, 2013 and endorsed Justin Trudeau after concluding that the latter's lead was insurmountable.[112] Garneau had previously suggested that Trudeau lacked substance and was "untested".[113]

Date campaign launched: November 28, 2012[114]
Date campaign ended: March 13, 2013[113][115]
Campaign website: marcgarneau.ca
Supporters

George Takach

George Takach
Background

Toronto based technology lawyer. Takach declared his candidacy in November 2012, but withdrew from the race on February 25, 2013 and endorsed Justin Trudeau.[119]

Takach was born in Toronto of Hungarian descent. He went to the University of Toronto for his BA and received his MA in International Relations from Carleton University.

During the campaign he supported improvements to the country's high-tech infrastructure. He also supported the legalization of marijuana and was opposed to a merger with the NDP.[120][121][122]

Date campaign launched: November 29, 2012[123]
Date campaign ended: February 25, 2013[119]
Campaign website: georgetakach.ca
Supporters
Other information

Candidates who withdrew before registering

Declined to run

Newspaper endorsements

Newspaper Candidate Endorsed Reference
The Prince Arthur HeraldMartha Hall Findlay[150]
Toronto StarJustin Trudeau[151]

Results

The voter turnout was 82.16% of all registered voters.[152][153]

     = Winner
First Ballot
Candidate
Votes cast % Points allocated %
Justin Trudeau 81,389 78.76% 24,668.71 80.09%
Joyce Murray 12,148 11.76% 3,130.76 10.16%
Martha Hall Findlay 6,585 6.37% 1,760.43 5.72%
Martin Cauchon 1,630 1.58% 815.86 2.65%
Deborah Coyne 833 0.81% 214.14 0.70%
Karen McCrimmon 757 0.73% 210.08 0.68%
Rejected Ballots 1,210
Total 104,552 100.00 30,800 100.00

Justin Trudeau won the most points in all but 5 of the 308 ridings, with the remaining 5 (British Columbia Southern Interior, Vancouver East, Vancouver Island North, Vancouver Kingsway, and Vancouver Quadra) all being won by Joyce Murray.[152]

Opinion polling

All Canadians

Polling firm Last date
of polling
Link Sample
size
Mark
Carney
Deborah
Coyne
Ken
Dryden
Marc
Garneau
Martha
Hall
Findlay
Gerard
Kennedy
Dominic
LeBlanc
David
McGuinty
Joyce
Murray
Bob
Rae
Justin
Trudeau
Other/
Undecided
Forum Research January 17, 2013 PDF 1,626 2% 10% 3% 2% 34% Don't know 26%
None of these 19%
Martin Cauchon 3%
George Takach 1%
Forum Research December 18, 2012 PDF 1,355 1% 12% 2% 2% 39% None of these 23%
Don't know 19%
David Bertschi 1%
George Takach 1%
Léger Marketing December 6, 2012 PDF 1,500 1% 16% 3% 0% 38% Don't know 42%
David Bertschi 0%
Alex Burton 0%
Karen McCrimmon 0%
David Merner 0%
Jonathan Mousley 0%
René Roy 0%
George Takach 0%
Forum Research June 15, 2012 PDF 1,529 4% 4% 5% 4% 6% 23% Don't know 44%
John Manley 7%
Scott Brison 4%
Forum Research April 26, 2012 PDF 1,744 4% 8% 3% 5% 3% 6% 18% 17% Don't know 42%
Forum Research February 6, 2012 PDF 736 5% 12% 6% 7% 4% 6% 33% 26%
Forum Research January 13, 2012 PDF 1,211 4% 9% 4% 5% 3% 21% Don't know 46%
Dalton McGuinty 4%
Naheed Nenshi 4%

Liberal supporters only

Polling firm Last date
of polling
Link Sample
size
Mark
Carney
Deborah
Coyne
Ken
Dryden
Marc
Garneau
Martha
Hall
Findlay
Gerard
Kennedy
Dominic
LeBlanc
David
McGuinty
Joyce
Murray
Bob
Rae
Justin
Trudeau
Other/
Undecided
Forum Research January 17, 2013 PDF 367 1% 6% 3% 3% 63% Don't know 16%
None of these 4%
Martin Cauchon 2%
George Takach 2%
Forum Research December 18, 2012 PDF 337 1% 16% 3% 1% 63% Don't know 11%
None of these 3%
David Bertschi 1%
George Takach 1%
Léger Marketing December 6, 2012 PDF 248 1% 20% 2% 0% 60% Don't know 16%
David Merner 1%
David Bertschi 0%
Alex Burton 0%
Karen McCrimmon 0%
Jonathan Mousley 0%
René Roy 0%
George Takach 0%
Forum Research June 15, 2012 PDF 333 6% 4% 5% 4% 9% 33% Don't know 26
John Manley 7%
Scott Brison 6%
Forum Research April 26, 2012 PDF 365 4% 7% 2% 8% 1% 2% 30% 24% Don't know 21%
Forum Research February 6, 2012 PDF 221 4% 5% 3% 5% 3% 9% 40% 30%
Forum Research January 13, 2012 PDF 223 12% 9% 8% 7% 6% 47% Dalton McGuinty 8%
Naheed Nenshi 3%
Léger Marketing September 15, 2011 HTML 243 5% 4% 19% 21% Jean Charest 6%
Denis Coderre 3%

See also

External links

References

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