1951 Prince Edward Island general election explained

Election Name:1951 Prince Edward Island general election
Country:Prince Edward Island
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Party Colour:no
Party Name:no
Previous Election:1947 Prince Edward Island general election
Previous Year:1947
Previous Mps:46th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island
Elected Mps:members
Next Election:1955 Prince Edward Island general election
Next Year:1955
Next Mps:48th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island
Seats For Election:All 30 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island
Majority Seats:16
Leader1:J. Walter Jones
Leader Since1:1943
Leaders Seat1:4th Queens
Last Election1:24 seats, 50.3%
Seats1:24
Popular Vote1:40,847
Percentage1:51.6%
Swing1:1.3pp
Leader2:Reginald Bell
Leader Since2:1950
Leaders Seat2:2nd Queens
Last Election2:6 seats, 45.3%
Seats2:6
Popular Vote2:36,921
Percentage2:46.7%
Swing2:1.4pp
Premier
Posttitle:Premier after election
Before Election:J. Walter Jones
After Election:J. Walter Jones

The 1951 Prince Edward Island general election was held in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island on April 26, 1951.[1]

The governing Liberals of Premier J. Walter Jones held on to their majority in the Legislature over the opposition Progressive Conservatives led by Reginald Bell, who was elected leader of the party in 1950. Both parties kept the same number of seats they earned in the previous election, though eight seats did change hands.

The democratic socialist Co-operative Commonwealth Federation fell back from their previous high in 1947, losing over half of their vote. This would be the last election contested by the CCF or any third party in provincial PEI elections until the CCF's successor, the New Democratic Party, ran in by-elections in 1972.

This election featured the first female candidate for office, Hilda Ramsay, who came in third while running for the CCF as Councillor in 3rd Prince.[2]

Party Standings

246
LiberalPC

Members elected

The Legislature of Prince Edward Island had two levels of membership from 1893 to 1996 - Assemblymen and Councillors. This was a holdover from when the Island had a bicameral legislature, the General Assembly and the Legislative Council.

In 1893, the Legislative Council was abolished and had its membership merged with the Assembly, though the two titles remained separate and were elected by different electoral franchises. Assembleymen were elected by all eligible voters of within a district, while Councillors were only elected by landowners within a district.[3]

Kings

DistrictAssemblymanPartyCouncillorParty
1st Kings   William AcornLiberal   Brenton St. JohnLiberal
2nd Kings   Harvey DouglasLiberal   Thomas R. CullenLiberal
3rd Kings   John A. MacDonaldProgressive
Conservative
   Keir ClarkLiberal
4th Kings   Lorne BonnellLiberal   Alexander Wallace MathesonLiberal
5th Kings   William HughesLiberal   George SavilleLiberal

Queens

DistrictAssemblymanPartyCouncillorParty
1st Queens   Frank MyersProgressive
Conservative
   W. F. Alan StewartLiberal
2nd Queens   George KitsonLiberal   Reginald BellProgressive
Conservative
3rd Queens   Russell C. ClarkLiberal   Eugene CullenLiberal
4th Queens   Dougald MacKinnonLiberal   John Walter JonesLiberal
5th Queens   Earle MacDonaldLiberal   William J. P. MacMillanProgressive
Conservative

Prince

DistrictAssemblymanPartyCouncillorParty
1st Prince   Hubert GaudetProgressive
Conservative
   Don CampbellProgressive
Conservative
2nd Prince   Walter DarbyLiberal   Forrest PhillipsLiberal
3rd Prince   J. Wilfred ArsenaultLiberal   Frank MacNuttLiberal
4th Prince   J. George MacKayLiberal   
Cleveland BakerLiberal
5th Prince   Edward P. FoleyLiberal   Lorne H. MacFarlaneLiberal

Sources

  1. Web site: Provincial General Election Results, 1951 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150525203458/http://www.electionspei.ca/pdfs/ceoreports/results/1951Report.pdf . dead . May 25, 2015 . Elections PEI .
  2. Web site: Women in Politics . Elections PEI.
  3. Web site: History and Politics of Prince Edward Island . Fred Driscoll . Canadian Parliamentary Review.