1972 British Columbia general election explained

Election Name:1972 British Columbia general election
Country:British Columbia
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Party Colour:no
Party Name:no
Previous Election:1969 British Columbia general election
Previous Year:1969
Next Election:1975 British Columbia general election
Next Year:1975
Seats For Election:55 seats to the 30th Legislative Assembly of British Columbia
28 seats were needed for a majority
Election Date:August 30, 1972
Image1:Dave Barrett, 1975.jpg
Leader1:Dave Barrett
Leader Since1:1969
Leaders Seat1:Coquitlam
Last Election1:12 seats,
Seats1:38
Seat Change1: 26
Popular Vote1:448,260
Percentage1:39.59%
Swing1: 5.67
Leader2:W. A. C. Bennett
Leader Since2:1952
Leaders Seat2:South Okanagan
Last Election2:38 seats,
Seats2:10
Seat Change2: 28
Popular Vote2:352,776
Percentage2:31.16%
Swing2: 15.63
Leader4:David Anderson
Leader Since4:1972
Leaders Seat4:Victoria
Last Election4:5 seats,
Seats4:5
Seat Change4: 0
Popular Vote4:185,640
Percentage4:16.40%
Swing4: 2.63
Image5: PC
Leader5:Derril Thomas Warren
Leader Since5:1971
Leaders Seat5:Ran in North Vancouver-Seymour (lost)
Last Election5:0 seats,
Seats5:2
Seat Change5: 2
Popular Vote5:143,450
Percentage5:12.67%
Swing5:12.56
Premier
Before Election:W. A. C. Bennett
Posttitle:Premier after election
After Election:Dave Barrett
Elected Members:30th Parliament of British Columbia#Members of the 30th General Assembly
Outgoing Members:29th Parliament of British Columbia#Members of the 29th General Assembly

The 1972 British Columbia general election for the Canadian province of British Columbia was held to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. The election was called on July 24, 1972, and held on August 30, 1972. The new legislature met for the first time on October 17, 1972. David Barrett led the social democratic New Democratic Party to victory, winning a majority government.

The Social Credit Party, led by Premier W. A. C. Bennett, were defeated after governing British Columbia since the 1952 election. Social Credit's share of the popular vote fell by over 15 percentage points, and the party lost 28 of the seats it had won in the previous election.

The Liberal Party held onto its five seats, while the Progressive Conservative Party, under the leadership of Derrill Warren, returned to the legislature for the first time since the 1953 election by winning two seats.

In four ridings and part of a fifth, a referendum was held on the question of daylight saving time and which time zone to use concurrently with the election.

Social Credit ran a lackluster campaign beset by gaffes. A week before the general election, cabinet minister Phil Gaglardi remarked to a newspaper that Bennett would resign after the election, calling him "an old man who doesn't understand what is happening with the young people of this province".[1] The remark proved damaging, bringing the issue of whether Bennett and his party were worn out after 20 years in office to the forefront of the campaign.[2] A pre-campaign visit by Bennett and his cabinet to New Westminster turned violent after they were confronted by demonstrators, who injured eight ministers, a melee for which Bennett tried to blame Barrett. Shortly after the Social Credit campaign started, Bennett was tricked into shaking hands with current Progressive Conservative leader Derril Warren in front of a photographer from The Province. After the photograph, depicting a smiling Warren and scowling Bennett, was published on The Provinces front page, Bennett spent the rest of the campaign antagonising the media, refusing to tell reporters where he was appearing.

Barrett benefited from his youth, allowing the media to contrast him with the aged Bennett, and ran a campaign focused on "people issues" such as urban transit, public auto insurance, and increased royalties from the province's timber and minerals industries. Late in the campaign, Bennett declared at a Social Credit rally, "The socialist hordes are at the gates of British Columbia!"

Although Bennett's campaign had been lacklustre, no commentators anticipated the party's loss. The resulting NDP majority came as a surprise.[3] Historian David J. Mitchell wrote, "The surprise was not just [the Social Credit] defeat, but its magnitude." In his victory speech, Barrett told supporters that ten thousand people had worked for 40 years to get the NDP and its predecessor, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, elected into office, and vowed, "I will not let their hopes or aspirations down."

Results

|- bgcolor="CCCCCC"!rowspan="2" colspan="2"|Party!rowspan="2"|Party leader!rowspan="2"|# of
candidates!colspan="3"|Seats!colspan="3"|Popular vote|- bgcolor="CCCCCC"|align="center"|1969|align="center"|Elected|align="center"|% Change|align="center"|#|align="center"|%|align="center"|% Change|align="left"|Dave Barrett|align="right"|55|align="right"|12|align="right"|38|align="right"| +217% |align="right"|448,260|align="right"|39.59% |align="right"| +5.67% |align="left"|W. A. C. Bennett|align="right"|55|align="right"|38|align="right"|10|align="right"|-73.7%|align="right"|352,776|align="right"|31.16% |align="right"|-15.63%|align="left"|David Anderson|align="right"|53|align="right"|5|align="right"|5|align="right"| - |align="right"|185,640|align="right"| 16.40% |align="right"|-2.63%|align="left"|Derril Thomas Warren|align="right"|49|align="right"|-|align="right"|2|align="right"|- |align="right"|143,450|align="right"| 12.67% |align="right"|+12.56% | colspan="2" align="left"|Independent|align="right"|9|align="right"|-|align="right"|-|align="right"| - |align="right"|1,184|align="right"|0.10% |align="right"|+0.02% |colspan="2" align="left"|Communist Party|align="right"|15|align="right"|-|align="right"|-|align="right"| -|align="right"|862|align="right"|0.08% |align="right"| +0.03% |- |colspan="3"|Total!align="right"|226!align="right"|55!align="right"|55!align="right"| - !align="right"|1,132,172!align="right"| 100% |align="center"| |-| align="center" colspan="10"|Source: [4] |-|}

See also

Notes

  1. Book: Mitchell. David J.. W.A.C. Bennett and the Rise of British Columbia. 1983. 0-88894-395-4. 414. registration.
  2. Web site: Griffin. Norm. Rogers. Bruce. 1972: Dave Barrett elected Premier of B.C.. CBC Digital Archives. Radio program. CBC Radio: Sunday Magazine. 5 June 2016. 3 September 1972.
  3. Web site: Dawes. Harvey. B.C. Elections: Voters react to NDP victory in B.C.. CBC Digital Archives. Hourglass News. 5 June 2016. Television program. 31 August 1972.
  4. Web site: Electoral History of British Columbia 1871-1986 Part One 30th General Election 1972 . https://web.archive.org/web/20041221095859/http://www.elections.bc.ca/elections/electoral_history/30ge1972-1.html . 2004-12-21 . elections.bc.ca . dead.