Historical rankings of prime ministers of Canada explained

Surveys have been conducted to construct historical rankings of individuals who have served as prime minister of Canada. These ranking systems are usually based on surveys of academic historians, economists and political scientists. The rankings focus on the achievements, leadership qualities, failures and faults in office.

Scholar survey results

Canadian custom is to count by the individuals who were prime minister, not by terms.[1] Since Confederation, 23 prime ministers have been "called upon" by the governor general to form 29 Canadian ministries.[1]

Legend
Blue backgrounds indicate first quartile.Green backgrounds indicate second quartile.Orange backgrounds indicate third quartile.Red backgrounds indicate fourth quartile.

Note: Click the "sort" icon at the head of each column to view the rankings for each survey in numerical order.

SequencePrime Minister Political party Maclean's 1997[2] Maclean's 2011[3] Maclean's 2016[4] Aggr.[5] Time in office (rank)
1 Conservative2 2 3 03 2
2 11 13 13 13 14
3 [6] Conservative 17 19 20 20 18
4 Conservative 10 14 16 15 16
5 Conservative 19 21 21 22 19
6 Conservative 16 18 19 19 23
7 Liberal 3 1 2 02 4
8 7 8 9 08 8
9 Conservative 14 16 17 17 17
10 Liberal 13 1 01 1
11 Conservative 12 12 14 14 12
12 Liberal 4 7 6 06 9
13 13 10 12 12 11
14 Liberal 6 4 5 05 13
15 Liberal 5 5 4 04 3
16 Progressive Conservative 15 17 18 18 20
17 Liberal 18 20 22 21 22
18 Progressive Conservative 8 9 8 09 7
19 Progressive Conservative 20 22 23 23 21
20 Liberal 9[7] 6 7 07 5
21 Liberal - 15 15 16 15
22 - 11 11 11 6
23 Liberal - - 10 10 10

Sequence listed by first term as prime minister.

By approval rating

The following is a list of prime ministers of Canada by their highest and lowest approval rating during their term. The approval rating system came into effect when John Diefenbaker was prime minister (1957–1963).

Highest approval rating

1. Jean Chrétien66% (September 1994)[8]

2. Justin Trudeau65% (September 2016)[9]

3. John Diefenbaker64% (June 1958)[8]

3. Stephen Harper64% (March 2006)[8]

5. Brian Mulroney61% (June 1985)[8]

6. Paul Martin56% (September 2004)[8]

6. Lester B. Pearson56% (January 1966)[8]

8. Pierre Trudeau55% (September 1972)[8]

9. Kim Campbell53% (July 1993)[8]

10. Joe Clark32% (November 1979)[8]

Lowest approval rating

1. Brian Mulroney12% (November 1992)[8]

2. Stephen Harper23% (May 2013)[8]

3. Joe Clark24% (January 1980)[8]

4. Pierre Trudeau25% (September 1982)

5. Justin Trudeau28% (April 2024)[10]

6. John Diefenbaker34% (March 1963)[8]

7. Jean Chrétien36% (June 2000)[8]

8. Paul Martin41% (June 2005)[8]

8. Lester B. Pearson41% (September 1965)[8]

10. Kim Campbell48% (October 1993)[8]

Other surveys

The Institute for Research on Public Policy undertook a survey to rank the prime ministers who had served in the 50 years preceding 2003.[11] They ranked those nine prime ministers as follows:

  1. Pearson
  2. Mulroney
  3. Pierre Trudeau
  4. St. Laurent
  5. Chrétien
  6. Diefenbaker
  7. Clark ^
  8. Turner ^
  9. Campbell ^

^ Served less than 10 months as prime minister, while all others served for more than 4 years, 11 months.

In October 2016, Maclean's again ranked the prime ministers, this time splitting them into two lists. The long-serving prime ministers were ranked as follows:

  1. King
  2. Laurier
  3. Macdonald
  4. Pierre Trudeau
  5. Pearson
  6. St. Laurent
  7. Chrétien
  8. Mulroney
  9. Borden
  10. Harper
  11. Diefenbaker
  12. Mackenzie
  13. Bennett

The short-term prime ministers were ranked as follows:

  1. Martin
  2. Thompson
  3. Meighen
  4. Clark
  5. Tupper
  6. Abbott
  7. Bowell
  8. Turner
  9. Campbell

See also

Other countries

Further reading

See also: List of books about prime ministers of Canada.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Prime Ministers of Canada . Library of the Canadian Parliament . 2023-02-26.
  2. Hillmer, Norman and Granatstein, J. L. "Historians rank the BEST AND WORST Canadian Prime Ministers" . Maclean's. April 21, 1997. Accessed July 9, 2012.
  3. Hillmer, Norman and Azzi, Stephen. "Canada's best prime ministers", Maclean's, June 10, 2011. Accessed July 9, 2012.
  4. Azzi, Stephen and Hillmer, Norman. "Ranking Canada's best and worst prime ministers" Maclean's, October 7, 2016. Accessed June 22, 2017.
  5. Aggregate of all polls in the table using Copeland's method.
  6. Served less than 2 years, 3 months as prime minister, while all others served for more than 4 years, 11 months. There is a strong correlation between time served in office and the poll rankings: the bottom quartile of the aggregate poll rankings are all in the bottom quartile of time served in office. Similarly, the top four prime ministers in terms of aggregate rankings are in the top four of time spent in office.
  7. Ranking calculated before the prime minister had left office.
  8. Web site: Éric Grenier's Leader Meter . 2018-12-19 . . 2022-02-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210127042907/https://www.cbc.ca/news2/interactives/leadermeter/index.html . 2021-01-27.
  9. Web site: Trudeau Tracker . . 2024-02-04.
  10. Web site: Korzinski . David . 2024-04-24 . No Bounce: Liberals' hoped-for support surge in wake of under-40 targeted spending blitz has yet to materialize . 2024-04-24 . Angus Reid Institute . en-US.
  11. MacDonald, L. Ian. "The Best Prime Minister of the Last 50 Years - Pearson, by a landslide," Policy Options, June–July 2003. Accessed April 3, 2014.