Yukon Progressive Conservative Party | |
Native Name: | Parti progressiste-conservateur du Yukon |
Subheader: | Former territorial party |
Successor: | Yukon Party |
Ideology: | Conservatism |
Position: | Centre–right |
Colours: | Blue |
Blank1 Title: | Fiscal policy |
Blank2 Title: | Social policy |
Seats1 Title: | Seats in the House of Commons |
Seats2 Title: | Seats in the Senate |
Seats3 Title: | Seats in Legislature |
Country: | Canada |
State: | Yukon |
Parties Dab1: | List of political parties in Yukon |
Elections Dab1: | List of Yukon general elections |
The Yukon Progressive Conservative Party (French: Parti progressiste-conservateur du Yukon) was a conservative political party in Yukon, Canada. It was succeeded by the Yukon Party.
The Yukon Progressive Conservative Party was founded in April 1978. Long time Yukon legislator Hilda Watson was elected the party's first leader defeating Yukon MP Erik Nielsen by one vote.[1] Watson had been a member of the territorial Legislative Council since 1970, and became the first woman in Canadian history to lead a political party into a general election. However, she was unable to win a seat in the 1978 election, and consequently resigned. Chris Pearson became leader of the party as well as the government.
The Progressive Conservatives were defeated in the 1985 election by the Yukon New Democratic Party (NDP) led by Tony Penikett. With Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservative federal government's increasing unpopularity, the Yukon Progressive Conservatives decided to sever their relations with the federal Conservatives, and renamed themselves the "Yukon Party" prior to the 1992 election.
Election | Leader | % | Seats | +/– | Position | Government | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | Hilda Watson | 37.1 | 11 | 1st | |||
1982 | Chris Pearson | 46.9 | 1 | 1st | |||
1985 | Willard Phelps | 46.9 | 4 | 2nd | |||
1989 | Willard Phelps | 46.9 | 1 | 2nd |