1874 Canadian election - Polsearch
About us  |  Why use us?  |  Press  |  Contact us

 

Topic: 1874 Canadian election


  
 Canadian federal election, 1993 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The election was held under the Election Expenses Act of 1974.
The Canadian federal election of 1993 was held on October 25, 1993.
The election was called by new Progressive Conservative Party leader Kim Campbell, near the end of her party's five year mandate.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993_Canadian_election   (3891 words)

  
 canadian federal election
Canadian federal elections are nation-wide votes that are held to decide who will govern Canada.
The Prime Minister may ask the Governor General to call an election at virtually any time, although one must be called within five years of the last election.
Currently, about two-thirds of eligible voters vote in federal elections.
http://www.yourencyclopedia.net/Canadian_federal_election   (916 words)

  
 Federal
Canadian federal election, 1867 The 1867 election was the first election for the new nation of The Province of Canada wh...
Canadian federal election, 1957 The 1957 Canadian election was held John Diefenbaker.
Canadian federal election, 1988 The 1988 Canadian federal election was an election largely fought on a single issue: the...
http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/federal.html   (2983 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: James Cockburn
The Canadian federal election of 1878 resulted in the end of Canada suffered an economic depression during Mackenzies term, and his party was pounished by the voters for it.
The Canadian federal election of 1874 was held on January 22, 1874.
Speakers of the Canadian House of Commons In Canada the Speaker of the House of Commons is the presiding officer of the lower house and is elected by fellow MPs.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/James-Cockburn   (1117 words)

  
 Edward Blake biography .ms
The Liberals won the subsequent 1874 Canadian election, Blake joined the federal cabinet of Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie serving as Minister of Justice and President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada.
Blake became leader of the Ontario Liberal Party in 1868 and became Premier in 1871 but left provincial politics the next year to run in the 1872 Canadian election.
Blake resigned as Liberal leader in 1887, recruiting Wilfrid Laurier as his successor, and left the Canadian House of Commons in 1891 in order to move to Britain.
http://edward-blake.biography.ms   (276 words)

  
 Dictionary of Canadian Biography
Elections for the federal house and by-elections for the provincial one had to be fought, and there was always his family.
The provincial election of 1850 gave the association and Tilley their opportunity.
His government was returned with a comfortable majority in a June election.
http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBioPrintable.asp?BioId=40589   (7927 words)

  
 Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
Riel’s election to the House of Commons for Provencher in January 1874 and the arrest, conviction, and sentencing of Ambroise-Dydime Lépine*, Riel’s lieutenant, on the Scott matter, made amnesty a lively issue.
Mackenzie had nevertheless demonstrated his ability, in the election and in his overlapping involvement at the provincial level.
This act was associated with the postal convention that year with the United States to expedite the passage of mail in North America.
http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=40374   (10971 words)

  
 New Democratic Party: Information From Answers.com
This status was regained in the 1997 election, in which 21 New Democrats were elected.
In the May 2002 by-elections, Brian Masse won the riding of Windsor West in Windsor, Ontario, previously held for decades by a Liberal, former Deputy Prime Minister Herb Gray.
In 1989, Broadbent stepped down after 15 years as federal leader of the NDP, although he has recently returned from retirement, and won election to Parliament in the riding of Ottawa Centre in the 2004 election.
http://www.answers.com/topic/new-democratic-party   (2097 words)

  
 Liberal Party of Canada
Mackenzie King appointed Vincent Massey the first Canadian ambassador to Washington in 1926, marking the Liberal government's insistence on having direct relations with the United States rather than having Britain act on Canada's behalf.
After the King-Byng Affair of 1926, the Liberals argued that the Governor General of Canada should no longer be appointed on the recommendation of the British government.
Gordon Campbell, MLA, Premier of British Columbia, leader) use the Liberal name but are completely independent of the federal party and function as coalitions of Liberal and Conservative supporters.
http://www.1-free-software.com/en/wikipedia/l/li/liberal_party_of_canada.html   (1953 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Arthur Meighen (Canadian History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Entering (1908) the Canadian House of Commons as a Liberal-Conservative, he became solicitor general (1913), secretary of state and minister of mines (1917), and minister of the interior (1917).
He was chosen prime minister in 1920 but resigned in 1921 after his defeat in the general election.
A lawyer, he began his career in Manitoba.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/M/Meighen.html   (219 words)

  
 Bermuda and Canada
It was on one of the Canadian National Steamships' 'Ladyboats' much loved in Bermuda that the Duke of Windsor and his wife, the former Wallis Warfield Simpson, sailed in 1940 from Bermuda to Nassau, Bahamas, where the Duke became the wartime Governor of the Bahamas.
From the British Canadian attack on New England during the War of 1812-14 came the lucrative Halifax based Castine Fund of 1814, based on income from British possession of the US Customs port of Castine (now Maine, then in Massachusetts), a major beneficiary of which was Dalhousie College.
There were Canadian sympathizers and followers among the 4,400 or so Boer War prisoners shipped by Britain from South Africa to Bermuda and confined here, on several islands in the Great Sound, from 1901-1902, until repatriated.
http://www.bermuda-online.org/canada.htm   (7677 words)

  
 The Canadian Celebrities Site -- Misc. Celebrities
In the election that shortly followed he and his party won 59 percent of the seats in the House of Commons.
Born in 1885 in Montreal to a Liberal senator.
In the fall of 1972 (with the October crisis only a short 2 years behind him) he and his Liberals won the federal election with only a minority government.
http://www.canadiancelebs.com/others.html   (3059 words)

  
 Canada 2004 · Voter Turnout · Canadian Federal Election 2004
In many general elections, several electoral districts were won by acclamation, hence, no eligible voters nor actual votes were recorded.
Canada 2004 · Voter Turnout · Canadian Federal Election 2004
Furthermore, in some of the more remote districts, votes were cast but no voters' lists had been prepared.
http://www.nodice.ca/election2004/voterturnout.html   (92 words)

  
 POL 211 CANADIAN POLITICAL PARTIES 1998-99
John C. Courtney and David E. Smith, "Voting in a Provincial General Election and a Federal By-election: A Constituency Study of Saskatoon City," CJEPS 32 (1966), 338-353.
the 1968 Federal Election in Ontario," in Kruhlak, 267-283.
John C. Courtney and David E. Smith, "Voting in a Provincial General Election and a Federal By-Election: A Constituency Study of Saskatoon City," CJEPS 32, No. 3 (1966), 338-353.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~clarkson/courses/pol211y_bib.html   (12248 words)

  
 [No title]
This election was the last time that the
Québec wing of the party that had split from the English Canadian party, met with great success.
Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, had won a surprise victory over Paul Martin Sr.
http://en-cyclopedia.com/wiki/1968_Canadian_election   (518 words)

  
 CBC.ca - The Greatest Canadian - Top Ten Greatest Canadians - Sir John A. Macdonald
The British Parliament passed the BNA Act and on July 1, 1867, a nation was born.
The deal was soon uncovered and dubbed "the Pacific Scandal." Newspapers discovered telegrams showing that Macdonald and Cartier accepted large sums of money from Allan, while the government was considering bids to construct the railway, Macdonald and his government resigned on November 5, 1873 - the same time Prince Edward Island joined Canada.
In early 1855, Macdonald would push through a controversial bill on separate schools, an issue close to French Roman Catholics, over the objections of his Protestant, Upper Canadian electorate.
http://www.cbc.ca/greatest/top_ten/nominee/macdonald-john.html   (1617 words)

  
 A Brief Canadian History
Douglas led the first socialist government elected in Canada and is recognized as the father of socialized medicine.
Nevertheless, Bennett lost the Oct 1935 general election, and in Jan 1937 the JUDICAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL declared most of the “New Deal” ULTRA VIVRES.
First leader of the CO-OPERATIVE COMMONWEALTH FEDERATION (CCF), he was the best known of the reformed-minded SOCIAL GOSPEL ministers and led many of them into the politics of democratic socialism.
http://www.abriefcanadianhistory.com/tgdbrief.html   (387 words)

  
 GuruNet — Content Map
Canadian federal election results in the Côte-Nord and Saguenay
Canadian federal election results in the Laurentides, Outaouais and Northern Quebec
Canadian federal election results in Northern Montreal and Laval
http://www.gurunet.com/cm-dsid-2222-letter-1C-first-3551   (81 words)

  
 1874 Canadian election
election election result election 2000 county election election results recall election ontario election california election presidential election election information history election rules election nova scotia political cowardice election
evote.ca Canadian company which runs elections acting both as election officer and as a technology provider
Canadian Federal Election Riding-by-Riding Prediction Uses information submitted by political junkies with their ears to the ground to predict the result of the upcoming federal election riding by riding.
http://www.serebella.com/encyclopedia/article-1874_Canadian_election.html   (371 words)

  
 1874 in Canada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
January 22 - Federal election: Alexander Mackenzie's Liberals win a majority
See also: 1873 in Canada, other events of 1874, 1875 in Canada and the list of 'years in Canada'.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1874_in_Canada   (279 words)

  
 Letter C Dictionary of Meaning www.mauspfeil.net
Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C. Canadian embassy in Washington.JPG
There you find a list of all editors and the possibility to edit the original text of the article Canadian federal election, 1911.
http://www.mauspfeil.net/C_96.html   (72 words)

  
 [No title]
2004 general election, mostly in Nova Scotia, and in the
The party has nominated 16 candidates for the
Under new provisions of the Canada Elections Act that took effect on May 14, 2004, the party need only nominate one candidate in order to qualify for
http://en-cyclopedia.com/wiki/Progressive_Canadian_Party   (286 words)

  
 New Books
Crux of Election: Paul’s Critique of the Jewish Confidence in the Election of Israel
Election Law of Bosnia & Herzegovina [In English & Bosnian]
Charters of Foundations and Early Documents of the Universities of the Coimbra Group, 2nd Revised Edition
http://www.coronetbooks.com/new.html   (6741 words)

  
 Canadian Eleciton Results: 1867-2000
**Note that the official voter turnout figure in 2000 is 61.2%, but that Elections Canada later realized that this was based on a voters' list that was artificially inflated by almost a million duplicate names.
Source: Party Candidates and Votes: Library of Parliament; Turnout: Elections Canada
1997 (June 2) - Turnout: 67.0 % View Detailed Results of 1997 Elections
http://www.sfu.ca/~aheard/elections/1867-2000.html   (104 words)

  
 Canadian federal election, 1874 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Canadian federal election of 1874 was held on January 22, 1874, to elect members of the Canadian House of Commons.
For a list of candidates elected in the 1874 election, see 3rd Canadian Parliament.
The election was the first to use secret ballots in Canada.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_federal_election%2C_1874   (205 words)

  
 Canadian HO Slot Car Bulletin Board
1983 - Turkey Turgut ™zals Moederland party wins elections
1932 - German election - KPD defeats NSDAP
http://canho.ca/modules.php?name=Calendar   (1735 words)

  
 1874 in music - encyclopedia article about 1874 in music.
Written in 1874 for violinist Pablo de Sarasate, it was premiered in Paris, France in February of 1875.
- Serge Koussevitzky Sergei Aleksandrovich Koussevitzky (July 26, 1874 – June 4, 1951), better known as Serge, was a Russian-born conductor, best known for his long tenure as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1924 to 1949.
Her family moved to Chicago, Illinois, USA in her childhood.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/1874%20in%20music   (2108 words)

  
 Vintage Stock Theatre Vintage Stock Theatre
A brash American Senator comes to the Village and tries to convince the residents that maybe amalgamation with the United States isn't such a bad thing.
Set against the backdrop of the 1874 Canadian federal election this is intrigue of a different sort, where not only do you have to figure out whodunit, by why it was done.
The local municipal election is also coming up and the Reeve is in full campaign mode.
http://www.vintagestock.on.ca/weblog.php?id=C0_6_1   (535 words)

  
 1874 Canadian election - Definition up Erdmond.Com
Books and Others to the Term: "1874 Canadian election".
A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
http://www.erdmond.com/1874_Canadian_election.html   (51 words)

 About us   |  Why use us?   |  Press   |  Contact us

 Copyright © 2006 Polsearch.com Usage implies agreement with terms.