1935 Prince Edward Island general election

{{short description|Canadian provincial election}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2023}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1935 Prince Edward Island general election

| country = Prince Edward Island

| type = parliamentary

| party_colour = no

| party_name = no

| previous_election = 1931 Prince Edward Island general election

| previous_year = 1931

| previous_mps = 42nd General Assembly of Prince Edward Island

| next_election = 1939 Prince Edward Island general election

| election_date = {{Start date|1935|07|23}}

| elected_mps = members

| next_year = 1939

| next_mps = 44th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island

| seats_for_election = 30 seats of the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island

| majority_seats = 16

| opinions_polls =

| turnout =

| image1 = 175x175px

| colour1 = {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|nohash}}

| leader1 = Walter Lea

| leader_since1 = 1930

| party1 = {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|name}}

| leaders_seat1 = 4th Prince

| last_election1 = 12 seats, 48.3%

| seats_before1 =

| seats1 = 30

| seat_change1 = {{increase}}18

| popular_vote1 = 43,824

| percentage1 = 57.9%

| swing1 = {{increase}}9.6pp

| image2 = 175x175px

| colour2 = {{Canadian party colour|PE|PC|nohash}}

| leader2 = William J. P. MacMillan

| leader_since2 = 1933

| party2 = {{Canadian party colour|PE|Conservative|name}}

| leaders_seat2 = 5th Queens (lost)

| last_election2 = 18 seats, 51.7%

| seats_before2 =

| seats2 = 0

| seat_change2 = {{decrease}}18

| popular_vote2 = 31,840

| percentage2 = 42.1%

| swing2 = {{decrease}}9.6pp

| map_image = Prince_Edward_Island_General_Election_1935.png

| map_size = 300px

| map_alt =

| map_caption = Map of PEI's ridings coloured in based on how they voted

| title = Premier

| posttitle = Premier after election

| before_election = William J. P. MacMillan

| before_party = {{Canadian party colour|PE|Conservative|name}}

| after_election = Walter Lea

| after_party = {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|name}}

}}

The 1935 Prince Edward Island general election was held in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island on 23 July 1935.{{cite web | url=http://www.electionspei.ca/pdfs/ceoreports/results/1935Report.pdf | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150518220221/http://www.electionspei.ca/pdfs/ceoreports/results/1935Report.pdf | url-status=dead | archive-date=May 18, 2015 | title=Provincial General Election Results, 1935 | publisher=Elections PEI }} The Liberal Party led by Walter Lea swept the board by winning every seat in every constituency. This was the first time that a government in the British Commonwealth would face no opposition in an elected chamber.{{cite web | url=http://www.peildo.ca/fedora/repository/leg:25457 | title=Walter Maxfield Lea | publisher=PEI Legislative Documents Online}} To date, this feat has only been accomplished one other time in Canadian history, the 1987 New Brunswick election.

Background

The 1935 election took place in the shadow of the Great Depression. In 1931, the Conservative Party, then under James David Stewart, defeated the incumbent Liberal government, installing Stewart as Premier. As Premier, Stewart worked to get federal assistance in combating the Depression, but stress caused him to die in office in 1933.

When Stewart's health was failing, he was replaced by Acting Premier William J. P. MacMillan, who took over for Stewart upon his death. MacMillan continued Stewart's policies of increased economic spending and government assistance, until the election in 1935.

Walter Lea, a farmer by trade, had been elected to the Legislature in 1915, and had been Premier before Stewart from 1930–31. During his time as Premier, he "undertook many initiatives to improve and diversify the island’s agricultural industry".{{cite web|title=Lea's Landslide|url=http://www.canadashistory.ca/Magazine/Online-Exclusive/Articles/Lea-s-Landslide#.UpdiUwJGBJc.email|publisher=Canada's History|accessdate=28 November 2013}} After his loss to James Stewart, he continued in opposition until 1935. By the time the 1935 election came around, Lea was very ill. He coordinated most of the campaign "from a hospital bed for six weeks, and then from his home for the remainder of the election. He made only one public appearance during the entire campaign".

Results

style="width:55%; text-align:center;"

|+ ↓

style="color:white;"

| style="background:#EA6D6A; width:100.00%;" | 30

Liberal

class="wikitable"

!rowspan="2" colspan="2"|Party

!rowspan="2"|Party Leader

!colspan="3"|Seats

!colspan="3"|Popular Vote

1931

!Elected

!Change

!#

!%

!Change

{{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|row}}

|{{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|name}}

|Walter Lea

| align=right|12

! align=right|30

| align=right|+18

! align=right|43,824

! align=right|57.9%

| align=right|+9.6%

{{Canadian party colour|PE|PC|row}}

|{{Canadian party colour|PE|Conservative|name}}

|William J. P. MacMillan

! align=right|18

| align=right

align=right
18

| align=right|31,840

| align=right|42.1%

| align=right

9.6%

The Liberal Party, under Lea, won all 30 seats in the House of Assembly, a feat that had never been accomplished before in the Commonwealth. News media across the Commonwealth broadcast the story. When faced with this unusual institutional setup, Lea had several members of his own party act as members of the opposition, as an actual opposition party did not exist within the legislature. This step was also used in the New Brunswick Legislative Assembly after the 1987 election, in which the New Brunswick Liberal Party won all 58 seats in the Legislative Assembly.

Lea died a few months into his mandate, and was replaced by Thane Campbell, who served as Premier until 1943.

Members

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.{{cite web | url=http://www.revparl.ca/11/2/11n2_88e_Driscoll.pdf | title=History and Politics of Prince Edward Island | author=Fred Driscoll | publisher=Canadian Parliamentary Review}}

=Kings=

class="wikitable"

! District

! colspan="2" | Assemblyman

! Party

! colspan="2" | Councillor

! Party

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 1st Kings

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Peter A. MacIsaac

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Herbert H. Acorn

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 2nd Kings

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Harry Cox

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| James P. McIntyre

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 3rd Kings

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| John Mustard

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Stephen Hessian

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 4th Kings

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| John A. Campbell

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Montague Annear

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 5th Kings

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| William Hughes

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| George Saville

| Liberal

=Queens=

class="wikitable"

! District

! colspan="2" | Assemblyman

! Party

! colspan="2" | Councillor

! Party

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 1st Queens

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Donald N. McKay

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| W. F. Alan Stewart

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 2nd Queens

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Angus McPhee

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Bradford W. LePage

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 3rd Queens

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Russell C. Clark

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Mark R. MacGuigan

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 4th Queens

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Dougald MacKinnon

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| John Walter Jones

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 5th Queens

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| T. William L. Prowse

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| C. St. Clair Trainor

| Liberal

=Prince=

class="wikitable"

! District

! colspan="2" | Assemblyman

! Party

! colspan="2" | Councillor

! Party

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 1st Prince

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Aeneas Gallant

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Thane Alexander Campbell

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 2nd Prince

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| George H. Barbour

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| William H. Dennis

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 3rd Prince

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Marin Gallant

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Thomas Linkletter

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 4th Prince

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Cleveland Baker

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Walter Lea

| Liberal

bgcolor="CCCCCC" | 5th Prince

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Edward P. Foley

| Liberal

| {{Canadian party colour|PE|Liberal|background}} |    

| Lucas R. Allan

| Liberal

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |title=The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs, 1935 and 1936 |date=1939 |publisher=The Annual Review Company |location=Toronto |url=https://archive.org/details/canadianannualre0000unse_k4i7}}

{{PEIElections}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Prince Edward Island general election, 1935}}

Category:1935 elections in Canada

Category:July 1935 in Canada

General election

1935

Category:Landslide victories in Canada