1964 Saskatchewan general election

{{Short description|Canadian provincial election}}

{{Use Canadian English|date=December 2024}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2024}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1964 Saskatchewan general election

| country = Saskatchewan

| flag_year = 1957

| type = parliamentary

| party_colour = no

| party_name = no

| previous_election = 1960 Saskatchewan general election

| previous_year = 1960

| previous_mps = 14th Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan

| election_date = {{Start date|1964|04|22}}

| elected_mps = members

| next_election = 1967 Saskatchewan general election

| next_year = 1967

| next_mps = 16th Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan

| seats_for_election = 59 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan

| majority_seats = 30

| turnout =

| image1 = 150x150px

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

| leader1 = Ross Thatcher

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

| leader_since1 = September 24, 1959

| leaders_seat1 = Morse

| last_election1 = 17

| seats1 = 32

| seat_change1 = {{increase}}15

| popular_vote1 = 269,402

| percentage1 = 40.40%

| swing1 = {{increase}}7.3pp

| image2 = 150x150px

| colour2 = {{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|nohash}}

| leader2 = Woodrow Lloyd

| party2 = {{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|name}}

| leader_since2 = November 3, 1961

| leaders_seat2 = Biggar

| last_election2 = 37

| seats2 = 26

| seat_change2 = {{decrease}}11

| popular_vote2 = 268,742

| percentage2 = 40.30%

| swing2 = {{decrease}}0.46pp

| image3 =

PC

| colour3 = {{Canadian party colour|SK|PC|nohash}}

| leader3 = Martin Pederson

| party3 = {{Canadian party colour|SK|PC|name}}

| leader_since3 = October 28, 1958

| leaders_seat3 = Arm River

| last_election3 = 0

| seats3 = 1

| seat_change3 = {{increase}}1

| popular_vote3 = 126,028

| percentage3 = 18.90%

| swing3 = {{increase}}4.95pp

| map_image =

| map_size =

| map_alt =

| map_caption =

| title = Premier

| before_election = Woodrow Lloyd

| before_party = {{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|name}}

| posttitle = Premier after election

| after_election = Ross Thatcher

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

}}

The 1964 Saskatchewan general election was held on April 22, 1964, to elect members of the 15th Saskatchewan Legislature.

The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) government of Premier Woodrow Lloyd was defeated by the Liberal Party, led by Ross Thatcher. The CCF had governed Saskatchewan since the 1944 election under the leadership (until December 1961) of Tommy Douglas.

By 1964 the provincial Social Credit Party had collapsed, nominating only two candidates. In another morale hit, the federal Social Credit Party endorsed the Liberals during the election. While the CCF held on to nearly all of their vote from the previous election and only trailed the Liberals by 0.1%, most of the shift in Social Credit support went to the Liberals and proved decisive in helping to push Thatcher to a majority government.

The Progressive Conservative Party also picked up some support at the expense of Social Credit but won only one seat in the legislature, that of leader Martin Pederson.

Election campaign

Douglas' government was the first social democratic government in North America, and had introduced the medicare system in Canada. This led to a 23-day strike by the province's physicians. Universal public health care, however, was not an issue in the campaign. In fact, following its successful introduction, the opposition Liberals were for expanding Medicare even more. The only provincial party to advocate eliminating Medicare was the small Social Credit Party.

The Social Credit party nominated only two candidates in the election, and they were hurt by statements by the federal Social Credit party leader, Robert N. Thompson, supporting the Saskatchewan Liberals. The Socreds' leader, Martin Kelln, chose not to spend much time on the campaign, in part because of the recent death of his mother.

The Progressive Conservatives returned to the Legislative Assembly for the first time since 1934. They won only one seat despite winning almost 19% of the popular vote. The Tories promised to keep Medicare in place, but opposed the Liberals' plans to expand it. They argued that the Liberals were too radical, and that the CCF government was not doing enough to develop the province's natural resources.

The Liberals were able to capitalize on the collapse of Social Credit and were more effective than the Tories in drawing the "anti-socialist" (anti-CCF) vote. Yet the campaign was not marked by any major issues.

There was, however, considerable animosity between the Liberals and the CCF. The Liberals employed what were called "Madison Avenue campaign tactics" and spent a lot of money on campaign advertising, especially television advertising. They tried to characterize the election as being a choice between socialism and private enterprise-oriented reform. The Saskatchewan Liberals ran well to the right of the federal Liberals and claimed that the CCF government was stagnating.

A warning sign came in the 1962 federal election. The federal CCF had merged with the Canadian Labour Congress to form the New Democratic Party, though the Saskatchewan branch kept the CCF name. Douglas resigned as premier and party leader to become the NDP's first leader, and was succeeded by then-Treasurer Woodrow Lloyd, a former teacher. However, the NDP was completely shut out in Saskatchewan, and Douglas lost by almost 10,000 votes in his bid for a Regina-area riding.

The CCF campaigned heavily on its 20-year record in government. Lloyd attacked the Liberal campaign, stating that they had resorted to "hucksterism, the kind of sales attempts that one usually associates with useless pills, second hand cars and body deodorants."{{cite web| url = http://www.cbc.ca/archives/categories/politics/provincial-territorial-politics/showdown-on-the-prairies-a-history-of-saskatchewan-elections/useless-pills-second-hand-cars-and-body-deodorants.html| title = CBC Archives}}

Lloyd faced several challenges: taxes in Saskatchewan were among the highest in Canada; spending on health care, welfare and education were high; and he lacked the popular support Douglas had enjoyed. However, Saskatchewan had the second highest per capita income in Canada and the lowest unemployment rate in Canada.

Electoral system

In this election, Saskatchewan used a mixture of single-member districts, electing through First past the post, and multiple-member districts, electing through Plurality block voting.

Before the next election, Saskatchewan switched to consistent single-member districts.Parliamentary Guide

Results

class="wikitable"

!rowspan=2 colspan=2|Party

!rowspan=2|Party leader

!rowspan=2|# of
candidates

!colspan=4|Seats

!colspan=3|Popular vote

1960

!Dissol.

!Elected

!% Change

!#

!%

!% Change

{{Canadian party colour|SK|Liberal|row-name}}

|align="center"|Ross Thatcher

|align="right"| 59

|align="right"|17

|align="right"|19

|align="right"| 32

|align="right"|+68.4%

|align="right"|269,402

|align="right"|40.40%

|align="right"|+7.73%

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row-name}}

|align="center"|Woodrow Lloyd

|align="right"| 59

|align="right"|37

|align="right"|35

|align="right"| 25/261

|align="right"

25.7%

|align="right"|268,742

|align="right"|40.30%

|align="right"

0.46%

{{Canadian party colour|SK|PC|row-name}}

|align="center"|Martin Pederson

|align="right"| 42

|align="right"|–

|align="right"|–

|align="right"| 1

|align="right"|+1000%

|align="right"|126,028

|align="right"|18.90%

|align="right"|+4.95%

{{Canadian party colour|SK|Social Credit|row-name}}

|align="center"|Martin Kelln

|align="right"| 2

|align="right"|–

|align="right"|–

|align="right"| –

|align="right"|–

|align="right"|2,621

|align="right"|0.39%

|align="right"

11.96%

{{Canadian party colour|SK|Communist|row-name}}

|align="center"|

|align="right"| 1

|align="right"|–

|align="right"|–

|align="right"| –

|align="right"|–

|align="right"|68

|align="right"|0.01%

|align="right"

0.05%
colspan=3| Total

|align="right"| 163

|align="right"|54

|align="right"|54

|align="right"| 591

|align="right"|+9.3%

|align="right"|666,861

|align="right"|100%

|align="right"| 

align="center" colspan=11|Source: [https://web.archive.org/web/20140407162559/http://www.elections.sk.ca/previous-elections/historical---provincial-general-election-summaries/page-2/ Elections Saskatchewan]

Note: 1 One seat declared void.

=Percentages=

{{Bar box|title=Popular vote|titlebar=#ddd|width=600px|barwidth=410px|bars={{Bar percent|Liberal|{{Canadian party colour|SK|Liberal}}|40.40}}

{{Bar percent|CCF|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF}}|40.30}}

{{Bar percent|PC|{{Canadian party colour|SK|PC}}|18.90}}

{{Bar percent|Others|{{Canadian party colour|SK|Independent}}|0.40}}}}

{{Bar box|title=Seats summary|titlebar=#ddd|width=600px|barwidth=410px|bars={{Bar percent|Liberal|{{Canadian party colour|SK|Liberal}}|54.24}}

{{Bar percent|CCF|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF}}|44.07}}

{{Bar percent|PC|{{Canadian party colour|SK|PC}}|1.69}}}}

=Ranking=

class="wikitable"

!colspan=2|Party

!Seats

!Second

!Third

{{Canadian party colour|SK|Liberal|row-name}}

|align=center|32

|align=center|26

|align=center|1

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row-name}}

|align=center|26

|align=center|31

|align=center|2

{{Canadian party colour|SK|PC|row-name}}

|align=center|1

|align=center|2

|align=center|39

{{Canadian party colour|SK|Independent|row}}

|Other parties

|align=center|0

|align=center|0

|align=center|3

Riding results

Names in bold represent cabinet ministers and the Speaker. Party leaders are italicized. The symbol " ** " indicates MLAs who are not running again.

=Northwestern Saskatchewan=

{{Canadian politics/candlist header|province=SK|Liberal|CCF|PC|Other}}

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Athabasca

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

|Allan Ray Guy
1,076

|

|John M. Stonehocker
684

|

|Harry J. Houghton
909

|

|

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

|Allan Ray Guy

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Cut Knife-Lloydminster

|

|Raymond H. Rooney
1,821

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Isidore Charles Nollet
2,927

|

|Gordon Goodfellow
1,617

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Isidore Charles Nollet

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Meadow Lake

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

|Henry Coupland
3,149

|

|Martin Semchuk
2,113

|

|Frederick L. Dunbar
1,014

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Martin Semchuk

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Redberry

|

|Bernard L. Korchinski
1,993

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Dick Michayluk
2,200

|

|Walter John Dolynny
1,238

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Demitro Wasyl Michayluk

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Rosthern

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

|David Boldt
2,873

|

|George Guenther
1,949

|

|

|

|Isaak Elias (Social Credit) 1,239

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

|David Boldt

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Shellbrook

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

|John Cuelenaere
2,427

|

|John Thiessen
2,259

|

|Norval Horner
1,701

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|John Thiessen

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|The Battlefords

|

|Herbert O.M. Sparrow
4,242

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Eiling Kramer
4,645

|

|

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Eiling Kramer

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Turtleford

|

|Frank Foley
2,123

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Bob Wooff
2,221

|

|William Elmer Armstrong
1,502

|

|

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

|Franklin Edward Foley

{{end}}

=Northeastern Saskatchewan=

{{Canadian politics/candlist header|province=SK|Liberal|CCF|PC|Other}}

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Cumberland

|

|Eldon McLachlan
1,630

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Bill Berezowsky
2,135

|

|Emanuel Sonnenschein
963

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Bill Berezowsky

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Humboldt

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

|Mathieu Breker
4,226

|

|Sylvester E. Wiegers
3,030

|

|Frank J. Martin
1,244

|

|

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

|Mary Batten**

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Kelsey

|

|William John McHugh
2269

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|John Hewgill Brockelbank
5283

|

|Carsten Johnson
703

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|John Hewgill Brockelbank

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Kelvington

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

|Bryan Bjarnason
2,888

|

|Neil Byers
2,398

|

|Joseph M. Ratch
1,341

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Clifford Benjamin Peterson**

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Kinistino

|

|Michael A. Hnidy
3,125

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Arthur Thibault
3,334

|

|

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Arthur Thibault

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Melfort-Tisdale

|

|William Ernest Hurd
3,056

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Clarence George Willis
3,471

|

|Kenneth Aseltine
2,094

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Clarence George Willis

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Nipawin

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

|Frank Radloff
2,652

|

|Bob Perkins
2,440

|

|John A. Whittome
1,942

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Robert Irvin Perkins

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Prince Albert

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

|Davey Steuart
5,024

|

|Joseph E. Leon Lamontagne
4,946

|

|Richard E. Spencer
3,828

|

|

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

|David Gordon Steuart

{{end}}

=West Central Saskatchewan=

{{Canadian politics/candlist header|province=SK|Liberal|CCF|PC|Other}}

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Arm River

|

|Gustaf Herman Danielson
2,020

|

|Emanuel Lang
1,550

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|PC|background}}| 

|Martin Pederson
2,326

|

|

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

|Gustaf Herman Danielson

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Biggar

|

|Benson McLeod Blacklock
1,992

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Woodrow S. Lloyd
2,875

|

|George Loucks
1,120

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Woodrow Lloyd

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Hanley

|

|Herbert C. "Charlie" Pinder
3,938

|

|Robert Alexander Walker
3,940

|

|Hans Taal
2,602

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Robert Alexander Walker

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Kerrobert-Kindersley

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

|William S. Howes
3,799

|

|Eldon Johnson
2,937

|

|

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Eldon Arthur Johnson

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Rosetown

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

|George Loken
2,573

|

|Allan Stevens
2,367

|

|Les P. Hickson
1,396

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Allan Leonard Frederick Stevens

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Watrous

|

|Neil McArthur
2,602

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Hans Broten
2,725

|

|

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Hans Broten

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Wilkie

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

|Joseph "Cliff" McIsaac
3,593

|

|W. Ray Grant
2,162

|

|Donald Wallace
1,649

|

|

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

|John Whitmore Horsman**

{{end}}

==Re-run of voided election==

{{Election box begin | title=December 16, 1964, by-election: Hanley}}

|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

|style="width: 130px"|CCF

|Robert Walker

|align="right"|4,608

|align="right"|45.14%

|align="right"|+7.55

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

|Liberal

|Herb Pinder

|align="right"|3,864

|align="right"|37.86%

|align="right"|+0.28

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

|Prog. Conservative

|W. Hugh Arscott

|align="right"|1,735

|align="right"|17.00%

|align="right"|-7.83

|- bgcolor="white"

!align="left" colspan=3|Total

!align="right"|10,207

!align="right"|100.00%

!align="right"|

{{election box end}}

=East Central Saskatchewan=

{{Canadian politics/candlist header|province=SK|Liberal|CCF|PC|Other}}

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Canora

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

|Ken Romuld
3,391

|

|Alex Kuziak
3,348

|

|

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Alex Gordon Kuziak

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Last Mountain

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

|Donald MacLennan
2,857

|

|Russell Brown
2,799

|

|

|

|Martin Kelln (Social Credit) 1,382

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Russell Brown

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Melville

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

|James W. Gardiner
3,485

|

|William Wiwchar
3,229

|

|Douglas A. Ellis
1,627

|

|

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

|James Wilfrid Gardiner

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Pelly

|

|Jim Barrie
2,669

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Leo Larson
2,705

|

|Bohdan E. Lozinsky
1,212

|

|

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

|Jim Barrie

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Saltcoats

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

|James Snedker
3,260

|

|Baldur M. Olson
2,275

|

|David Arthur Keyes
1,537

|

|

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

|James Snedker

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Touchwood

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

|George Trapp
2,692

|

|Frank Meakes
2,566

|

|Alice M.L. Turner
1,320

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Frank Meakes

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Wadena

|

|Elizabeth Mary Paulson
2,580

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Fred Dewhurst
3,295

|

|H.D. McPhail
1,405

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Frederick Arthur Dewhurst

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Yorkton

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

|Barry Gallagher
4,337

|

|Karl Rokeby Bartelt
3,494

|

|Lawrence L. Ball
1,841

|

|

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

|Bernard David Gallagher

{{end}}

=Southwest Saskatchewan=

{{Canadian politics/candlist header|province=SK|Liberal|CCF|PC|Other}}

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Elrose

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

|George Leith
3,317

|

|Alex Turnbull
3,263

|

|

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Olaf Alexander Turnbull

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Gravelbourg

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

|Leo Coderre
2,999

|

|Roland Leblanc
2,448

|

|

|

|

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

|Lionel Philas Coderre

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Maple Creek

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

|Alexander Cameron
2,977

|

|William Percy Rolick
2,424

|

|Marlyn K. Clary
1,389

|

|

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

|Alexander C. Cameron

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Morse

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

|Ross Thatcher
3,188

|

|Paul W. Beach
2,952

|

|

|

|

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

|Ross Thatcher

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Notukeu-Willow Bunch

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

|Jim Hooker
2,660

|

|Hasket Merle Sproule
2,193

|

|Boyd M. Anderson
946

|

|

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

|Karl Frank Klein**

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Shaunavon

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

|Fernand Larochelle
2,955

|

|Art Kluzak
2,545

|

|Clifford Boyd Clark
1,225

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Arthur Kluzak

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Swift Current

|

|T. Lawrence Salloum
4,647

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Everett Irvine Wood
5,238

|

|

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Everett Irvine Wood

{{end}}

=Southeast Saskatchewan=

{{Canadian politics/candlist header|province=SK|Liberal|CCF|PC|Other}}

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Bengough

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

|Sam Asbell
2,613

|

|Hjalmar Dahlman
2,311

|

|Roy Bailey
1,192

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Hjalmar Reinhold Dahlman

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Cannington

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

|Tom Weatherald
3,852

|

|Henry George Doty
2,489

|

|Glenn Brimner
1,917

|

|

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

|Rosscoe Arnold McCarthy**

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Lumsden

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

|Darrel Heald
2,469

|

|Cliff Thurston
2,068

|

|William Clyde Tufts
1,614

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Clifford Honey Thurston

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Milestone

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

|Cyril MacDonald
2,568

|

|James M. Hubbs
1,972

|

|Leonard Frederick Westrum
1,023

|

|

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Jacob Walter Erb**

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Moosomin

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

|Alexander Hamilton McDonald
4,523

|

|William Francis Goodwin
3,102

|

|

|

|

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

|Alex "Hammy" McDonald

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Qu'Appelle-Wolseley

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

|Doug McFarlane
3,525

|

|John Stephen Leier
2,188

|

|Victor Edward Horsman
2,164

|

|

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

|Douglas Thomas McFarlane

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Souris-Estevan

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

|Ian MacDougall
6,220

|

|Ivar Johann Kristianson
4,040

|

|

|

|

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

|Ian Hugh MacDougall

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Weyburn

|

|Junior Staveley
4,347

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Jim Pepper
4,453

|

|Jean Benson
1,234

|

|

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

|Junior Herbert Staveley

{{end}}

{{Election box begin | title=June 30, 1965, by-election: Moosomin}}

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

|style="width: 130px"|Liberal

|Frank Gardner

|align="right"|3,033

|align="right"|36.72%

|align="right"|-22.60

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

|CCF

|William Francis Goodwin

|align="right"|2,821

|align="right"|34.14%

|align="right"|-6.54

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

|Prog. Conservative

|Andrew Emerson Bruce

|align="right"|2,407

|align="right"|29.14%

|align="right"|-

|- bgcolor="white"

!align="left" colspan=3|Total

!align="right"|8,261

!align="right"|100.00%

!align="right"|

{{election box end}}

{{Election box begin | title=February 16, 1966, by-election: Bengough}}

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

|style="width: 130px"|Liberal

|Alex Mitchell

|align="right"|2,423

|align="right"|42.74%

|align="right"|+0.02

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

|CCF

|Hjalmar Dahlman

|align="right"|2,285

|align="right"|40.31%

|align="right"|+2.52

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

|Prog. Conservative

|George W. Spicer

|align="right"|961

|align="right"|16.95%

|align="right"|-2.54

|- bgcolor="white"

!align="left" colspan=3|Total

!align="right"|5,669

!align="right"|100.00%

!align="right"|

{{election box end}}

=Moose Jaw and Saskatoon=

{{Election box begin | title=Saskatchewan general election, 1964: Moose Jaw City

(2 members elected)}}

|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

| style="width: 130px"|CCF

|William Davies (incumbent)

|align="right"|7,749

|align="right"|24.55%

|align="right"|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

| style="width: 130px"|CCF

|Gordon Snyder (incumbent)

|align="right"|7,550

|align="right"|23.92%

|align="right"|-

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

|Prog. Conservative

|Daniel J. Patterson

|align="right"|7,115

|align="right"|22.54%

|align="right"|-

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

|Liberal

|E. A. Astell

|align="right"|5,455

|align="right"|17.28%

|align="right"|-

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

|Prog. Conservative

|Gordon A. Hume

|align="right"|3,697

|align="right"|11.71%

|align="right"|-

|- bgcolor="white"

!align="left" colspan=3|Total

!align="right"|31,566

!align="right"|100.00%

!align="right"|

{{election box end}}

{{Election box begin | title=Saskatchewan general election, 1964: Saskatoon City

(5 members elected)}}

|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

| style="width: 130px"|CCF

|Alex M. Nicholson (incumbent)

|align="right"|16,701

|align="right"|7.83%

|align="right"|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

| style="width: 130px"|CCF

|Edward Brockelbank (elected)

|align="right"|16,559

|align="right"|7.76%

|align="right"|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

| style="width: 130px"|CCF

|Wes Robbins (elected)

|align="right"|16,126

|align="right"|7.56%

|align="right"|-

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

|Liberal

|Sally Merchant (elected)

|align="right"|16,068

|align="right"|7.53%

|align="right"|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

| style="width: 130px"|CCF

|Harry D. Link (elected)

|align="right"|16,041

|align="right"|7.52%

|align="right"|-

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

|Liberal

|Clarence Estey

|align="right"|15,761

|align="right"|7.39%

|align="right"|-

{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|row}}

| style="width: 130px"|CCF

|Gladys Strum (incumbent)

|align="right"|15,741

|align="right"|7.38%

|align="right"|-

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

|Liberal

|Keith McLean Crocker

|align="right"|15,661

|align="right"|7.34%

|align="right"|-

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

|Liberal

|Joseph J. Charlebois

|align="right"|15,542

|align="right"|7.28%

|align="right"|-

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

|Liberal

|Victor C. Hession

|align="right"|14,770

|align="right"|6.92%

|align="right"|-

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

|Prog. Conservative

|Lewis Brand

|align="right"|11,401

|align="right"|5.34%

|align="right"|-

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

|Prog. Conservative

|W. Hugh Arscott

|align="right"|11,344

|align="right"|5.32%

|align="right"|-

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

|Prog. Conservative

|Ray Hnatyshyn

|align="right"|10,874

|align="right"|5.09%

|align="right"|-

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

|Prog. Conservative

|Henry Clay Rees

|align="right"|10,543

|align="right"|4.94%

|align="right"|-

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

|Prog. Conservative

|Irving Goldenberg

|align="right"|10,240

|align="right"|4.80%

|align="right"|-

|- bgcolor="white"

!align="left" colspan=3|Total

!align="right"|213,372

!align="right"|100.00%

!align="right"|

{{election box end}}

=Regina=

{{Canadian politics/candlist header|province=SK|Liberal|CCF|PC|Other}}

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Regina East

|

|Paul Dojack
8,208

Jacob W. Erb
8,060

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Henry Baker
8,953

Walt Smishek
8,395

|

|Dick Shelton
2,356

George J. Tkach
2,343

|

|

| colspan=2 style="background:whitesmoke; text-align:center;"|New District

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Regina North

|

|Ron Atchison
3,867

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Ed Whelan
4,722

|

|

|

|Norman Brudy (Communist) 68

| colspan=2 style="background:whitesmoke; text-align:center;"|New District

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Regina South

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

|Gordon Grant
7,788

|

|George R. Bothwell
3,440

|

|

|

|

| colspan=2 style="background:whitesmoke; text-align:center;"|New District

|-

|bgcolor=whitesmoke|Regina West

|

|Alex Cochrane
7,770

Betty Sear
6,981

|{{Canadian party colour|SK|CCF|background}}| 

|Allan Blakeney
9,076

Marjorie Cooper
8,413

|

|Donald K. MacPherson
4,495

|

|

| colspan=2 style="background:whitesmoke; text-align:center;"|New District

{{end}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

  • [https://saskarchives.com/sites/default/files/pdf/2019_elections_results_by_electoral_division.pdf Saskatchewan Archives Board - Election Results By Electoral Division]
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20090313070432/http://www.elections.sk.ca/history.php#provincialvotesummaries Elections Saskatchewan: Provincial Vote Summaries]

Further reading

  • {{cite book |editor1-last=Saywell |editor1-first=John T. |editor1-link=John Saywell |title=Canadian Annual Review for 1964 |date=1965 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto |url=https://archive.org/details/canadianannualre0000unse_w7t2 |url-access=registration}}

{{SaskatchewanElections}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:1964 elections in Canada

Category:1964 in Saskatchewan

Category:April 1964 in Canada

1964