1949 Canadian federal election Opinion polls Turnout 73.8%[ 1] ( 1.5pp )
First party
Second party
Leader
Louis St. Laurent
George A. Drew
Party
Liberal
Progressive Conservative
Leader since
August 7, 1948
October 2, 1948
Leader's seat
Quebec East
Carleton
Last election
118
65
Seats won
191
41
Seat change
73
24
Popular vote
2,874,813
1,734,261
Percentage
49.15%
29.65%
Swing
9.37pp
2.03pp
Third party
Fourth party
Leader
Major James Coldwell
Solon Earl Low
Party
Co-operative Commonwealth
Social Credit
Leader since
March 22, 1942
April 6, 1944
Leader's seat
Rosetown—Biggar
Peace River
Last election
28
13
Seats won
13
10
Seat change
15
3
Popular vote
784,770
135,217
Percentage
13.42%
2.31%
Swing
2.13pp
1.74pp
The Canadian parliament after the 1949 election
The 1949 Canadian federal election was held June 27, 1949, to elect members of the House of Commons of Canada of the 21st Parliament of Canada .
The Liberal Party of Canada was re-elected with its fourth consecutive government, winning 191 seats (73 percent of the seats in the House of Commons), with just under 50 percent of the popular vote.
It was the Liberals' first election in almost thirty years not under the leadership of William Lyon Mackenzie King . King had retired in 1948, and was replaced as Liberal leader and Prime Minister by Louis St. Laurent .
It was the first federal election with Newfoundland voting, having joined Canada in March of that year. It was also the first election since 1904 in which part of the remaining parts of the Northwest Territories were granted representation, following the partitioning off of the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan.
The Liberal Party victory won the largest majority in Canadian history to that point. As of 2022[update] , it remains the third largest majority government in Canadian history, and the largest in the party's history (the Progressive Conservative Party won larger seat majorities in 1958 and 1984 ).
The Progressive Conservative Party, led by former Premier of Ontario George Drew , gained little ground in this election. The party lost over a third of their seats.
Smaller parties, such as the social democratic Co-operative Commonwealth Federation , and Social Credit , a party that advocated monetary reform , lost support to the Liberals and, to a lesser extent, the Conservatives.
Opinion polling
Evolution of voting intentions at national level
Polling firm
Last day of survey
Source
LPC
PC
CCF
SC
BP
Other
Undecided
ME
Sample
Election 1949
June 27, 1949
49.15
29.65
13.42
2.31
—
5.47
Gallup
June 1949
[ 2]
49
29
15
—
—
6
22
—
—
Gallup
May 1949
[ 3]
49
29
16
—
—
6
18
—
—
Gallup
April 1949
[ 4]
42
32
17
5
—
4
22
—
—
Gallup
January 1949
[ 2]
40
33
18
—
—
9
23
—
—
Gallup
October 1948
[ 5]
39
27
21
7
—
6
—
—
—
Gallup
August 1948
[ 5]
41
28
20
6
—
5
—
—
—
Gallup
June 1948
[ 6]
41
28
19
6
—
6
—
—
—
Gallup
February 1948
[ 6]
43
28
15
7
—
7
—
—
—
Gallup
January 1948
[ 6]
42
28
16
6
—
8
26[ 2]
—
—
Gallup
October 1947
[ 6]
43
28
16
6
—
7
—
—
—
Gallup
July 1947
[ 7]
42
27
16
6
—
9
—
—
—
Bloc populaire dissolved (July 6, 1947)
Gallup
May 1947
[ 7]
43
26
16
6
—
9
—
—
—
Gallup
February 1947
[ 8]
41
27
18
7
4
3
—
—
—
Gallup
December 1946
[ 8]
41
26
18
6
5
4
—
—
—
Gallup
September 1946
[ 9]
41
27
17
5
—
10
—
—
—
Gallup
May 1946
[ 9]
44
26
16
4
—
10
—
—
—
Gallup
January 1946
[ 9]
45
24
16
4
—
10
—
—
—
Gallup
November 1945
[ 9]
44
26
17
4
—
9
—
—
—
Election 1945
June 11, 1945
39.78
27.62
15.55
4.05
3.29
9.71
National results
Party
Party leader
# of candidates
Seats
Popular vote
1945
Elected
% Change
#
%
Change
Liberal
Louis St. Laurent
258
117
191
+63.2%
2,874,813
49.15%
+9.37pp
Progressive Conservative
George Drew
249
65
41
-21.5%
1,734,261
29.65%
+2.03pp
Co-operative Commonwealth
M.J. Coldwell
180
28
13
-53.6%
784,770
13.42%
-2.13pp
Social Credit
Solon Low
28
13
10
-23.1%
135,217
2.31%
-1.74pp
Independent
28
6
4
-33.3%
119,827
2.05%
-2.84pp
Union of Electors
Réal Caouette
56
-
-
-
86,087
1.47%
+1.46pp
Labor–Progressive
Tim Buck
17
1
-
-100%
32,623
0.56%
-1.58pp
Independent Liberal
15
8
1
-87.5%
30,407
0.52%
-1.27pp
Liberal-Labour
2
-
1
11,730
0.20%
+0.19pp
Liberal–Progressive
1
1
1
-
9,192
0.16%
+0.04pp
Independent PC
6
1
-
-100%
8,195
0.14%
-0.14pp
Farmer-Labour
1
-
-
-
6,161
0.11%
-0.07pp
National Unity
Adrien Arcand
1
*
-
*
5,590
0.10%
*
Nationalist
1
*
-
*
4,994
0.09%
*
Independent Social Credit
2
*
-
*
4,598
0.08%
*
Labour
2
-
-
-
415
0.01%
x
Socialist Labour
1
*
-
*
271
x
*
Total
848
245
262
+7.8%
5,849,151
100%
Sources: http://www.elections.ca -- History of Federal Ridings since 1867 Archived 2008-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
Notes:
* The party did not nominate candidates in the previous election.
x - less than 0.005% of the popular vote
Vote and seat summaries
Popular vote
Liberal
49.15%
PC
29.65%
CCF
13.42%
Social Credit
2.31%
Labor-Progressive
0.56%
Others
4.91%
Seat totals
Liberal
72.90%
PC
15.64%
CCF
4.96%
Social Credit
3.81%
Others
2.67%
Results by province
Party name
BC
AB
SK
MB
ON
QC
NB
NS
PE
NL
Terr
Total
Liberal
Seats:
11
5
14
11
55
68
8
10
3
5
1
191
Popular Vote:
36.7
33.8
43.4
45.1
45.1
60.4
53.8
52.7
49.2
71.9
49.0
49.1
Progressive Conservative
Seats:
3
2
1
1
25
2
2
2
1
2
-
41
Vote:
27.9
16.8
14.4
22.0
37.4
24.5
39.4
37.5
48.4
27.9
29.7
Co-operative Commonwealth
Seats:
3
-
5
3
1
-
-
1
-
-
-
13
Vote:
31.5
10.0
40.9
25.9
15.2
1.1
4.2
9.9
2.4
0.2
17.0
13.4
Social Credit
Seats:
-
10
-
-
10
Vote:
0.5
37.4
0.9
0.2
2.3
Independent
Seats:
1
-
-
3
-
4
Vote:
2.6
2.1
0.1
6.1
0.2
34.0
2.1
Independent Liberal
Seats:
1
-
-
1
Vote:
0.3
1.3
1.4
0.5
Liberal-Labour
Seats:
1
-
1
Vote:
0.6
xx
0.2
Liberal-Progressive
Seats:
1
1
Vote:
2.9
0.2
Total Seats
18
17
20
16
83
73
10
13
4
7
1
262
Parties that won no seats:
Union of Electors
Vote:
0.1
5.1
1.0
1.5
Labor–Progressive
Vote:
0.8
0.7
0.4
2.0
0.7
0.3
0.6
Independent PC
Vote:
xx
0.5
0.1
Farmer-Labour
Vote:
0.3
0.1
National Unity
Vote:
0.4
0.1
Nationalist
Vote:
0.3
0.1
Independent Social Credit
Vote:
1.4
0.1
Labour
Vote:
xx
xx
xx
Socialist Labour
Vote:
xx
xx
xx - less than 0.05% of the popular vote
See also
References
^ "Voter Turnout at Federal Elections and Referendums" . Elections Canada . Retrieved March 10, 2019 .
^ a b c "Survey gives Liberals margin over others". The Calgary Gazette . June 18, 1949. p. 22.
^ "Drew versus the pollsters". The Leader-Post . June 20, 1949. p. 6.
^ "Canada's election watched for socialistic trends". The Schenectady Gazette . June 4, 1949. p. 8.
^ a b "Liberal support falls below '45 vote level". The Calgary Gazette . October 16, 1948. p. 2.
^ a b c d "CCF gaining support at liberals' expense". The Ottawa Citizen . June 30, 1948. p. 1.
^ a b "Party strength in Canada stays virtually unchanged". The Windsor Star . October 4, 1947. p. 16.
^ a b "Few changes noted in political set-up". The Calgary Herald . March 1, 1947. p. 16.
^ a b c d "No Notable Shift in Party Support". The Evening Citizen . March 1, 1947. p. 1.
Further reading