1943 Ontario Liberal Party leadership election
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Date | April 30, 1943 |
---|---|
Convention | King Edward Hotel, Toronto |
Resigning leader | Gordon Daniel Conant |
Won by | Harry Nixon |
Ballots | 1 |
Candidates | 4 |
The Ontario Liberal Party held a leadership election in 1943 to choose a permanent replacement to Mitchell Hepburn who had been forced to resign at the end of 1942. Because the Ontario Liberal Party was in power, the winner of the race would also become premier of the province. Initially, Hepburn attempted to anoint Gordon Daniel Conant as his permanent successor but the caucus did not accept this and forced a full leadership convention which was won on the first ballot by former Provincial Secretary Harry Nixon.
As Conant was ailing and had been hospitalized, Thomas McQuesten was Acting Premier on the day of the leadership convention.[1]
Candidates
[edit]- Thomas McQuesten, 60, MPP for Hamilton—Wentworth since 1934, Minister of Public Works and Highways (1934-1937, 1943), Minister of Municipal Affairs (1940-1943)
- Harry Nixon, 52, MPP for Brant since 1919, Provincial Secretary and Registrar of Ontario under E.C. Drury and Mitchell Hepburn (1919-1923, 1934-1942), first elected as a United Farmers of Ontario MPP (1919-1926), then as a Progressive (1926-1934) and Liberal-Progressive (1934-1937), Leader of the Progressives (1929-1934) and Liberal-Progressives (1934-1937)
- Arthur Roebuck, 65, MP for Trinity since 1940, former MPP for Bellwoods (1934-1949), Attorney-General of Ontario under Hepburn (1934-1937)
- Walter Thomson, 48, Lawyer and rancher in Hastings County
Premier Gordon Daniel Conant had also been a candidate but collapsed hours before the leadership vote and withdrew as a candidate.[2]
Results
[edit]Results were as follows:[3]
- NIXON, Harry 418
- ROEBUCK, Arthur 85
- McQUESTEN, Thomas 40
- THOMSON, Walter 22
There were 8 spoiled ballots.[3]
See Ontario Liberal leadership conventions
References
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