Nanaimo (electoral District) - Election Results

Election Results

Canadian federal election, 1904
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Liberal Ralph Smith 1,392 43.31%
Progressive Conservative Wolley 1 1,105 34.38%
Socialist Fenton 1 717 22.31%
Total 3,214 100.00%
1
Canadian federal election, 1908
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Liberal Ralph Smith 1,494 36.08%
Progressive Conservative Francis Henry Shepherd 1,335 32.24%
Socialist James Hurst Hawthornthwaite 1,312 31.68%
Total 4,141 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1911
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative Francis Henry Shepherd 2,438 58.21%
Liberal Ralph Smith 1,750 41.79%
Total 4,188 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1917
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Government (Unionist) John Charles McIntosh 9,175 73.43%
Opposition (Laurier Liberals) Hector Allen Stewart 1,976 15.81%
Labour Joseph Taylor 1,344 10.76%
Total 12,495 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1921
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative Charles Herbert Dickie 6,897 45.94%
Liberal Thomas Banks Booth 4,159 27.70%
Labour William Arthur Pritchard 3,958 26.36%
Total 15,014 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1925
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative Charles Herbert Dickie 9,584 54.49%
Liberal Thomas Banks Booth 6,117 34.78%
Labour William Turner Grieves 1,888 10.73%
Total 17,589 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1926
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative Charles Herbert Dickie 10,464 66.49%
Liberal Cornelius Hawkins O'Halloran 5,274 33.51%
Total 15,738 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1930
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative Charles Herbert Dickie 11,827 57.91%
Liberal Cornelius Hawkins O'Halloran 8,596 42.09%
Total 20,423 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1935
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Co-operative Commonwealth James Samuel Taylor 7,053 34.84%
Progressive Conservative Charles Herbert Dickie 6,440 31.81%
Liberal Alan Chambers 6,204 30.65%
Reconstruction Ashton Aubrey Burnet Matthew Clark 546 2.70%
Total 20,243 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1940
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Liberal Alan Chambers 10,668 42.46%
National Government Frank Stigant Cuncliffe 7,518 29.92%
Co-operative Commonwealth Ronald Grantham 6,252 24.88%
New Democracy Andrew Henry Jukes 506 2.01%
Independent William Frederick Povah 181 0.72%
Total 25,125 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1945
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative George Randolph Pearkes2 11,181 35.32%
Co-operative Commonwealth John Morris Thomas 9,542 30.15%
Liberal Alan Chambers 8,223 25.98%
Labor-Progressive George Thomas Greenwell 2,707 8.56%
Total 31,653 100.00%
2
Canadian federal election, 1949
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative George Randolph Pearkes 17,507 48.00%
Co-operative Commonwealth Robert Martin Strachan 9,772 26.79%
Liberal William Edmond Poupore 9,196 25.21%
Total 36,475 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1953
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Co-operative Commonwealth Colin Cameron 7,272 38.56%
Liberal Gavin Colvin Mouat 4,884 25.90%
Progressive Conservative Douglas Deane Finlayson 3,412 18.09%
Social Credit Leonard Francis Hodgson 2,773 14.71%
Labor-Progressive Ernest Leon Knott 516 2.74%
Total 18,857 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1957
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Co-operative Commonwealth Colin Cameron 8,650 37.62%
Progressive Conservative Walter Franklyn Matthews 6,131 26.66%
Social Credit Harold Hine 4,766 20.73%
Liberal Frank William Wilfert 3,448 14.99%
Total 22,995 100.00%
Canadian federal election, 1958
Party Candidate Votes % ±pp
Progressive Conservative Walter F. Matthews 10,734 43.91%
Co-operative Commonwealth Colin Cameron 10,029 41.03%
Liberal Ernest W.H. Miller 2,606 10.66%
Social Credit Roy Arthur Folz 1,077 4.41%
Total 24,446 100.00%

Read more about this topic:  Nanaimo (electoral District)

Famous quotes containing the words election and/or results:

    Do you know I believe that [William Jennings] Bryan will force his nomination on the Democrats again. I believe he will either do this by advocating Prohibition, or else he will run on a Prohibition platform independent of the Democrats. But you will see that the year before the election he will organize a mammoth lecture tour and will make Prohibition the leading note of every address.
    William Howard Taft (1857–1930)

    The chief benefit, which results from philosophy, arises in an indirect manner, and proceeds more from its secret, insensible influence, than from its immediate application.
    David Hume (1711–1776)