15th Parliament of Ontario
The 15th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was in session from October 20, 1919, until May 10, 1923, just prior to the 1923 general election. The leading party in the chamber after the election was the United Farmers of Ontario. It formed a coalition government with 11 Labour MLAs and three Independent candidates of varying stripes.
The coalition held a slight majority of the seats and the parties it represented had taken about 34 percent of the vote in the 1919 election. The rest of the votes had been split between the Conservatives, the Liberals and others, many of which were unsuccessful candidates. (Under First past the post, any votes cast for unsuccessful candidates are simply disregarded.)
The UFO derived a benefit from winning many rural seats where the number of votes involved were less than in the urban districts. In North Brant the UFO candidate won while receiving only 3600 votes while in Ottawa West the Conservative candidate took 9000 votes to win his seat.
The party approached Ernest Charles Drury, who had not run in the election, to serve as party leader and premier. Drury had not run in the 1919 election and was elected in a by-election held in Halton in 1920. He made it known that the coalition government party should be known by the name "The People's Party."[1]
Most of the seats the United Farmers won were taken at the expense of the Conservative party, who had formed the government in the preceding assembly and would again regain power in 1923.
Nelson Parliament served as speaker for the assembly.[2]
The power wielded by the UFO-Labour coalition enabled the passage of progressive Labour and farmer legislation. The government created the first Department of Welfare for the province and brought in allowances for widows and children, a minimum wage for women and standardized adoption procedures. The government also expanded Ontario Hydro and promoted rural electrification, created the Province of Ontario Savings Office - a provincially owned bank that lent money to farmers at a lower rate - began the first major reforestation program in North America, and began construction of the modern highway system.[3]
The government was a strict enforcer of the Ontario Temperance Act, enacted in 1916, and Prohibition stayed in force until 1927.
The 1923 election saw the UFO-Labour coalition government defeated by a re-energized Conservative Party. The UFO vote stayed solid as compared to 1919 but the UFO suffered under First past the post and took about half the seats it was due.
In 1924 (after the 1923 election), the provincial treasurer was found guilty of conspiracy to defraud the government following a series of events known as the Ontario Bond Scandal.[4]
In the waning days of the UFO-Labour government, the government attempted to reform the province's electoral system (to introduce proportional representation) but the effort failed, in part due to Conservative opposition. The UFO suffered under the First past the post electoral system used in the 1923 election, taking just about half the seats they were due proportionally.[5]
Members elected to the Assembly
Italicized names indicate members returned by acclamation.
Addington: William David Black
Algoma: Kenneth Spencer Stover
Brant South: Morrison Mann MacBride
Brockville: Donald McAlpine
Bruce North: William Henry Fenton
Bruce South: Frank Rennie
Bruce West: Alexander Patterson Mewhinney
Cochrane: Malcolm Lang
Dufferin: Thomas Kerr Slack
Dundas: William H. Casselman
Durham East: Samuel Sandford Staples
Durham West: William John Bragg
Elgin East: Malcolm MacVicar
Elgin West: Peter Gow Cameron
Essex North: Alphonse George Tisdelle
Essex South: Milton C. Fox
Fort William: Henry Mills
Frontenac: Anthony McGuin Rankin
Glengarry: Duncan Alexander Ross
Grey Centre: Dougall Carmichael
Grey North: David James Taylor (F-Lib)
Grey South: George Mansfield Leeson
Haldimand: Warren Stringer
Halton: John Featherstone Ford
Hamilton East: George Grant Halcrow
Hamilton West: Walter Rollo
Hastings East: Henry Ketcheson Denyes
Hastings North: John Robert Cooke
Hastings West: William Henry Ireland
Huron Centre: John M. Govenlock
Huron North: John Joynt
Huron South: Andrew Hicks
Kenora: Peter Heenan
Kent East: James B. Clark |
Kent West: Robert Livingstone Brackin
Kingston: Arthur Edward Ross
Lambton East: Leslie Warner Oke
Lambton West: Jonah Moorehouse Webster
Lanark North: Hiram McCreary
Lanark South: William J. Johnston
Leeds: Andrew Wellington Gray
Lennox: Reginald Amherst Fowler
Lincoln: Thomas A. Marshall
London: Hugh Allen Stevenson
Manitoulin: Beniah Bowman
Middlesex East: John Willard Freeborn
Middlesex North: James C. Brown
Middlesex West: John Giles Lethbridge
Muskoka: George Walter Ecclestone
Niagara Falls: Charles Fletcher Swayze
Norfolk North: George David Sewell
Norfolk South: Joseph Cridland
Northumberland East: Wesley Montgomery
Northumberland West: Samuel Clarke
Ontario North: John Wesley Widdifield
Ontario South: William Edmund Newton Sinclair
Oxford North: John Alexander Calder
Oxford South: Albert Thomas Walker
Parkdale: William Herbert Price
Parry Sound: Richard Reese Hall
Perth North: Francis Wellington Hay
Perth South: Peter Smith
Peterborough East: Ernest Nicholls McDonald
Peterborough West: Thomas Tooms
Port Arthur: Donald McDonald Hogarth
Prescott: Gustave Évanturel
Prince Edward: Nelson Parliament |
Rainy River: James Arthur Mathieu
Renfrew North: Ralph Melville Warren
Renfrew South: John Carty
Riverdale: Joseph McNamara
Russell: Damase Racine
St. Catharines: Frank Howard Greenlaw
Simcoe Centre: Gilbert Hugh Murdoch
Simcoe East: John Benjamin Johnston
Simcoe South: Edgar James Evan
Simcoe West: William Torrance Allen
Stormont: James William McLeod
Sturgeon Falls: Zotique Mageau
Timiskaming: Thomas Magladery
Toronto Northeast - A: Henry John Cody
Toronto Northeast - B: Joseph Elijah Thompson
Toronto Northwest - A: Thomas Crawford
Toronto Northwest - B: Henry Sloane Cooper
Toronto Southeast - A: John O'Neill
Toronto Southeast - B: James Walter Curry
Toronto Southwest - A: Herbert Hartley Dewart
Toronto Southwest - B: John Carman Ramsden
Victoria North: Edgar Watson
Victoria South: Frederick George Sandy
Waterloo North: Nicholas Asmussen (I-Lib)
Waterloo South: Karl Kenneth Homuth (F-Lab)
Wellington East: Albert Hellyer
Wellington South: Caleb Henry Buckland
Wellington West: Robert Neil McArthur
Wentworth North: Frank Campbell Biggs
Wentworth South: Wilson A. Crockett
Windsor: James Craig Tolmie
York North: Thomas Herbert Lennox
|
Timeline
Party | 1919 | Gain/(loss) due to | 1923 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Death in office |
Resignation as MPP |
Byelection gain |
Byelection hold | ||||
United Farmers | 44 | (3) | 1 | 3 | 45 | ||
Liberal | 27 | (2) | (1) | 1 | 25 | ||
Conservative | 25 | (2) | 1 | 2 | 26 | ||
Labour | 11 | 11 | |||||
Independent-Liberal | 1 | 1 | |||||
Farmer–Labour | 1 | 1 | |||||
Farmer-Liberal | 1 | 1 | |||||
Soldier | 1 | 1 | |||||
Total | 111 | (2) | (6) | 2 | 6 | 111 |
Seat | Before | Change | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Member | Party | Reason | Date | Member | Party | |
Kent East | January 9, 1920 | James B. Clark | █ United Farmers | Resignation | February 9, 1920 | Manning William Doherty | █ United Farmers |
Halton | January 10, 1920 | John Featherstone Ford | █ United Farmers | Resignation | February 16, 1920 | Ernest Charles Drury | █ United Farmers |
Wellington East | February 4, 1920 | Albert Hellyer | █ United Farmers | Resignation | February 23, 1920 | William Edgar Raney | █ United Farmers |
Toronto Northeast - A | March 3, 1920 | Henry John Cody | █ Conservative | Resignation | November 8, 1920 | Alexander Cameron Lewis | █ Conservative |
Kingston | November 18, 1921 | Arthur Edward Ross | █ Conservative | Elected to federal seat | February 6, 1922 | William Folger Nickle | █ Conservative |
Oxford North | November 18, 1921 | John Alexander Calder | █ Liberal | Resignation | December 19, 1921 | David Munroe Ross | █ United Farmers |
Russell | December 2, 1921 | Damase Racine | █ Liberal | Died in office | October 23, 1922 | Alfred Goulet | █ Liberal |
Toronto Southeast - A | January 6, 1922 | John O'Neill | █ Liberal | Died in office | October 23, 1922 | John Allister Currie | █ Conservative |
External links
- Members in Parliament 15 Archived 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine
References
- 1920 Parliamentary Guide, p. 316
- "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2014-08-28.
- Wiki: United Farmers of Ontario
- "PETER SMITH AND AEMILIUS JARVIS SR. CONVICTED". The Globe. Oct 25, 1924. p. 1.
- Blais, To keep or to change First Past The Post, p. 113