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Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan

The Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan is a conservative political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Prior to 1942, it was known as the Conservative Party of Saskatchewan. Members are commonly known as Tories.

Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan
LeaderRose Buscholl (interim)
PresidentAlan Evans
Founded1912
Preceded byProvincial Rights Party
Headquarters3928 Gordon Road Regina, Saskatchewan S4S 6Y3[1]
Membership (2018)80[2]
IdeologyConservatism
Political positionCentre-right
ColoursBlue and green
Seats in Legislature
0 / 61
Website
www.pcsask.ca

History edit

Early years, 1905–1934 edit

It was the Saskatchewan successor to the eastern half of the North-West Territories Conservatives. The Conservative Party of Saskatchewan's first leader, Frederick W. A. G. Haultain, was so upset at sections of the federal legislation that created the province relating to immigration, education, and natural resources that he renamed the party the Provincial Rights Party for the 1905 and 1908 general elections.[3] The party reverted to the Conservative name for the 1912 election, after which Haultain left politics to become Chief Justice of Saskatchewan.[4] Its share of the popular vote declined from 32% to 5% between 1905 and 1921.[3]

The Conservative Party's fortunes began to improve when James T.M. Anderson became leader in 1924. Anderson united opponents of the governing Liberal Party,[3] and led the party to its best performance in the first half of the twentieth century in the 1929 election, when it won 36% of the popular vote and 24 out of 63 seats. Despite having fewer seats than the Liberals, the Conservatives were able to form a coalition government with Progressive Party Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) and independents, and Anderson became Premier.

Anderson was able to use the racial and religious animosity created by the rise of the Ku Klux Klan in Saskatchewan to gain support for Conservative policies on immigration and education.[3] In 1928, Liberal Premier James Garfield Gardiner claimed that the Klan was a tool of the Conservative Party.[5] The united opposition brought the Liberal government to defeat in the 1929 general election.[6] The Anderson government introduced amendments to the Schools Act banning French as a language of instruction, and the display of religious symbols in Catholic schools. The Klan convention in 1930 applauded the Anderson government’s amendments to the School Act.[5]

Political wilderness, 1934–1975 edit

The "Co-operative government", as it was called, was defeated in the 1934 election, and the Conservative Party lost all of its seats in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan. This loss can be attributed to several factors:

With the rise of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), politics in the province became polarized between the Liberals and the CCF. The CCF became the "New Democratic Party" in 1961. The Conservatives were frozen out of the provincial legislature for decades. Even the presence of future Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, who represented a Saskatchewan riding, was not enough to reverse this trend.

No Conservative was elected as a Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) until thirty years later when the party won a single seat in 1964 election. It lost that foothold three years later in the 1967 election.

Return to the Legislature, 1975–1982 edit

The Tories returned to the legislature in the 1975 election. The Progressive Conservatives won 7 seats to the Liberals' 15 and the NDP's 39.

Several Liberals crossed the floor to the PC's prior to the 1978 election, in which the Liberals were wiped out and the Tories became the Official Opposition with 17 seats to the governing NDP's 44.

Devine government, 1982–1991 edit

In the 1982 election, the Progressive Conservatives under Grant Devine formed a majority government for the first time, taking 55 out of 64 seats – still the second-biggest majority in Saskatchewan history. It was only the second Tory-led government in the province's history. They were re-elected with a somewhat reduced majority in the 1986 election, but were defeated in the 1991 election, due to large budgetary deficits, an unpopular imposition of harmonized sales taxes, and a scheme entitled "Fair Share Saskatchewan" to decentralize civil service functions from Regina and privatize crown corporations.[3]

Expenses scandal, 1991–2005 edit

In the years following their defeat, 14 Progressive Conservative MLAs and two caucus workers were convicted of fraud and breach of trust for illegally diverting hundreds of thousands of dollars from government allowances in a phony expense-claim scam. During inquiry into the scandal, many innocent party members were placed under heavy scrutiny. Jack Wolfe died by suicide, faced with the agony of possibly being scrutinized for wrongdoing himself, or having the testify against his former colleagues. Although one NDP MLA was ensnared in the scandal, the Tories' image was badly damaged by this scandal and has never recovered. Although they managed to win five seats in the 1995 election, this total was less than both the NDP and the resurgent Liberals.

Most former members and supporters (including then-leader Bill Boyd) joined the Saskatchewan Party in 1997. The new party was derisively called the "Saska-Tories" by Premier Roy Romanow and others who saw it as a repackaged version of the Tories — a perception that was attached to the Saskatchewan Party for several years.[7] While the Progressive Conservative Party essentially went dormant at this point, it was not formally dissolved. The party was believed to retain a substantial amount of money, which it would forfeit to the provincial government if it ever lost its registration. Since Saskatchewan electoral law requires a party to run at least 10 candidates in provincial elections to retain its registration, a hand-picked group under the nominal leadership of Iris Dennis ran paper candidates in the next two provincial elections to ensure that the party stayed alive.

In the September 16, 1999 election, the party nominated 14 candidates, who collected 1,609 votes, 0.4% of the provincial total. Its best result was in Saskatoon Nutana, where Patrick L. Smith received 518 votes (7.6%). In the November 5, 2003 provincial election, the party nominated 11 candidates, who received a total of 665 votes, which was 0.16% of the provincial total. In 2003, their best result was in Saskatoon Centre, where Betty Korkin received 153 votes and 2.62% of the vote.

Revival, 2005–present edit

In June 2005, the party announced that it was taking applications for new members, and that it would hold a meeting of members to decide the future of the party.[8] In the meantime, changes to provincial electoral laws passed during the previous Legislature decreased the number of candidates the party needs to run in general elections from ten to two.

On May 27, 2006, the party held a weekend convention. Forty-two delegates attended the convention in Saskatoon and voted to resurrect the Progressive Conservative Party. Delegates elected Lori Isinger as party president, and picked Rick Swenson, a minister in the Devine government, to serve as interim leader. The next order of business would have been to use the money that was put into a trust before the party was effectively put into hibernation. The party had trouble regaining access to this money, and accused the trustees of conspiring with the Saskatchewan Party so the PC party wouldn't be able to run many candidates or a serious campaign, and thus not compete with the Saskatchewan Party for votes in the next election. The party sued the trustees and the Saskatchewan Party to get at their funds.[9]

The party ran five candidates in the 2007 election. Swenson and other party members kept a relatively low profile but did some modest campaigning. The party collected 832 votes (0.18% of the total). Its five candidates in the 2011 election won a total of 1,315 votes (0.33% of the total).

The party ran 18 candidates in the 2016 election, its largest number since 1995. Even though they contested a number falling far short of the 61 total ridings, the party still collected 5,571 votes, or 1.28% of the total vote, managing 10 third-place finishes. Of the 18 ridings contested, the PC party surpassed 12 Liberal candidates and 12 Green candidates, and far exceeded the average number of votes that these parties received per contested riding.

Swenson announced in November 2016 that he will be stepping down as leader as soon as the party organizes a leadership convention.[10] On November 3, 2018, Ken Grey was chosen as the new leader of the party.[11] In the 2020 provincial election, the party won no seats in the legislature.

Ken Grey resigned as leader on January 18, 2021.[2] In November 2022, Rose Buscholl was appointed as the interim leader.[12]

Election results edit

Election Leader Seats Change Place Votes % Position
1912 Wellington Willoughby
8 / 54
 6  2 36,848 42.0% Opposition
1917
7 / 62
 1  2 68,243 36.3% Opposition
1921 Donald Maclean
2 / 63
 5  3 7,133 3.9% Third party
1925 James Anderson
3 / 63
 1  3 45,515 18.4% Third party
1929
24 / 63
 21  2 131,550 36.4% Coalition
with Progressive
1934
0 / 55
 24  3 114,923 26.8% No seats
1938 John Diefenbaker
0 / 52
   5 52,315 11.9% No seats
1944 Rupert Ramsay
0 / 52
   3 42,511 10.69% No seats
1948
0 / 52
   4 37,986 7.6% No seats
1952 Alvin Hamilton
0 / 53
   4 10,648 2.0% No seats
1956
0 / 53
   4 10,921 2.0% No seats
1960 Martin Pederson
0 / 54
   3 94,737 14.0% No seats
1964
1 / 59
 1  3 126,028 18.9% Third party
1967
0 / 59
 0  3 41,583 9.8% No seats
1971 Ed Nasserden
0 / 60
   3 9,659 2.1% No seats
1975 Dick Collver
7 / 61
 7  3 124,573 27.6% Third party
1978
17 / 61
 10  2 181,045 38.1% Opposition
1982 Grant Devine
55 / 64
 38  1 289,311 54.1% Majority
1986
38 / 64
 17  1 244,382 44.6% Majority
1991
10 / 66
 28  2 137,994 25.5% Opposition
1995 Bill Boyd
5 / 58
 5  3 73,269 17.9% Third Party
1999 Iris Dennis
0 / 58
 5  4 1,609 0.4% No seats
2003
0 / 58
   7 681 0.2% No seats
2007 Richard Swenson
0 / 58
   5 832 0.2% No seats
2011
0 / 58
   5 1,315 0.3% No seats
2016
0 / 61
   5 5,571 1.3% No seats
2020 Ken Grey
0 / 61
    8,404 1.89% No seats

Party leaders edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Registered Political Parties" (PDF). Elections Saskatchewan. July 19, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2023.
  2. ^ a b Tank, Phil (March 2, 2021). "Former Saskatchewan PC leader says party on path to extinction". Saskatoon Star Phoenix. Postmedia Network. Retrieved August 3, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f . Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on July 7, 2017. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  4. ^ . Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  5. ^ a b . Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on January 19, 2016. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  6. ^ . Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Archived from the original on July 26, 2012. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  7. ^ "Karwacki shoots back at controversial poll". CBC News. May 12, 2006.
  8. ^ . CBC News. June 23, 2005. Archived from the original on November 3, 2005.
  9. ^ French, Janet (November 1, 2007). . Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on February 15, 2016.
  10. ^ "Rick Swenson stepping down as leader of PC Party of Sask". CBC News. November 5, 2016.
  11. ^ "Ken Grey elected new leader of PC Party of Saskatchewan". November 4, 2018. Retrieved August 11, 2019.
  12. ^ Thomson, Carol (November 18, 2022). "PC Party of Saskatchewan appoints new interim leader". CJWW. Retrieved August 18, 2023.

External links edit

  • Party Website

progressive, conservative, party, saskatchewan, conservative, political, party, canadian, province, saskatchewan, prior, 1942, known, conservative, party, saskatchewan, members, commonly, known, tories, leaderrose, buscholl, interim, presidentalan, evansfounde. The Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan is a conservative political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan Prior to 1942 it was known as the Conservative Party of Saskatchewan Members are commonly known as Tories Progressive Conservative Party of SaskatchewanLeaderRose Buscholl interim PresidentAlan EvansFounded1912Preceded byProvincial Rights PartyHeadquarters3928 Gordon Road Regina Saskatchewan S4S 6Y3 1 Membership 2018 80 2 IdeologyConservatismPolitical positionCentre rightColoursBlue and greenSeats in Legislature0 61Websitewww wbr pcsask wbr caPolitics of SaskatchewanPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1905 1934 1 2 Political wilderness 1934 1975 1 3 Return to the Legislature 1975 1982 1 4 Devine government 1982 1991 1 5 Expenses scandal 1991 2005 1 6 Revival 2005 present 2 Election results 3 Party leaders 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editEarly years 1905 1934 edit It was the Saskatchewan successor to the eastern half of the North West Territories Conservatives The Conservative Party of Saskatchewan s first leader Frederick W A G Haultain was so upset at sections of the federal legislation that created the province relating to immigration education and natural resources that he renamed the party the Provincial Rights Party for the 1905 and 1908 general elections 3 The party reverted to the Conservative name for the 1912 election after which Haultain left politics to become Chief Justice of Saskatchewan 4 Its share of the popular vote declined from 32 to 5 between 1905 and 1921 3 The Conservative Party s fortunes began to improve when James T M Anderson became leader in 1924 Anderson united opponents of the governing Liberal Party 3 and led the party to its best performance in the first half of the twentieth century in the 1929 election when it won 36 of the popular vote and 24 out of 63 seats Despite having fewer seats than the Liberals the Conservatives were able to form a coalition government with Progressive Party Members of the Legislative Assembly MLAs and independents and Anderson became Premier Anderson was able to use the racial and religious animosity created by the rise of the Ku Klux Klan in Saskatchewan to gain support for Conservative policies on immigration and education 3 In 1928 Liberal Premier James Garfield Gardiner claimed that the Klan was a tool of the Conservative Party 5 The united opposition brought the Liberal government to defeat in the 1929 general election 6 The Anderson government introduced amendments to the Schools Act banning French as a language of instruction and the display of religious symbols in Catholic schools The Klan convention in 1930 applauded the Anderson government s amendments to the School Act 5 Political wilderness 1934 1975 edit The Co operative government as it was called was defeated in the 1934 election and the Conservative Party lost all of its seats in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan This loss can be attributed to several factors the controversy over the government s School Act the government s inability to deal with the Great Depression Dust Bowl which wiped out the province s agrarian economy 3 and the unpopularity of the federal Conservative government of R B Bennett With the rise of the Co operative Commonwealth Federation CCF politics in the province became polarized between the Liberals and the CCF The CCF became the New Democratic Party in 1961 The Conservatives were frozen out of the provincial legislature for decades Even the presence of future Prime Minister John Diefenbaker who represented a Saskatchewan riding was not enough to reverse this trend No Conservative was elected as a Member of the Legislative Assembly MLA until thirty years later when the party won a single seat in 1964 election It lost that foothold three years later in the 1967 election Return to the Legislature 1975 1982 edit The Tories returned to the legislature in the 1975 election The Progressive Conservatives won 7 seats to the Liberals 15 and the NDP s 39 Several Liberals crossed the floor to the PC s prior to the 1978 election in which the Liberals were wiped out and the Tories became the Official Opposition with 17 seats to the governing NDP s 44 Devine government 1982 1991 edit In the 1982 election the Progressive Conservatives under Grant Devine formed a majority government for the first time taking 55 out of 64 seats still the second biggest majority in Saskatchewan history It was only the second Tory led government in the province s history They were re elected with a somewhat reduced majority in the 1986 election but were defeated in the 1991 election due to large budgetary deficits an unpopular imposition of harmonized sales taxes and a scheme entitled Fair Share Saskatchewan to decentralize civil service functions from Regina and privatize crown corporations 3 Expenses scandal 1991 2005 edit In the years following their defeat 14 Progressive Conservative MLAs and two caucus workers were convicted of fraud and breach of trust for illegally diverting hundreds of thousands of dollars from government allowances in a phony expense claim scam During inquiry into the scandal many innocent party members were placed under heavy scrutiny Jack Wolfe died by suicide faced with the agony of possibly being scrutinized for wrongdoing himself or having the testify against his former colleagues Although one NDP MLA was ensnared in the scandal the Tories image was badly damaged by this scandal and has never recovered Although they managed to win five seats in the 1995 election this total was less than both the NDP and the resurgent Liberals Most former members and supporters including then leader Bill Boyd joined the Saskatchewan Party in 1997 The new party was derisively called the Saska Tories by Premier Roy Romanow and others who saw it as a repackaged version of the Tories a perception that was attached to the Saskatchewan Party for several years 7 While the Progressive Conservative Party essentially went dormant at this point it was not formally dissolved The party was believed to retain a substantial amount of money which it would forfeit to the provincial government if it ever lost its registration Since Saskatchewan electoral law requires a party to run at least 10 candidates in provincial elections to retain its registration a hand picked group under the nominal leadership of Iris Dennis ran paper candidates in the next two provincial elections to ensure that the party stayed alive In the September 16 1999 election the party nominated 14 candidates who collected 1 609 votes 0 4 of the provincial total Its best result was in Saskatoon Nutana where Patrick L Smith received 518 votes 7 6 In the November 5 2003 provincial election the party nominated 11 candidates who received a total of 665 votes which was 0 16 of the provincial total In 2003 their best result was in Saskatoon Centre where Betty Korkin received 153 votes and 2 62 of the vote Revival 2005 present edit In June 2005 the party announced that it was taking applications for new members and that it would hold a meeting of members to decide the future of the party 8 In the meantime changes to provincial electoral laws passed during the previous Legislature decreased the number of candidates the party needs to run in general elections from ten to two On May 27 2006 the party held a weekend convention Forty two delegates attended the convention in Saskatoon and voted to resurrect the Progressive Conservative Party Delegates elected Lori Isinger as party president and picked Rick Swenson a minister in the Devine government to serve as interim leader The next order of business would have been to use the money that was put into a trust before the party was effectively put into hibernation The party had trouble regaining access to this money and accused the trustees of conspiring with the Saskatchewan Party so the PC party wouldn t be able to run many candidates or a serious campaign and thus not compete with the Saskatchewan Party for votes in the next election The party sued the trustees and the Saskatchewan Party to get at their funds 9 The party ran five candidates in the 2007 election Swenson and other party members kept a relatively low profile but did some modest campaigning The party collected 832 votes 0 18 of the total Its five candidates in the 2011 election won a total of 1 315 votes 0 33 of the total The party ran 18 candidates in the 2016 election its largest number since 1995 Even though they contested a number falling far short of the 61 total ridings the party still collected 5 571 votes or 1 28 of the total vote managing 10 third place finishes Of the 18 ridings contested the PC party surpassed 12 Liberal candidates and 12 Green candidates and far exceeded the average number of votes that these parties received per contested riding Swenson announced in November 2016 that he will be stepping down as leader as soon as the party organizes a leadership convention 10 On November 3 2018 Ken Grey was chosen as the new leader of the party 11 In the 2020 provincial election the party won no seats in the legislature Ken Grey resigned as leader on January 18 2021 2 In November 2022 Rose Buscholl was appointed as the interim leader 12 Election results editElection Leader Seats Change Place Votes Position1912 Wellington Willoughby 8 54 nbsp 6 nbsp 2 36 848 42 0 Opposition1917 7 62 nbsp 1 nbsp 2 68 243 36 3 Opposition1921 Donald Maclean 2 63 nbsp 5 nbsp 3 7 133 3 9 Third party1925 James Anderson 3 63 nbsp 1 nbsp 3 45 515 18 4 Third party1929 24 63 nbsp 21 nbsp 2 131 550 36 4 Coalitionwith Progressive1934 0 55 nbsp 24 nbsp 3 114 923 26 8 No seats1938 John Diefenbaker 0 52 nbsp nbsp 5 52 315 11 9 No seats1944 Rupert Ramsay 0 52 nbsp nbsp 3 42 511 10 69 No seats1948 0 52 nbsp nbsp 4 37 986 7 6 No seats1952 Alvin Hamilton 0 53 nbsp nbsp 4 10 648 2 0 No seats1956 0 53 nbsp nbsp 4 10 921 2 0 No seats1960 Martin Pederson 0 54 nbsp nbsp 3 94 737 14 0 No seats1964 1 59 nbsp 1 nbsp 3 126 028 18 9 Third party1967 0 59 nbsp 0 nbsp 3 41 583 9 8 No seats1971 Ed Nasserden 0 60 nbsp nbsp 3 9 659 2 1 No seats1975 Dick Collver 7 61 nbsp 7 nbsp 3 124 573 27 6 Third party1978 17 61 nbsp 10 nbsp 2 181 045 38 1 Opposition1982 Grant Devine 55 64 nbsp 38 nbsp 1 289 311 54 1 Majority1986 38 64 nbsp 17 nbsp 1 244 382 44 6 Majority1991 10 66 nbsp 28 nbsp 2 137 994 25 5 Opposition1995 Bill Boyd 5 58 nbsp 5 nbsp 3 73 269 17 9 Third Party1999 Iris Dennis 0 58 nbsp 5 nbsp 4 1 609 0 4 No seats2003 0 58 nbsp nbsp 7 681 0 2 No seats2007 Richard Swenson 0 58 nbsp nbsp 5 832 0 2 No seats2011 0 58 nbsp nbsp 5 1 315 0 3 No seats2016 0 61 nbsp nbsp 5 5 571 1 3 No seats2020 Ken Grey 0 61 nbsp nbsp 8 404 1 89 No seatsParty leaders editFrederick W A G Haultain 1905 1912 Wellington Bartley Willoughby 1912 17 Donald Maclean 1917 21 John Salkeld 1921 24 house leader James T M Anderson 1924 October 28 1936 John Diefenbaker October 28 1936 1940 Herbert E Keown 1940 44 Rupert Ramsay 1944 October 12 1949 Alvin Hamilton October 12 1949 1957 Vacant 1957 1958 Martin Pederson October 28 1958 1968 Vacant 1968 70 Ed Nasserden February 28 1970 March 18 1973 Dick Collver March 18 1973 November 9 1979 Grant Devine November 9 1979 October 8 1992 Rick Swenson October 8 1992 November 21 1994 interim Bill Boyd November 21 1994 August 8 1997 Iris Dennis August 8 1997 May 31 2006 interim Rick Swenson May 31 2006 November 3 2018 Ken Grey November 3 2018 January 18 2021 Vacant January 18 2021 November 15 2022 Rose Buscholl November 16 2022 present interim See also edit nbsp conservatism portalPolitics of Saskatchewan Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan leadership conventions Provincial Rights Party Northwest Territories Liberal Conservative PartyReferences edit Registered Political Parties PDF Elections Saskatchewan July 19 2023 Retrieved July 24 2023 a b Tank Phil March 2 2021 Former Saskatchewan PC leader says party on path to extinction Saskatoon Star Phoenix Postmedia Network Retrieved August 3 2023 a b c d e f Conservative Party of Saskatchewan Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on July 7 2017 Retrieved February 3 2016 Frederick Haultain Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on July 6 2017 Retrieved February 3 2016 a b Ku Klux Klan Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on January 19 2016 Retrieved February 3 2016 James Garfield Gardiner Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on July 26 2012 Retrieved February 3 2016 Karwacki shoots back at controversial poll CBC News May 12 2006 Sask PC party taking applications again CBC News June 23 2005 Archived from the original on November 3 2005 French Janet November 1 2007 Sask Tories launch suit over funds Saskatoon StarPhoenix Archived from the original on February 15 2016 Rick Swenson stepping down as leader of PC Party of Sask CBC News November 5 2016 Ken Grey elected new leader of PC Party of Saskatchewan November 4 2018 Retrieved August 11 2019 Thomson Carol November 18 2022 PC Party of Saskatchewan appoints new interim leader CJWW Retrieved August 18 2023 External links editParty Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan amp oldid 1180668166, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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