1984 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election

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1984 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election

← 1968 June 16, 1984 1990 →
 
Candidate John Turner Jean Chrétien
Second ballot delegate count 1,862
(53.9%)
1,398
(40.5%)
First ballot delegate count 1,539
(46.3%)
1,067
(31.0%)

  LIB
Candidate Don Johnston John Roberts
Second ballot delegate count 192
(5.6%)
Withdrew
First ballot delegate count 278
(8.1%)
185
(5.4%)

Leader before election

Pierre Trudeau

Elected Leader

John Turner

1984 Liberal leadership election
DateJune 16, 1984
ConventionOttawa Civic Centre
Resigning leaderPierre Trudeau
Won byJohn Turner
Ballots2
Candidates7
Liberal leadership elections
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The 1984 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election was called for June 16, 1984, to replace retiring Liberal leader and sitting Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. The convention elected former Finance Minister John Turner, who at the time was not sitting in the House of Commons, as its leader on the second ballot, defeating another former finance minister, Jean Chrétien.

Candidates[edit]

Jean Chrétien[edit]

Jean Chrétien, 50, MP for Saint-Maurice since 1963, was Minister of Energy and had been Minister Responsible for constitutional negotiations, playing a significant role in the patriation of the Constitution of Canada. First appointed to Cabinet by Lester Pearson in 1967, he had served in several senior portfolios under Trudeau, including Minister of Finance and Justice Minister.

Don Johnston[edit]

Don Johnston, 47, MP for Saint-Henri—Westmount in Montreal since 1978, was President of the Treasury Board, and had served in several other economic portfolios.

Mark MacGuigan[edit]

Mark MacGuigan, 53, MP from Windsor-Walkerville since 1968 and a former dean of law, was the Minister of Justice and a former Minister of External Affairs.

John Munro[edit]

John Munro, 53, an MP for Hamilton East since 1962, was Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development.

John Roberts[edit]

John Roberts, 48, MP for St. Paul's, was Minister of Employment and Immigration.

John Turner[edit]

John Turner, 55, former MP for Ottawa-Orleans (1968–1976) and previously for St. Lawrence—St. George, Quebec (1962–1968), had served in Cabinet under Lester Pearson and Trudeau and had been Minister of Justice and Minister of Finance until resigning from cabinet in 1975 over a policy dispute over wage and price freezes.[1] Since then, he had been a corporate lawyer on Bay Street until his return to politics in 1984. Turner had run for the leadership previously in 1968, placing third on the final ballot.

Eugene Whelan[edit]

Eugene Whelan, 59, MP for Essex-Windsor since 1962, has been Minister of Agriculture from 1972 to 1979, when the Liberals lost power, and again since 1980.

Results[edit]

First ballot
TURNER, John Napier 1,593 (46%)
CHRÉTIEN, Joseph Jacques Jean 1,067 (31%)
JOHNSTON, Donald James 278 (8%)
ROBERTS, John (Moody) 185
MACGUIGAN, Mark R. 135
MUNRO, John Carr 93
WHELAN, Eugene Francis 84
Spoiled ballots 2
Total votes cast 3,437

Whelan eliminated, supports Chrétien. MacGuigan withdraws and supports Turner. Munro and Roberts withdraw and support Chrétien.

Second ballot
TURNER, John Napier 1,862 (54%)
CHRÉTIEN, Joseph Jacques Jean 1,398 (40%)
JOHNSTON, Donald James 192 (6%)
Spoiled ballots 1
Total votes cast 3,453

First ballot
Turner
46.35%
Chrétien
31.04%
Johnston
8.09%
Roberts
5.38%
MacGuigan
3.93%
Munro
2.71%
Whelan
2.44%
Spoilt ballots
0.06%
Second ballot
Turner
53.92%
Chrétien
40.49%
Johnston
5.56%
Spoilt ballots
0.03%

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Beyond Politics - John Turner". YouTube. July 2, 2013. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2018.