1981 Quebec general election - Biblioteka.sk

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1981 Quebec general election
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1981 Quebec general election

← 1976 April 13, 1981 1985 →

122 seats in the 32nd National Assembly of Quebec
62 seats were needed for a majority
Turnout82.52% (Decrease2.75%)
  First party Second party Third party
  UN
Leader René Lévesque Claude Ryan Roch LaSalle
Party Parti Québécois Liberal Union Nationale
Leader since October 14, 1968 April 15, 1978 January 9, 1981
Leader's seat Taillon Argenteuil Ran in Berthier (lost)
Last election 71 seats, 41.37% 26 seats, 33.78% 11 seats, 18.20%
Seats won 80 42 0
Seat change Increase9 Increase16 Decrease11
Popular vote 1,773,237 1,658,753 144,070
Percentage 49.26% 46.07% 4.00%
Swing Increase7.89% Increase12.29% Decrease14.20%

Popular vote by riding. As this is an FPTP election, seat totals are not determined by popular vote, but instead via results by each riding. Click the map for more details.

Premier before election

René Lévesque
Parti Québécois

Premier after election

René Lévesque
Parti Québécois

The 1981 Quebec general election was held on April 13, 1981, to elect members of the National Assembly of the Province of Quebec, Canada. The incumbent Parti Québécois, led by Premier René Lévesque, won re-election, defeating the Quebec Liberal Party, led by Claude Ryan.

The PQ won re-election despite having lost the 1980 Quebec referendum on sovereignty-association, the party's proposal for political independence for Quebec in an economic union with the rest of Canada. To some extent, they were helped by Claude Ryan's old-fashioned campaign style: he refused to tailor sound bites for the evening news and ran a campaign generally unsuited for television coverage. Despite finishing only three percent behind the PQ, the Liberals still finished a distant second, with 42 seats to the PQ's 80. Historically, provincial elections in Quebec produce large disparities between the popular vote and the actual seat count.

The Union Nationale, which had won 11 seats in a modest comeback in the 1976 general election, was reduced to five seats at dissolution by numerous floor crossings, retirements and resignations. Among the departures was that of its leader in the 1976 election, Rodrigue Biron, who crossed the floor to the PQ. The once-proud party lost all of its remaining seats, never to return. The party essentially ended at this point, though it lingered in desultory fashion until 1989.

Redistribution of ridings

A 1979 Act [1] provided for the creation of the Commission de la représentation électorale, charged with the task of the redistribution of riding boundaries for elections to the National Assembly. For its initial work, it had to create a sufficient number of ridings that would have an average of 34,000 electors.[2] In April 1980, the Commission increased the number of electoral districts from 110 to 122, effective with the next election:[3]

Abolished ridings New ridings
Drawn from parts of other ridings
Reorganization of ridings
Division of ridings
Renaming of ridings
  1. ^ from parts of Chambly and Verchères
  2. ^ from parts of Papineau
  3. ^ from parts of Terrebonne
  4. ^ from part of Chauveau
  5. ^ from parts of Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Marguerite-Bourgeoys and Jacques-Cartier
  6. ^ from parts of Abitibi-Est and Abitibi-Ouest
  7. ^ from parts of Viau and Jeanne-Mance

Campaign

The Liberals and péquistes fielded full slates, while the Unionists decided not to run a candidate in the new riding of Ungava. The Parti national populaire ceased operations after its co-founder and only MNA Fabien Roy decided to leave the Legislature in 1979 for the federal level to lead the Social Credit Party of Canada.

The Ralliement créditiste dissolved in 1978 when its leader Camil Samson created Les Démocrates, but that party failed to secure enough nominations for the coming election and thus dissolved in 1980. Samson would later join the Liberals, and would run as a candidate for that party in Rouyn-Noranda–Témiscamingue.

Other disaffected créditistes opted to join the United Social Credit which had been revived by Jean-Paul Poulin.

Riding contests, by number of candidates (1981)[4]
Candidates PQ Lib UN Ind Comm-W FOC Ltn ML PCSU Workers Comm LSO Total
2 1 1 2
3 48 48 48 144
4 35 35 35 7 5 2 1 13 5 2 140
5 14 14 14 4 5 5 6 5 2 1 70
6 11 11 11 4 10 3 1 9 1 3 1 1 66
7 6 6 6 3 6 6 3 3 2 1 42
8 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 1 32
9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9
10 2 2 2 4 2 1 1 2 1 1 2 20
Total 122 122 121 27 33 12 10 40 16 10 10 2 525

Results

All seats were won by either the PQ or the Liberals, and no other party received better than a third-place result. The UN was once more shut out of the National Assembly. The election was notable for a large number of fringe parties, none of which received as much as 0.2% of the popular vote.

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=1981_Quebec_general_election
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Elections to the National Assembly of Quebec (1981)[4]
Political party Party leader MNAs Votes
Candidates 1976 1981 ± # ± % ± (pp)
Parti Québécois René Lévesque 122 71 80 9Increase 1,773,237 382,886Increase 49.26% 7.89Increase
Liberal Claude Ryan 122 26 42 16Increase 1,658,753 523,697Increase 46.08% 12.30Increase
Union Nationale Roch LaSalle 121 11 11Decrease 144,070 467,596Decrease 4.00%