Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Progressive Conservative leadership convention, 1956

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December 13–14, 1956
  
1967 →

393
  
117

30.6%
  
9.1%

Candidates
  
3

774
  
393

60.3%
  
30.6%

Won by
  
John Diefenbaker

Resigning leader
  
George A. Drew

Progressive Conservative leadership convention, 1956

The 1956 Progressive Conservative leadership election was held to choose a leader for the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. The convention was held at the Ottawa Coliseum in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The convention began on December 13, 1956 with voting occurring on December 14 when John Diefenbaker was elected the new leader.

Contents

Background

The ailing George A. Drew had taken a leave of absence from his duties as Leader of the Opposition for much of 1956 due to a nearly fatal attack of meningitis. After eight years as party leader, he announced his resignation in the fall of 1956 and a leadership convention was announced for December in Ottawa.

Candidates

  • John George Diefenbaker, 61, the Member of Parliament (MP) for Lake Centre and then Prince Albert, Saskatchewan since 1940, announced his third bid for the leadership having run unsuccessfully in 1942 and 1948.
  • Donald Fleming, 51, MP for the Toronto riding of Eglinton since 1945, had run in the 1948 leadership election.
  • E. Davie Fulton, 40, MP for Kamloops, British Columbia since 1945, was running for leadership for the first time.
  • MP John Borden Hamilton, 43, who had represented the Toronto-area riding of York West since a 1954 by-election, considered running but decided against it.

    Convention

    The convention was opened by Ottawa mayor Charlotte Whitton with Nova Scotia Premier Robert Stanfield, a future party leader, giving the keynote address.

    Diefenbaker was nominated by New Brunswick Premier Hugh John Flemming and British Columbia MP George Pearkes. Diefenbaker's failure to have a French speaker as one of his nominees reportedly hurt him with Quebec delegates. They held a meeting and considered supporting one of Diefenbaker's opponents en masse, of which Fleming hoped to be the beneficiary.

    The convention supported polices to extend funding for veterans who lacked pensions, a health insurance plan, a new Canadian flag, tax cuts, subsidies for wheat exports, support for NATO and the United Nations, and to remove the responsibilities for broadcast regulation from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and instead create an independent regulator. An attempt to remove the word "Progressive" from the party's name was rejected.

    References

    Progressive Conservative leadership convention, 1956 Wikipedia