Reform Party of Canada
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- For the Reform Party that existed prior to Canadian Confederation, see Reform Party (pre-Confederation)
Reform Party of Canada | |
---|---|
Former Federal Party | |
Founded | October 31, 1987 |
Dissolved | March 25, 2000 |
Leader | Preston Manning Only leader |
President | n/a |
Headquarters | n/a |
Political ideology | Populism, Conservatism, Social conservatism |
International alignment | n/a |
Colours | Green |
Website | n/a |
The Reform Party of Canada was a Canadian federal political party founded in 1987. It viewed itself as a populist party, but was also conservative. It was folded into the ideologically and fiscally conservative Canadian Alliance in 2000. During its time on the Canadian political scene, Reform only had one leader, Preston Manning.
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[edit] Political roots and the party's creation
In 1986, a conference called "Canada's Economic and Political Future" was held in Vancouver, British Columbia. This conference led to the formation of the Reform Party in the following year. The party's founding occurred as the coalition of Western Prairie populists, Quebec nationalists, Ontario business leaders, and Atlantic Red Tories that made up Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservative Party (PC) began to fracture.
The party was the brainchild of a group of discontented Western interest groups who were upset with the PC government and the lack of a voice for Western concerns at the national level. They believed the West needed its own party if it was to be heard. Their main complaints against the Mulroney government were its alleged favoritism towards Quebec, lack of fiscal responsibility, and a failure to support a program of institutional reform (for example, of the Senate). The roots of this discontent lay mainly in their belief that a package of proposed constitutional amendments, called the Meech Lake Accord, failed to meet the needs of Westerners and Canadian unity overall.
The Reform Party was founded as a populist party to promote reform of democratic institutions. However, shortly after the 1987 founding convention, social and fiscal conservatives became dominant within the party, moving it to the right. Their political aims were a reduction in government spending on social programs, and reductions in taxation.
[edit] The party in the late 1980s
The party had its first assembly in 1987, in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Preston Manning, son of former Alberta Social Credit Premier and Senator Ernest Manning, was acclaimed as the new party's leader when former Manitoba Liberal Party Member of the Legislative Assembly Stan Roberts, the only other candidate, withdrew from the race. The party fought in the 1988 federal election, but was never considered more than a fringe element, and failed to elect any of its 72 riding candidates. However, the party ran second to the governing Tories in many Western ridings and earned 2.1% of the total national vote.
In 1989, following the sudden death of John Dahmer, PC MP for Beaver River, Alberta, the Reform Party gained its first MP when Deborah Grey won a by-election. Grey had finished fourth in the 1988 election. As the party's first MP, she became Reform's deputy leader, a position she held for the remainder of the party's history.
Also in 1989, Stanley Waters won Alberta's first senatorial election under the banner of the Reform Party of Alberta. He would eventually become Reform's first (and only) federal Senator, remaining in office until his untimely death. Waters' appointment, following his election victory, has led some to describe him as Canada's first elected Senator.
[edit] Controversial links
In the early 1990s, the party was controversially endorsed by extremist groups such as the Neo-Nazi Heritage Front and the Alliance for the Preservation of English in Canada (APEC). This was a significant blow to the party's image in many regions of Canada, and one from which they struggled to recover for many years.
While the Reform Party had similar views to APEC's on official bilingualism and the role of Quebec in the confederation, the reasons for the racist Heritage Front's endorsement were less direct. In fact, the Heritage Front simply viewed Reform as a vehicle they could infiltrate in order to steer it toward their views, a phenomenon to which many new political parties are somewhat vulnerable. A few individual party candidates did come under fire for having made racist statements; however, the Reform Party itself never proposed or endorsed a racist platform.
[edit] Electoral success
In 1992, the Mulroney government made another attempt at amending Canada's constitution. The Charlottetown Accord was even more ambitious than the Meech Lake Accord, but it failed to win support in a nationwide referendum. The Reform Party was one of the few groups to oppose the accord.
The constitutional debacle, unpopular initiatives such as the introduction of a Goods and Services Tax (GST), together with a series of high-profile scandals, all contributed to the implosion of the Progressive Conservative "grand coalition" in the 1993 election. The Progressive Conservatives suffered the worst defeat ever for a governing party at the federal level, falling to only two seats, while the Liberals won an overwhelming majority government.
Reform was the major beneficiary of the Tory collapse, taking nearly 16% of the popular vote--a healthy increase from 1988. With few exceptions, the PCs' Western support transferred en masse to Reform. It won all but four seats in Alberta and dominated British Columbia as well. It also won four seats in Saskatchewan and one seat in Manitoba. It probably would have won many more seats in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, but those provinces were swept under the Liberal tide. Besides taking over nearly all of the PCs' seats in the west, Reform also won several ridings held by the social democratic New Democratic Party. Despite sharp ideological differences, Reform's populism struck a responsive chord with many NDP voters.
However, Reform did not do as well as hoped east of Manitoba. It was shut out of Atlantic Canada - a region where a much more moderate brand of conservatism has traditionally prevailed. Many Red Tory voters in both Atlantic Canada and Ontario where fed up with the Tories, but found Reform's agenda too extreme and shifted to the Liberals, at least at the national level. Despite strong support in rural central Ontario--a very socially conservative area which had been the backbone of previous provincial Tory governments - vote splitting with the national Tories allowed the Liberals to win all but one seat in Ontario. Ed Harper managed to win in Simcoe Centre, but had 123 more votes gone to the Liberal candidate, the Liberals would have had the first-ever clean sweep of Canada's most populous province. As it turned out, this was Reform's only victory east of Manitoba, ever. The party also did not run any candidates in Quebec.
Reform was still a Western protest party, and would never lose this character. However, due to a quirk in the first past the post system, its heavy concentration of support in the West netted it 52 seats. However, the Bloc's concentration of support in Quebec was slightly larger, leaving Reform three seats short of Official Opposition status despite finishing second in the popular vote. Even with these disappointments, the 1993 election was a tremendous success for Reform. In one stroke, it had replaced the Tories as the major right-wing party in Canada.
[edit] Fortunes in the 1990s
The arrival of the Reformers in Ottawa followed a long line of Western protest parties like the Progressive Party of Canada and Social Credit. Reform ran into the same problems those parties had had, as it wrestled with the tricky task of maintaining a populist ideology.
In the 1997 election, Reform ran candidates in Quebec for the first time. However, it failed to win any seats east of Manitoba. The party increased its total seats to 60 and became the Official Opposition. The party was considerably hampered in its efforts to reach francophone voters due to Manning's inability to speak French; there was also a perception of the party as being anti-Quebec due to its position on official bilingualism and its opposition to the Meech Lake Accord.
Disillusionment with the traditional political parties in general had been the impetus behind Reform's initial growth, but that growth was now felt to have stalled. The party's executive therefore launched a major rebranding effort: leader Preston Manning got contact lenses, a new hair style, and worked with a voice coach. He began discussions towards the launch of a new pan-Canadian party, which would use "United Alternative" ("UA") forums to bring grassroots Reformers together with Tories. The goal was to create a small-c conservative political alternative that would convince Ontarians and Atlantic Canadians to vote for them. This initiative was opposed by "Grassroots United Against Reform's Demise" ("GUARD"). Manning was supported by the more right-of-center "Focus Federally For Reform".
[edit] Disbanding
The outcome was the creation of a new party, the "Canadian Reform Conservative Alliance" (more commonly known as the Canadian Alliance). It fused about half of the Progressive Conservative policies, and half of Reform's policies. Reform disbanded on March 27, 2000 and was folded into the Alliance.
Even though the Alliance and Reform are considered separate parties, former Reform members dominated the new party. The Reform parliamentary caucus, with few exceptions, simply became the Alliance caucus. As a result, the Alliance was widely seen as a renamed and enlarged Reform. Mulroney called the new party "Reform in pantyhose," and other critics frequently referred to it as the "Reform Alliance."
Manning stood in the first leadership race for the new party, but lost to the younger, more charismatic Stockwell Day, the treasurer (finance minister) and deputy premier of Alberta.
The creation of the Canadian Alliance, and its eventual merger in 2003 with the Progressive Conservative Party to form the new Conservative Party of Canada, alienated some of the old Reform populists, leading to the creation of a new "Reform Association of Canada".
A new initiative called "Bring Back Real Reform" has also been created by a very small group of original Reformers from Ontario, with the aim of bringing back a federal Reform Party. Under the tag "Operation Back to the Future", it was launched in Spring 2005 as an umbrella for all original Reformers across the nation who felt that they were still without a political home.
Most of these people were also members of GUARD, were anti-UA, and were generally unsupportive of the Canadian Alliance, seeing it as a political vehicle for a Tory takeover even though the Alliance was dominated by former Reform Party members.
[edit] Provincial wings
The Reform Party of Canada had two official provincial wings, that were registered by the party to be kept in a mostly dormant state.
The Reform Party of Ontario ran only one candidate in each election to maintain registration, whilst the Reform Party of Alberta ran candidates in the first two senatorial elections.
There were also two unaffiliated provincial parties, the Reform Party of British Columbia and the Reform Party of Manitoba. While they had no official connection to the federal party, they shared a similar political outlook. Both provincial parties are now largely inactive.
[edit] Federal election results 1988-1997
Election | # of candidates | # of seats won | # of total votes | % of popular vote |
---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | 72 | 0 | 275,767 | 2.09% |
1993 | 207 | 52 | 2,559,245 | 18.69% |
1997 | 227 | 60 | 2,513,080 | 19.35% |
[edit] See also
- Reform Party candidates, 1997 Canadian federal election
- Reform Party candidates, 1993 Canadian federal election
- List of political parties in Canada
- Unite the Right
[edit] External links
Preceded by Party founded |
Reform Party of Canada 1987 - 2000 |
Succeeded by Canadian Alliance |