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Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1992

Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1992
Date February 7–9, 1992
Convention Copps Coliseum,
Hamilton, Ontario
Resigning leader David Peterson
Won by Lyn McLeod
Ballots 5
Candidates 6
Spending limit $250,000

Ontario Liberal Party leadership conventions

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Ontario Liberal Party leadership conventions

The Ontario Liberal Party leadership election, 1992, held on February 8-9, 1992 elected Lyn McLeod as the leader of the Ontario Liberal Party. McLeod replaced David Peterson who resigned after losing his seat in the 1990 provincial election. McLeod won after five ballots against a field of five other candidates. She was the first woman to head a major political party in Ontario.

The leadership convention was held to replace David Peterson who resigned after losing his seat in the 1990 provincial election. Initially, Robert Nixon was appointed as interim leader but he resigned on July 31, 1991 to take a federal patronage position to conduct a review of Atomic Energy of Canada Limited. Murray Elston was then appointed as interim leader but he resigned when he announced his candidacy on November 18. Jim Bradley was appointed as the third interim leader which he kept until the leadership convention. The leadership race officially began on November 7, 1991, 90 days before a convention which was held on the weekend of February 7-9, 1992 in Hamilton, Ontario.

Six caucus members entered the race. They were Charles Beer, Murray Elston, Steve Mahoney, Lyn McLeod, David Ramsay, and Greg Sorbara. Mahoney was first off the mark when he officially announced his candidacy on November 7, 1991.

The party adopted a procedure to elect a leader that included elements of both direct elections and a leadership convention. Members who had been party members for at least 90 days would choose delegates for the convention. Delegates sent by each riding varied depending on their support for individual candidates. Each delegate was committed to vote for a particular candidate on the first ballot but were free to choose on subsequent ballots. The hybrid format was an effort to include local democracy but with the media attention that follows a traditional convention. A spending cap of $250,000 was placed for each candidates expenses and $671,000 was budgeted for the convention weekend.


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