*** Welcome to piglix ***

Progressive Conservative leadership convention, 1948

Progressive Conservative Party leadership election, 1948
Canada
← 1942 October 2, 1948 1956 →
  GeorgeDrew.jpg John G. Diefenbaker.jpg Donald Fleming.jpg
Candidate George A. Drew John Diefenbaker Donald Fleming
Party Progressive Conservative Progressive Conservative Progressive Conservative
Delegate count 827 311 104
Percentage 66.7% 25.0% 8.4%

Leader before election

John Bracken

Elected Leader

George A. Drew

Progressive Conservative leadership election, 1948
Date October 2, 1948
Convention Ottawa Coliseum,
Lansdowne Park
Ottawa, Ontario
Resigning leader John Bracken
Won by George A. Drew
Ballots 1
Candidates 3
Entrance Fee C$?
Spending limit None
Progressive Conservative leadership conventions
1927 · 1938 · 1942 · 1948 · 1956 · 1967 · 1976 · 1983 · 1993 · 1995 · 1998 · 2003

John Bracken

George A. Drew

The 1948 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. Voting occurred on October 2, 1948. Premier of Ontario George A. Drew was elected as the party's new leader.

John Bracken had been leader of the party since 1942 but did not enter parliament until the 1945 federal election in which the Liberal government was re-elected despite an increase in seats for the Progressive Conservatives. Unable to impress his leadership on the parliamentary party, which viewed him as an outsider, he was persuaded to step down as leader in 1948.

Grey North (Ontario) MP W. Garfield Case ended his candidacy before the convention to support Drew.

Policies considered by delegates including tax relief, a ban on communist activities, abolishing an annual $2.50 radio licence fee, reducing the cost of government, strengthened defence, a long-term immigration policy, a national flag, and a national library.

Drew's speech to delegates received more applause than Diefenbaker's. The Ontario premier called for stronger ties between Quebec and English Canada, warned against centralization of power in Ottawa and faoured personal initiative, saving, and security.

Fleming warned of the “cancer of Communism in our midst (that) must be fought without quarter by every democratic weapon open to a free people” and accused the Liberals of surrendering to socialist economics. He aruged that Quebec was essential for the party's success.

Diefenbaker said the party needed more support from what he called the “forgotten man" arguing that “They want leadership that will assert that decent living cannot come from government handouts; they know that government cannot take the place of fundamental virtues of honest, thrift, hard work, tolerance and sympathy… I believe that progress can be achieved by free enterprise rather than through the muddling interference of bureaucrats.”


...
Wikipedia

...