New Democratic Party
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
- This page is about the Canadian political party. For other parties, see New Democratic Party (disambiguation).
New Democratic Party | |
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Active Federal Party | |
Founded | June 17, 1961 Incorporated CCF and CLC |
Leader | Jack Layton |
President | Adam Giambrone |
Headquarters | 300 - 279 Laurier Avenue West Ottawa, Ontario K1P 5J9 |
Political ideology | social democratic/democratic socialist |
International alignment | Socialist International |
Colours | Orange |
Website | http://www.ndp.ca/ |
The New Democratic Party (French: Nouveau Parti démocratique) is a left wing political party in Canada that advocates varying forms of social democracy and democratic socialism. It contests elections at the federal and provincial levels. In the Canadian House of Commons, it represents the left wing of the Canadian political spectrum while the Liberal and Conservative parties represent the centre and right wings, respectively. The NDP is a member of the Socialist International organization of Democratic socialist and Social democratic parties.
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Principles, policies and electoral achievement
The NDP is noted for its populist, agrarian and democratic socialist roots, its close affiliation with organized labour, and, while the party is secular and pluralistic, it has a longstanding relationship with the Christian left and the Social Gospel movement, particularly the United Church of Canada. The federal leader of the NDP is Jack Layton.
The NDP has never formed the federal government, but has wielded considerable influence during federal minority governments, such as in the current 38th Parliament.
Provincial New Democratic Parties, technically sections of the federal party, have governed several provinces and a territory. They currently govern the provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan, form the Official Opposition in British Columbia, Nova Scotia and Yukon, and have sitting members in every provincial legislature except those of Quebec and Prince Edward Island. In previous terms, they have formed governments in the provinces of Ontario and British Columbia, and in Yukon territory.
New Democrats are also active municipally, and have been elected mayors, councillors, and school and service board members — Toronto mayor David Miller is a leading example. Like most municipal office-holders in Canada, they are usually elected as independents or with autonomous municipal parties.
History
Origins and early history
The NDP was created in 1961 as a merger of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) and the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC). Tommy Douglas, the long-time CCF Premier of Saskatchewan, was elected the party's first leader. In 1960, before the NDP was officially registered, one candidate, Walter Pitman, won a by-election under the New Party banner.
The influence of organized labour on the party is still reflected in the party's leadership elections as labour votes are scaled to 25% of the total number of ballots cast. Until 1983, the basic statement of principles of the party was embodied in the Winnipeg Declaration, which had been passed by the CCF in 1956.
Under the leadership of David Lewis (1971-1975), the NDP supported the minority government formed by Pierre Trudeau's Liberals from 1972 to 1974, although the two parties never entered into a coalition. Together they succeeded in passing many left-wing initiatives into law, including pension indexing and the creation of a nationalized oil and gas company, Petro-Canada.
The party under Ed Broadbent
Under the leadership of Ed Broadbent (1975-1989), the NDP played a critical role during Joe Clark's minority government of 1979-1980, moving the no-confidence motion on John Crosbie's budget that brought down the Progressive Conservative government, and forced the election that brought Trudeau's Liberal Party back to power.
In number of seats, the federal NDP reached its apogee with 43 Members of Parliament (MPs) in the election of 1988. The Conservatives, however, won a second majority. In 1989, Broadbent stepped down after 15 years as federal leader of the NDP, although he has recently returned from retirement, and won election to Parliament in the riding of Ottawa Centre in the 2004 election.
Declining popularity
Over three election cycles, under the leadership of Audrey McLaughlin (1989-1995) — the first woman to be leader of a national political party in Parliament — in the first, and Alexa McDonough (1995-2003) over the next two, the party underwent a marked decline in popularity, a modest resurgence, and a slight further decline. Among other factors, the unpopularity of Bob Rae's provincial NDP government in Ontario hurt the federal party's fortunes. In the 1993 election, in which it won only 9 seats, it lost official party status in the House of Commons. Twelve MPs are required by the rules of the House of Commons for official party status. This status was regained in the 1997 election, in which 21 New Democrats were elected.
The party embarked in a renewal process starting in 2000. A general convention in Winnipeg in November 2001 made significant alterations to certain party structures, and reaffirmed its commitment to the left. In the May 2002 by-elections, Brian Masse won the riding of Windsor West in Windsor, Ontario, previously held for decades by a Liberal, former Deputy Prime Minister Herb Gray.
Alexa McDonough announced her resignation as party leader for family reasons in June 2002, and was succeeded by Jack Layton. Layton, a former Toronto city councillor, was elected at the party's leadership election in Toronto on January 25, 2003, defeating his nearest rival, longtime MP Bill Blaikie, on the first ballot with 53.5% of the vote. Layton did not seek a seat in the House of Commons until the 2004 election.
Recent developments
In the 2004 election, the NDP won the third largest number of votes, behind the Conservative Party of Canada and the Liberal Party of Canada. The party gained five seats in the election, for a total of 19. The NDP won fewer seats than the Bloc Québécois, though, whose smaller portion of the overall popular vote was concentrated in Quebec ridings. The party was also bitterly disappointed to see its two Saskatchewan incumbents defeated by the Conservatives, both in close races. Those losses caused the federal NDP to be shut out in Saskatchewan for the first time since the 1968 election, despite obtaining 23% of the vote in the province.
The Liberals were re-elected to the 38th Canadian parliament, though this time as a minority government. The number of seats needed to form a majority government in the 2004 election was 154, exactly one more than the total resulting Liberal and NDP count. The election of a Speaker, the fact that the Liberal caucus has lost three members since the election, and the decision of Bev Desjarlais to leave the NDP have further decreased this total. The NDP may play an important role in getting legislation passed, particularly instituting electoral reform with proportional representation (PR). PR enjoys at least tacit support from all the opposition parties, which would apparently see elections to the House of Commons modelled on the system used in Germany. Also, there is historical precedent to the Liberals and NDP cooperating such as in the early 1960s and 1970s that laid the national framework for universal healthcare, expansion of employment insurance and the indexing of pensions.
On May 19, 2005, by Speaker Peter Milliken's tie-breaking vote, the House of Commons voted for second reading on major NDP amendments to the federal budget, preempting about $4.5 billion in corporate tax cuts and funding social, educational and environmental programs instead. Both supporters and opponents of the measures branded it Canada's first "NDP budget." The governing Liberals had agreed to support the changes in exchange for NDP support on confidence votes. In late June, the amendments passed the final reading vote and many political pundits concluded that the NDP has gained creditibilty as to their effective clout on the national scene.
The most successful provincial section of the party has been the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party, which first came to power in 1944 as the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation under Tommy Douglas and has won most of the province's elections since then. In Canada, Tommy Douglas is often cited as the Father of Medicare since, as Saskatchewan Premier, he introduced the first publicly-funded, universal healthcare system there.
Structure
Unlike other Canadian parties, the NDP is integrated with its provincial and territorial parties, such that a member of a provincial or territorial NDP is automatically a member of the federal NDP.
There are three exceptions. In Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, whose territorial legislatures have no parties, the federal NDP is promoted by its riding associations, since each territory is composed of only one federal riding.
In Quebec, the Quebec New Democratic Party and the federal NDP agreed in 1989 to sever their structural ties after the Quebec party adopted a sovereignist platform. Since then, the federal NDP is not integrated with a provincial party in that province; instead, it has a section, the Nouveau Parti démocratique-Section Québec, whose activities in the province are limited to the federal level, whereas on the provincial level its members are individually free to support or adhere to any party.
Provincial and territorial parties
The provincial New Democratic Parties are sections of the federal New Democratic Party of Canada. According to the party constitution a member of a provincial or territorial NDP is automatically a member of the federal NDP - the federal NDP has no membership of its own except in Quebec where the party has no provincial counterpart. This distinguishes the NDP from the Liberal and Conservative parties which have more complex relationships with their provincial counterparts (and in some cases, no formal relationship) and separate provincial and federal memberships.
Party | Seats/Total | Leader |
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Alberta New Democratic Party | 4/83 | Brian Mason, MLA |
New Democratic Party of British Columbia | 33/79 | Carole James, MLA |
New Democratic Party of Manitoba | 35/57 | Hon. Gary Doer, MLA, Premier of Manitoba |
New Brunswick New Democratic Party | 0/55 | Allison Brewer |
New Democratic Party of Newfoundland and Labrador |
2/48 | Jack Harris, MHA |
Nova Scotia New Democratic Party | 15/52 | Darrell Dexter, MLA |
Ontario New Democratic Party | 8/103 | Howard Hampton, MPP |
Island New Democrats (P.E.I.) | 0/27 | vacant / James Rodd * |
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party | 30/58 | Hon. Lorne Calvert, MLA, Premier of Saskatchewan |
Yukon New Democratic Party | 5/18 | Todd Hardy, MLA |
* James Rodd, as President of the PEI NDP, exercises the powers of the leader. An interm leader is expected to be appointed soon
From 1963 to 1994, there was a New Democratic Party of Quebec.
Province/Territory | Seats - Status | Election years and party leaders at the time |
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Alberta | 16 - Official Opposition | 1986, Ray Martin; 1989, Ray Martin |
British Columbia | 51 - Government | 1991, Michael Harcourt |
Manitoba | 35 - Government | 2003, Gary Doer |
New Brunswick | 2 | New Brunswick 1984 by-election, George Little |
Newfoundland and Labrador |
2 | 1987 by election Peter Fenwick ; 1999, 2003, Jack Harris |
Nova Scotia | 19 - Official Opposition | 1998, Robert Chisholm |
Ontario | 74 - Government | 1990, Bob Rae |
Prince Edward Island | 1 | 1996, Herb Dickieson |
Quebec | 1 | 1944, (CCF) |
Saskatchewan | 55 - Government | 1991, Roy Romanow |
Yukon | 11 - Government | 1996 |
Current members of Parliament
As of October 18, 2005, the NDP holds 18 seats in the House of Commons. For a list of NDP MPs and their critic portfolios see New Democratic Party Shadow Cabinet.
One senator, Lillian Dyck, chooses to associate herself with the NDP. However the party does not allow her to be part of the parliamentary caucus, as the NDP favours the abolition of the Senate. She therefore sits in the Senate as an Independent New Democrat.
Federal leaders
- Tommy Douglas (August 3, 1961 - April 23, 1971)
- David Lewis (April 24, 1971 - July 6, 1975)
- Ed Broadbent (July 7, 1975 - December 4, 1989)
- Audrey McLaughlin (December 5, 1989 - October 13, 1995)
- Alexa McDonough (October 14, 1995 - January 24, 2003)
- Jack Layton (January 25, 2003 - present)
Federal election results 1962–2004
Election | # of candidates | # of seats won | # of total votes | % of popular vote |
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1962 | 217 | 19 | 1,044,754 | 13.57% |
1963 | 232 | 17 | 1,044,701 | 13.24% |
1965 | 255 | 21 | 1,381,658 | 17.91% |
1968 | 263 | 22 | 1,378,263 | 16.96% |
1972 | 252 | 31 | 1,725,719 | 17.83% |
1974 | 262 | 16 | 1,467,748 | 15.44% |
1979 | 282 | 26 | 2,048,988 | 17.88% |
1980 | 280 | 32 | 2,150,368 | 19.67% |
1984 | 282 | 30 | 2,359,915 | 18.81% |
1988 | 295 | 43 | 2,685,263 | 20.38% |
1993 | 294 | 9 | 933,688 | 6.88% |
1997 | 301 | 21 | 1,434,509 | 11.05% |
2000 | 298 | 13 | 1,093,748 | 8.51% |
2004 | 308 | 19 | 2,116,536 | 15.7% |
See also
- List of articles about CCF/NDP members
- List of political parties in Canada
- New Democratic Party leadership conventions
- NDP Socialist Caucus
- New Politics Initiative
- Fightback (Canada)
- Regina Manifesto
- Metro New Democratic Party - Municipal NDP in Toronto in the 1970s and 1980s
- Young New Democrats
- List of NDP members of provincial and territorial assemblies
- List of NDP members of parliament
External links
- Official website
- Quebec section of the federal NDP
- Alex Ng's NDP links page
- flyourflag.ca NDP site discussing Paul Martin's operation of Canada Steamship Lines shipping company
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