Saskatchewan Liberal Party
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Template:Infobox Canada Political Party
The Saskatchewan Liberal Party is a political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.
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Early history (to 1944)
The party dominated Saskatchewan politics for the province's first forty years providing six of the first seven premiers, and being in power for all but five of the years between the province's creation in 1905 and World War II. Located on the middle of the political spectrum, it assiduously courted "ethnic" (i.e., non-British) voters, as well as the organized farm movement, and refused to pander to "nativist" sentiment that culminated in the short, spectacular existence of the Ku Klux Klan in Saskatchewan in 1927-28.
Varying fortunes (1944-1978)
In the 1944 election, however, Saskatchewan experienced a dramatic change when it elected the first socialist government in North America under Tommy Douglas and the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation. The Liberals moved to the political right and remained out of power for twenty years until Ross Thatcher's victory in 1964 election. Thatcher led the Liberals to re-election in 1967.
After the defeat of the Liberals in the 1971 election at the hands of the CCF's successor, the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party (NDP), the party remained the principal opposition party in the province until the 1978 election, when the party was wiped out and replaced on the right by the Progressive Conservatives.
The party in the 1980s and 1990s
The Liberals came under the leadership of future Lieutenant Governor Lynda Haverstock in 1989. The Liberals were only able to take limited advantage of the collapse of Grant Devine's scandal and deficit-ridden Conservative government in the 1991 election, but Haverstock was able to win her Saskatoon seat.
In the 1995 election, the Liberals displaced the Tories to become the Official Opposition to the re-elected NDP government of Roy Romanow. However, dissatisfaction with the party's political moderation and suspicions about the party's links to the federal Liberals led to the new caucus dumping Haverstock as leader. Generally, however, Liberals have not been a centre-right party.
The party continued to founder and, in 1997, several right-wing Liberal Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) joined forces with Reform Party of Canada supporters and former Tories to form the Saskatchewan Party.
Recent history
The 1999 election reduced the Liberals, then led by Jim Melenchuk, to only three seats and third party status in the legislature. The NDP, however, had been unable to win an outright majority of seats and persuaded the Liberals to form a coalition government with the NDP. The Liberal MLAs were then appointed to positions in the Cabinet. One Liberal who had been narrowly defeated in his bid for a seat in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan, David Karwacki opposed the coalition arrangement. Rank-and-file members of the party sided with Karwacki, and he was elected party leader, defeating MLA Jack Hillson who had initially joined the coalition, but later withdrew. Karwacki soon ordered the other two Liberal MLAs, Melenchuk and Ron Osika to leave the coalition. They refused and the party split. The pro-coalition Liberals eventually joined the NDP. These members, however, were defeated by their Saskatchewan Party opponents at the next election.
The internal party feud hurt Liberal fortunes, as did a polarized electorate, and the party was again shut out of the legislature in the 2003 election. Hillson was defeated in The Battlefords constituency by the NDP candidate and Karwacki was unable to gain a seat in Saskatoon.
The combination of an electorate that remains polarized and the unpopularity of the federal Liberals in Saskatchewan has left the provincial Liberal Party with an uncertain future, at least in the short-to-medium term.
Party Leaders
- Walter Scott (August 16, 1905-October 1916)
- William M. Martin (October 20, 1916-April 5, 1922)
- Charles A. Dunning (April 5, 1922-February 26, 1926)
- James G. Gardiner (February 26, 1926-October 31, 1935)
- William John Patterson (October 31, 1935-August 6, 1946)
- Walter Tucker (August 6, 1946-1954)
- Alexander H. McDonald (November 26, 1954-September 24, 1959)
- Ross Thatcher (September 24, 1959-1971)
- David Steuart (December 11, 1971-1976)
- Ted Malone (December 11, 1976-1981)
- Ralph Goodale (June 13, 1981-late 1988)
- Lynda Haverstock (April 2, 1989-November 12, 1995)
- Jim Melenchuk (November 24, 1996-2001)
- David Karwacki (October 27, 2001-)