1942 Canadian conscription plebiscite

April 27, 1942 (1942-04-27)

Are you in favour of releasing the Government from any obligations arising out of any past commitments restricting the methods of raising men for military service?
Advertisement appearing in The Canadian Champion (Milton, Ontario, April 23, 1942) soliciting votes for the 1942 Canadian conscription plebiscite.
Results
Choice
Votes  %
Yes 2,945,514 65.62%
No 1,543,006 34.38%
Valid votes 4,488,520 96.76%
Invalid or blank votes 150,327 3.24%
Total votes 4,638,847 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 6,502,234 71.34%

Results by province and territory

A plebiscite on conscription was held in Canada on 27 April 1942.[1] It was held in response to the Conservative Party lobbying Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King (Liberal leader) to introduce compulsory overseas military service, the government having previously promised not to introduce same in 1940.[2] The result was 66% voting in favour,[2] with Quebec being the only province to have a majority voting against. Quebec's strong majority against the comitment's release prompted the prime minister not to pursue the issue until later events prompted a change in position.

Content

The following question appeared on the ballot:


Are you in favour of releasing the Government from any obligations arising out of any past commitments restricting the methods of raising men for military service?
:
Consentez-vous à libérer le gouvernement de toute obligation résultant d'engagements antérieurs restreignant les méthodes de mobilisation pour le service militaire?

Opinion polling

Completion DatePolling firmSourceYesNoUndecidedLead
April 27, 1942Official results65.62%34.38%31.24%
March 1942Gallup[3]6428836
February 1942Gallup[3]60241636
December 27, 1941Gallup[4]60301030

Quebec polling only

Completion DatePolling firmSourceYesNoLead
April 27, 1942Official results27.9 72.144.2
March 1942Gallup[3]257550
February 1942Gallup[3]396122

Results

National

Canadian conscription plebiscite, 1942
National results
Choice Votes  %
Referendum passed Yes 2,945,514 65.63
No 1,543,006 34.37
Invalid or blank votes 50,327 1.08
Total votes 4,638,847 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 6,502,234 71.34
Source: Nohlen[1]

By province

Canadian conscription plebiscite, 1942
Provincial results
Jurisdiction Yes No
Votes %Votes %
Alberta186,62471.175,88028.9
British Columbia253,84480.462,03319.6
Manitoba218,09380.353,65119.7
New Brunswick105,62969.845,74330.2
Nova Scotia120,76377.135,84022.1
Ontario1,202,95384.0229,84716.0
Prince Edward Island23,56982.94,86917.1
Quebec375,65027.9971,92572.1
Saskatchewan183,61773.167,65426.9
Yukon84774.429125.6
Total civilian vote2,670,08863.31,547,72436.7
Military vote251,11880.560,88519.5
Canada2,921,20664.51,608,60935.5

The referendum was held in all 245 electoral districts, which covered all nine provinces and one of the two territories. Residents in the Northwest Territories did not have a vote, as their area was not organized as an electoral district.

References

  1. 1 2 Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p127 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. 1 2 Nohlen, p130
  3. 1 2 3 4 "64 p.c. of Canadians would free govt. from manpower promises". The Evening Citizen. March 14, 1942. p. A1.
  4. Gallup and Fortune Polls. (1942). The Public Opinion Quarterly, 6(1), 140–174. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2745046
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