1953 British Columbia general election

June 9, 1953

48 seats of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia
25 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
CCF
Leader W. A. C. Bennett Arnold Webster
Party Social Credit Co-operative Commonwealth
Leader since 1952 1953
Leader's seat South Okanagan Vancouver East
Last election 19 18
Seats won 28 14
Seat change Increase9 Decrease4
First count 274,771 224,513
  Percentage 37.75% 30.85%
  Swing Increase10.55pp Increase0.07pp
Final count 300,372 194,414
  Percentage 45.54% 29.48%

  Third party Fourth party
 
PC
Leader Arthur Laing Deane Finlayson
Party Liberal Progressive Conservative
Leader since 1953 1952
Leader's seat Vancouver-Point Grey Ran in Oak Bay (lost)
Last election 6 4
Seats won 4 1
Seat change Decrease2 Decrease3
First count 171,671 40,780
  Percentage 23.59% 5.60%
  Swing Increase0.13pp Decrease11.24pp
Final count 154,090 7,326
  Percentage 23.36% 1.11%

Premier before election

W. A. C. Bennett
Social Credit

Premier after election

W. A. C. Bennett
Social Credit

The 1953 British Columbia general election was the 24th general election in the Province of British Columbia, Canada. It was held to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. The election was called on April 10, 1953, and held on June 9, 1953. The new legislature met for the first time on September 15, 1953.

The minority government formed in 1952 by the conservative Social Credit party of Premier W.A.C. Bennett lasted only nine months before new elections were called. Social Credit was re-elected with a majority in the legislature to a second term in government with almost 38% of the popular vote.

The social democratic Co-operative Commonwealth Federation formed the official opposition with the only significant opposition caucus (14 seats).

The British Columbia Liberal Party had a net loss of two of its six seats despite maintaining its 23% share of the popular vote. They lost five of the six seats they had won in 1952, but picked up three new seats.

The Progressive Conservative Party lost three of its four seats in the legislature, as its share of the popular vote fell from almost 17% to under 6%.

One seat was won by a Labour candidate.

Results

Party Party leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular vote
1952 Elected % Change First count % Change Final count %
Social Credit W.A.C. Bennett 48 19 28 +47.4% 274,771 37.75% +10.55% 300,372 45.54%
  CCF Arnold Webster 47 18 14 -22.2% 224,513 30.85% +0.07% 194,414 29.48%
Liberal Arthur Laing 48 6 4 -33.3% 171,671 23.59% +0.13% 154,090 23.36%
  Progressive Conservative Deane Finlayson 39 4 1 -75.0% 40,780 5.60% -11.24% 7,326 1.11%
  Labour Tom Uphill 1 1 1 - 1,601 0.22% +0.06% 1,793 0.27%
Labour Progressive   25 - - - 7,496 1.03% +0.70% 816 0.12%
Christian Democratic   14 - - - 5,036 0.69% -0.24% 752 0.12%
  Independents 6 - - - 1,951 0.27% 0.10% - -
  People's   1 * - * 20 x * - -
Total 229 48 48 - 727,839 100% - 659,563 100%
Source: Elections BC

Notes:

* Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election.

x - less than 0.005% of the popular vote.

Popular vote (First count)
Social Credit
37.75%
CCF
30.85%
Liberal
23.59%
PC
5.60%
Labour
0.22%
Others
1.99%
Popular vote (Final count)
Social Credit
45.54%
CCF
29.48%
Liberal
23.36%
PC
1.11%
Labour
0.27%
Others
0.24%
Seats summary
Social Credit
58.33%
CCF
29.17%
Liberal
8.33%
PC
2.08%
Labour
2.08%

Results by riding

Results of British Columbia general election, 1953
Government Opposition
Member Riding
& party
Riding
& party
Member
     William Ralph Talbot Chetwynd Cariboo
Social Credit
          Alberni
CCF
Stanley John Squire     
     William Kenneth Kiernan Chilliwack
Social Credit
          Atlin
CCF
Frank Calder     
     Richard Orr Newton Columbia
Social Credit
          Burnaby
CCF
Ernest Edward Winch     
     Thomas Irwin Delta
Social Credit
          Comox
CCF
William Campbell Moore     
     Lyle Wicks Dewdney
Social Credit
          Cowichan-Newcastle
CCF
Robert Martin Strachan2     
     Llewllyn Leslie King Fort George
Social Credit
          Cranbrook
CCF
Leo Thomas Nimsick     
     Philip Arthur Gaglardi Kamloops
Social Credit
          Grand Forks-Greenwood
CCF
Rupert Haggen     
     Herbert Joseph Bruch Esquimalt
Social Credit
          Kaslo-Slocan
CCF
Randolph Harding     
     Wesley Drewett Black Nelson-Creston
Social Credit
          Mackenzie
CCF
Anthony John Gargrave     
     Lorne Shantz North Okanagan
Social Credit
          New Westminster
CCF
Rae Eddie     
     George Henry Tomlinson Jr. North Vancouver
Social Credit
          Revelstoke
CCF
Vincent Segur     
     Cyril Morley Shelford Omineca
Social Credit
          Skeena
CCF
Frank Howard     
     Charles William Parker Peace River
Social Credit
          Vancouver East
CCF
Arthur James Turner     
     Robert Edward Sommers Rossland-Trail
Social Credit
          Arnold Alexander Webster     
     John Douglas Tidball Tisdalle Saanich
Social Credit
          Fernie
Labour (Party)
Thomas Aubert Uphill     
     James Allan Reid Salmon Arm
Social Credit
          Lillooet
Liberal
James Gordon Gibson     
     Frank Richter, Jr. Similkameen
Social Credit
          Oak Bay
Liberal
Philip Archibald Gibbs     
     William Andrew Cecil Bennett1 South Okanagan
Social Credit
          Prince Rupert
Liberal
Arthur Bruce Brown     
     Eric Charles Fitzgerald Martin Vancouver-Burrard
Social Credit
          Vancouver-Point Grey
Liberal
Arthur Laing     
     Bert Price           Nanaimo and the Islands
Progressive Conservative
Larry Giovando     
     Alexander Small Matthew Vancouver Centre
Social Credit
    
     George Churchill Moxham     
     Thomas Audley Bate Vancouver-Point Grey
Social Credit
    
     Robert William Bonner     
     Lydia Arsens Victoria City
Social Credit
    
     William Neelands Chant     
     Walter Percival Wright     
     Irvine Finlay Corbett Yale
Social Credit
    
1 Premier-Elect 2 Leader of the Opposition
Source: Elections BC

See also

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