This HTML5 document contains 168 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata.

Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
dctermshttp://purl.org/dc/terms/
dbohttp://dbpedia.org/ontology/
foafhttp://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/
n4http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:
n15https://global.dbpedia.org/id/
dbthttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Template:
rdfshttp://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#
n9http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/
rdfhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
n17https://www.parl.ca/
owlhttp://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#
wikipedia-enhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
dbchttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Category:
dbphttp://dbpedia.org/property/
provhttp://www.w3.org/ns/prov#
xsdhhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#
wikidatahttp://www.wikidata.org/entity/
dbrhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/

Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada_leadership_elections
rdfs:label
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership elections
rdfs:comment
The first Progressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership election was held in 1927, when the party was called the Conservative Party. Prior to then the party's leader was chosen by the caucus or in several cases by the Governor General of Canada designating a Conservative MP or Senator to form a government after the retirement or death of an incumbent Conservative Prime Minister. Note on tables: Green box indicates winner. Pink box indicates candidate eliminated from ballot for receiving the fewest votes. Blue box indicates candidate withdrew from balloting.
foaf:depiction
n9:Howard_Charles_Green.jpg n9:KimCampbell.jpg n9:Robert_Rogers.jpg n9:Peter-MacKay.jpg n9:Paul_Hellyer-c1969.jpg n9:Joseph_Henry_Harris.jpg n9:Mulroney.jpg n9:John_Bracken_circa_1941.jpg n9:JoeClark.jpg n9:Hugh_Guthrie.png n9:Garth_Turner_(cropped).jpg n9:Donald_Fleming.jpg n9:Jean_Charest.jpg n9:Scott_Brison_2010.jpg n9:Henry_Herbert_Stevens.jpg n9:Diplomat_Michael_Wilson.png n9:Murdoch_Alexander_MacPherson.jpg n9:Michael_Fortier.jpg n9:Crombie1983.jpg n9:EdmundDavieFulton-1916.jpg n9:Jim_Prentice.jpg n9:Richard_Bedford_Bennett.jpg n9:John_G._Diefenbaker.jpg n9:Robert_Manion.jpg n9:George_Hees.jpg n9:Brian_Pallister_2014.jpg n9:Henry_Lumley_Drayton.jpg n9:Crosbie_1983-2_crop.jpg n9:Sinclair_Stevens_photo_by_Djuradj_Vujcic.jpg n9:GeorgeDrew.jpg n9:Alvin_Hamilton.jpg n9:Hugh_Segal_(cropped).jpg
dcterms:subject
dbc:Lists_of_elections_in_Canada dbc:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada_leadership_elections
dbo:wikiPageID
532248
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1098511667
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
n4:Garth_Turner_(cropped).jpg dbr:Alvin_Hamilton n4:Brian_Pallister_2014.jpg dbr:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada dbr:Hull,_Quebec dbr:Ottawa n4:John_G._Diefenbaker.jpg dbc:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada_leadership_elections n4:Crosbie_1983-2_crop.jpg dbr:Canadian_Alliance n4:Scott_Brison_2010.jpg dbr:Richard_Hanson_(Canadian_politician) dbr:George_Halsey_Perley dbr:Quebec n4:Paul_Hellyer-c1969.jpg dbc:Lists_of_elections_in_Canada dbr:John_Diefenbaker dbr:Hugh_Segal dbr:Howard_Ferguson dbr:Winnipeg dbr:M._A._MacPherson n4:Richard_Bedford_Bennett.jpg dbr:Hugh_Guthrie dbr:Malcolm_Wallace_McCutcheon dbr:Manitoba dbr:Governor_General_of_Canada n4:Howard_Charles_Green.jpg n4:Sinclair_Stevens_photo_by_Djuradj_Vujcic.jpg dbr:Robert_James_Manion dbr:Patrick_Boyer dbr:John_Allen_Fraser dbr:Arthur_Meighen dbr:Henry_Lumley_Drayton dbr:Electoral_district_(Canada) n4:Hugh_Segal_(cropped).jpg dbr:John_Bracken n4:Henry_Lumley_Drayton.jpg dbr:Caucus n4:Alvin_Hamilton.jpg dbr:R._B._Bennett n4:Jim_Prentice.jpg dbr:Joe_Clark dbr:Jim_Prentice dbr:Brian_Pallister dbr:Davie_Fulton dbr:John_A._Gamble dbr:Joseph_Henry_Harris dbr:Ontario dbr:Robert_Rogers_(Manitoba_politician) dbr:Interim_leader_(Canada) dbr:Garth_Turner dbr:Scott_Brison dbr:James_Gillies dbr:Dufferin_Roblin dbr:George_A._Drew dbr:Jack_Horner_(politician) dbr:Charles_Cahan dbr:Mary_Walker-Sawka dbr:Flora_MacDonald_(politician) dbr:Sinclair_Stevens dbr:George_Hees n4:Henry_Herbert_Stevens.jpg dbr:Kim_Campbell dbr:Jim_Edwards_(Canadian_politician) n4:Donald_Fleming.jpg dbr:Proportional_representation dbr:Peter_Pocklington dbr:Michael_Starr_(politician) dbr:Leadership_convention n4:Mulroney.jpg n4:Murdoch_Alexander_MacPherson.jpg n4:KimCampbell.jpg dbr:Michael_Wilson_(Canadian_politician) dbr:Craig_Chandler n4:JoeClark.jpg dbr:Conservative_Party_of_Canada dbr:Conservative_Party_of_Canada_(1867–1942) n4:Michael_Fortier.jpg dbr:Denton_Massey dbr:Brian_Mulroney dbr:Conservative_Party_of_Canada_leadership_elections dbr:Michael_Fortier dbr:Jean_Charest dbr:Edgar_Nelson_Rhodes n4:GeorgeDrew.jpg n4:Joseph_Henry_Harris.jpg dbr:Donald_Fleming dbr:Henry_Herbert_Stevens dbr:Progressive_Conservative_leadership_conventions n4:Diplomat_Michael_Wilson.png dbr:Wilfrid_Garfield_Case dbr:Robert_Stanfield dbr:Palais_des_congrès_de_Gatineau dbr:Claude_Wagner dbr:Pat_Nowlan dbr:One_member,_one_vote dbr:Member_of_parliament n4:EdmundDavieFulton-1916.jpg dbr:Peter_MacKay dbr:David_Orchard n4:Crombie1983.jpg dbr:John_Allister_Currie n4:Robert_Manion.jpg dbr:Earl_Lawson_(politician) n4:Robert_Rogers.jpg n4:Hugh_Guthrie.png n4:John_Bracken_circa_1941.jpg dbr:Howard_Charles_Green n4:Peter-MacKay.jpg dbr:Neil_Fraser_(civil_servant) dbr:1993_Canadian_federal_election dbr:John_Babington_Macaulay_Baxter dbr:David_Crombie n4:Jean_Charest.jpg dbr:André_Bachand_(Progressive_Conservative_MP) dbr:Paul_Hellyer dbr:Toronto dbr:Heward_Grafftey dbr:John_Crosbie n4:George_Hees.jpg
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n17:
owl:sameAs
wikidata:Q7248717 n15:4tbYE
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Short_description dbt:Main
dbo:thumbnail
n9:Richard_Bedford_Bennett.jpg?width=300
dbo:abstract
The first Progressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership election was held in 1927, when the party was called the Conservative Party. Prior to then the party's leader was chosen by the caucus or in several cases by the Governor General of Canada designating a Conservative MP or Senator to form a government after the retirement or death of an incumbent Conservative Prime Minister. There have been two permanent leaders since 1927 who were not chosen by a leadership convention. Arthur Meighen agreed to serve a second term as leader in 1941 on condition that he would not have to contest the position. The party agreed since the party was desperate for a leader of Meighen's stature. Jean Charest was one of only two Progressive Conservative Members of Parliament returned in the 1993 election and was appointed leader by the party's executive with the decision later being affirmed at a regular party convention two years later. The Conservative Party became the Progressive Conservative Party in 1942. All leadership conventions were delegated conventions, except in 1998 when a one member, one vote process was used in which each riding was allocated 100 points which were distributed among candidates by proportionally. For the 2003 leadership election, the party reverted to use of a delegated convention, ostensibly because of the cost of using a one member, one vote process (though it has been argued that the party feared that use of one member, one vote would make an outside takeover of the party easier due to a decline in membership). In 2003, the party merged with the Canadian Alliance to form a new Conservative Party of Canada. This party adopted the one member, one vote process the Tories had used in 1998. Note on tables: Green box indicates winner. Pink box indicates candidate eliminated from ballot for receiving the fewest votes. Blue box indicates candidate withdrew from balloting.
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada_leadership_elections?oldid=1098511667&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
26794
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada_leadership_elections