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List of Canadian conservative leaders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of federal leaders after Confederation who were members of federal conservative parties.

Tory leaders since Confederation

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This is a list of leaders of theConservative Party of Canada (historical) (1867–1942),Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (1942–2003), andConservative Party of Canada (2003–present) ("the Tory parties"), and ofprime ministers of Canada after Confederation who were members of those parties.

Conservative (1867–1942)

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Further information:Liberal-Conservative Party,Conservative Party of Canada (1867–1942),Unionist Party (Canada),National Liberal and Conservative Party, andNational Government (Canada)
NameFromToRiding as leaderNotes
Sir John A. MacdonaldJuly 1, 1867June 6, 1891Kingston, ON (1867–18, 1887–91);
Victoria, BC (1878–82);
Carleton, ON (1882–88)
1st Prime Minister
Sir John AbbottJune 16, 1891November 24, 1892Senator for Inkerman, QC3rd Prime Minister
Sir John Sparrow David ThompsonDecember 5, 1892December 12, 1894Antigonish, NS4th Prime Minister
Sir Mackenzie BowellDecember 21, 1894April 27, 1896Senator for Hastings, ON5th Prime Minister
Sir Charles TupperMay 1, 1896February 6, 1901Cape Breton, NS6th Prime Minister
Sir Robert Laird BordenFebruary 6, 1901July 10, 1920Halifax, NS (1900–04, 1908–17);
Carleton, ON (1905–08);
Kings, NS (1917–21)
8th Prime Minister
Arthur MeighenJuly 10, 1920September 24, 1926Portage la Prairie, MB (1908–21, 1925–26);
Grenville, ON (1922–25)
9th Prime Minister
Hugh Guthrie(interim leader)October 11, 1926October 12, 1927Wellington South
R. B. BennettOctober 12, 1927July 7, 1938Calgary West, AB11th Prime Minister
Robert ManionJuly 7, 1938May 14, 1940London, ONResigned after lost seat in 1940 election
Richard Hanson(interim leader)May 14, 1940November 12, 1941York—Sunbury, NB
Arthur MeighenNovember 12, 1941December 9, 1942Senator for St. Marys, OntarioResigned after defeat in attempt to enter House of Commons viaYork South by-election

Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (1942–2003)

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Main article:Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
PictureNameTerm startTerm endRiding as leaderNotes
John BrackenDecember 11, 1942July 20, 1948NeepawaFormer Premier of Manitoba
George DrewOctober 2, 1948November 29, 1956CarletonFormer Premier of Ontario
William Earl RoweNovember 29, 1956(Interim)December 14, 1956Dufferin—SimcoeInterim leader until1956 leadership convention
John DiefenbakerDecember 14, 1956September 9, 1967Prince Albert13th Prime Minister of Canada
Robert StanfieldSeptember 9, 1967February 22, 1976HalifaxFormer Premier of Nova Scotia
Joe ClarkFebruary 22, 1976February 19, 1983Rocky Mountain,Yellowhead16th Prime Minister of Canada
Erik NielsenFebruary 19, 1983(Interim)June 11, 1983YukonInterim leader until1983 leadership convention
Brian MulroneyJune 11, 1983June 13, 1993Central Nova,Manicouagan,Charlevoix18th Prime Minister of Canada
Kim CampbellJune 13, 1993December 14, 1993Vancouver Centre19th Prime Minister of Canada
Jean CharestDecember 14, 1993April 2, 1998SherbrookeFormer Premier of Quebec
Elsie WayneApril 2, 1998(Interim)November 14, 1998Saint JohnInterim until1998 leadership election
Joe ClarkNovember 14, 1998May 31, 2003Kings—Hants,Calgary CentreHis second tenure as leader
Peter MacKayMay 31, 2003December 7, 2003Central NovaFinal leader of the Progressive Conservative Party; merged the PC Party withStephen Harper'sCanadian Alliance in 2003, cofounding the newConservative Party of Canada.

Conservative Party of Canada (2003–present)

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Main article:Conservative Party of Canada
LeaderTerm startTerm endConstituencyNotes
John Lynch-Staunton7 December 200320 March 2004Senator forGrandville, QuebecInterim leader, served concurrently asSenate Opposition Leader.
1stStephen Harper20 March 200419 October 2015
Acting: 19 October 2015 – 4 November 2015
Calgary Southwest, AlbertaFirst official leader of the modern Conservative Party of Canada;

Served asLeader of the Official Opposition from 2004–2006, andPrime Minister from 2006–2015.

Rona Ambrose5 November 201527 May 2017Sturgeon River—Parkland, AlbertaInterim leader, served concurrently asLeader of the Official Opposition.
2ndAndrew Scheer27 May 201724 August 2020Regina—Qu'Appelle, SaskatchewanServed concurrently asLeader of the Official Opposition 2017–2020;

(resigned 12 December 2019, remained leader until his successor was chosen on 24 August 2020).[1]

3rdErin O'Toole24 August 20202 February 2022Durham, OntarioServed concurrently asLeader of the Official Opposition 2020–2022;

(removed 2 February 2022 by the Conservative caucus).

Candice Bergen2 February 202210 September 2022Portage—Lisgar, ManitobaInterim leader, served concurrently asLeader of the Official Opposition 2022.
4thPierre Poilievre10 September 2022IncumbentCarleton, Ontario (2015-2025)

None (2025)
Battle River—Crowfoot, Alberta (2025-present)

Served concurrently asLeader of the Official Opposition until being unseated in the2025 Canadian federal election. He returned to Parliament in the2025 Battle River—Crowfoot federal by-election, thus again becoming Leader of the Official Opposition.

Conservative prime ministers of Canada

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This is a list ofprime ministers of Canada after Confederation who were members of theConservative Party of Canada (1867–1942),Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (1942–2003), andConservative Party of Canada (2003–present).

Conservative (1867–1942)

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Further information:Liberal-Conservative Party,Conservative Party of Canada (1867–1942),Unionist Party (Canada),National Liberal and Conservative Party, andNational Government (Canada)

Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (1942–2003)

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Further information:Progressive Conservative Party of Canada

Conservative Party of Canada (2003–present)

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Further information:Conservative Party of Canada

Electoral performance of Tory leaders

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Conservative (historical; 1867–1942)

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ElectionLeaderParty name# of candidates nominated# of seats won+/–Election Outcome# of total votes% of popular votePosition
1867John A. MacdonaldConservatives,Liberal-Conservatives112
100 / 180
Increase100Increase1st92,65634.53%Majority
1872Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives, oneConservative Labour140
100 / 200
SteadySteady 1st123,10038.66%Minority
1874Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives, oneConservative Labour104
65 / 206
Decrease 35Decrease 2nd99,44030.58%Opposition
1878Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives161
129 / 206
Increase 64Increase 1st229,19142.06%Majority
1882Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives168
136 / 215
Increase 7Steady 1st208,54440.39%Majority
1887Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives203
111 / 215
Decrease 25Steady 1st343,80547.41%Majority
1891Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives212
117 / 215
Increase 6Steady 1st376,51848.58%Majority
1896Charles TupperConservatives, Liberal-Conservatives207
98 / 213
Decrease 19Decrease 2nd467,41548.17%Opposition
1900Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives204
79 / 213
Decrease 19Steady 2nd438,33046.1%Opposition
1904Robert BordenConservatives, Liberal-Conservatives205
75 / 214
Decrease 4Steady 2nd470,43045.94%Opposition
1908Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives211
85 / 221
Increase 10Steady 2nd539,37446.21%Opposition
1911Conservatives, Liberal-Conservatives andNationalist Conservatives212
132 / 221
Increase 47Increase 1st636,93848.90%Majority
1917Unionist Party211
152 / 235
Increase 20Steady 1st1,070,69456.93%Majority
1921Arthur MeighenNational Liberal and Conservative Party204
49 / 235
Decrease 103Decrease 3rd935,65129.95%Third Party
1925Conservatives232
114 / 245
Increase 65Increase 1st1,454,25346.13%Opposition
(October 1925–June 2026)
Minority
(June–September 2026)
1926Conservatives232
91 / 245
Decrease 23Decrease 2nd1,476,83445.34%Opposition
1930R. B. BennettConservatives229
135 / 245
Increase 44Increase 1st1,836,11547.79%Majority
1935Conservatives228
39 / 245
Decrease 96Decrease 2nd1,290,67129.84%Opposition
1940Robert James ManionNational Government207
39 / 245
SteadySteady 2nd1,402,05930.41%Opposition

Progressive Conservative Party of Canada (1942–2003)

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ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/–PositionRoleGovernment
1945John Bracken1,448,74427.62%
64 / 245
Increase 27Steady 2ndOppositionLiberal minority
1949George A. Drew1,734,26129.62%
41 / 262
Decrease 23Steady 2ndOppositionLiberal majority
19531,749,57931.01%
50 / 265
Increase 9Steady 2ndOppositionLiberal majority
1957John Diefenbaker2,564,73238.81%
112 / 265
Increase 62Increase 1stMinorityPC minority
19583,908,63353.56%
208 / 265
Increase 96Steady 1stMajorityPC majority
19622,865,54237.22%
116 / 265
Decrease 92Steady 1stMinorityPC minority
19632,591,61332.80%
93 / 265
Decrease 23Decrease 2ndOppositionLiberal minority
19652,500,11332.41%
95 / 265
Increase 2Steady 2ndOppositionLiberal minority
1968Robert Stanfield2,554,39731.43%
72 / 264
Decrease 23Steady 2ndOppositionLiberal majority
19723,388,98035.02%
107 / 264
Increase 35Steady 2ndOppositionLiberal minority
19743,371,31935.46%
95 / 264
Decrease 12Steady 2ndOppositionLiberal majority
1979Joe Clark4,111,60635.89%
136 / 282
Increase 41Increase 1stMinorityPC minority
19803,552,99432.49%
103 / 282
Decrease 33Decrease 2ndOppositionLiberal majority
1984Brian Mulroney6,278,81850.03%
211 / 282
Increase 108Increase 1stMajorityPC majority
19885,667,54343.02%
169 / 295
Decrease 42Steady 1stMajorityPC majority
1993Kim Campbell2,178,30316.04%
2 / 295
Decrease 167Decrease 5thNo statusLiberal majority
1997Jean Charest2,446,70518.84%
20 / 301
Increase 18Steady 5thFifth partyLiberal majority
2000Joe Clark1,566,99412.19%
12 / 301
Decrease 8Steady 5thFifth partyLiberal majority

Conservative Party of Canada (2003–present)

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ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/–PositionGovernment
2004Stephen Harper4,019,49829.63%
99 / 308
Increase 21Steady 2ndOpposition
20065,374,07136.37%
124 / 308
Increase 25Increase 1stMinority
20085,209,06937.65%
143 / 308
Increase 19Steady 1stMinority
20115,832,40139.62%
166 / 308
Increase 23Steady 1stMajority
20155,613,63331.91%
99 / 338
Decrease 67Decrease 2ndOpposition
2019Andrew Scheer6,239,22734.34%
121 / 338
Increase 22Steady 2ndOpposition
2021Erin O'Toole5,747,41033.74%
119 / 338
Decrease 2Steady 2ndOpposition
2025Pierre Poilievre8,089,94141.3%
144 / 343
Increase 25Steady 2ndOpposition

Other conservative parties' leaders

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Parties that have had representation in the House of Commons

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"Reform-Alliance"

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Leaders of theReform Party of Canada
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Leaders of theCanadian Alliance
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Leaders of theReconstruction Party of Canada

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Leaders of theSocial Credit Party of Canada

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Leader of thePeople's Party of Canada

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Parties that have had no representation in the House of Commons

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Leaders of theChristian Heritage Party of Canada

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Leaders of theLibertarian Party of Canada

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  • Sieg Pedde (1973–1974)
  • Charles 'Chuck' Lyall (1974–1976)
  • Ron Bailey (1976–1978)
  • Alex Eaglesham (1978–1979)
  • Linda Cain (1980–1982)
  • Neil Reynolds (May 1982 – 1983)
  • Victor Levis (1983–1987)
  • Dennis Corrigan (1987–1990)
  • Stanislaw Tyminski (1990–1991)
  • George Dance (1991–1993)
  • Hilliard Cox (May 1993 – 1995)
  • George Dance (1995–1996)
  • Vincent Pouliot (May 12, 1996 – April 5, 1997)
  • Robert Morse (1997)
  • Jean-Serge Brisson (1997 - May 18, 2008)[f][2]
  • Dennis Young (May 18, 2008 - May 2011)
  • Katrina Chowne (May 2011 – May 2014)
  • Tim Moen (May 2014 – 2021)
  • Jacques Boudreau (2021 – present)

Leaders of theProgressive Canadian Party

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Leaders of theWestern Block Party

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  • Doug Christie (November 30, 2005 – March 11, 2013)
  • Paul St. Laurent (March 11, 2013 – January 31, 2014)

Leader of theAlliance of the North

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  • François Bélanger (September 11, 2013 — present)

References

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  1. ^Tunney, Catharine; Harris, Kathleen (12 Dec 2019)."Conservative caucus backs Scheer as interim leader amid private school backlash".CBC News. Retrieved1 Feb 2019.
  2. ^AgendaArchived 2011-06-14 at theWayback Machine

Notes

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  • ^[a] CreatedViscount Bennett following his retirement from office.
  • ^[b] On this occasion, Meighen failed in his attempts to win re-election to the House of Commons, so Hanson remained Leader of the Opposition throughout Meighen's term
  • ^[c] Bracken did not win election to the House of Commons until 1945, so Hanson remained Leader of the Opposition until January 1943, when he was replaced byGordon Graydon
  • ^[d] On two occasions when Drew was too ill to perform his duties,William Earl Rowe served as Leader of the Opposition
  • ^[e]Michael Starr served as Leader of the Opposition until November 5, 1967, when Stanfield, who had previously beenpremier ofNova Scotia, won election to Parliament
  • ^[f] Brisson led the party on an interim basis prior to being elected at a delegated convention in 2000.
Conservative (1867–1942)
Progressive Conservative (1942–2003)
Reform (1987–2000)
Canadian Alliance (2000–2003)
Conservative (2003–present)
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