Shirley McLoughlin

Shirley McLoughlin (born 1930)[1] is a former Canadian politician, who was the leader of the British Columbia Liberal Party from 1981 to 1983.[1] She was the first woman ever to lead a political party in the province.[2]

Shirley McLoughlin
Leader of the British Columbia Liberal Party
In office
1981–1984
Preceded byJev Tothill
Succeeded byArt Lee
Personal details
Born1930
NationalityCanadian
Political partyLiberal Party of Canada, British Columbia Liberal Party
ResidenceComox, British Columbia, Canada
Occupationteacher

Prior to assuming the leadership, McLoughlin worked as a teacher, and served as the party's president.[3] She ran as the Liberal Party of Canada's candidate in Comox—Powell River in the 1980 federal election,[4] losing to Ray Skelly. She was elected leader of the BC Liberals at their leadership convention on May 25, 1981, over lawyer Tom Finkelstein and farmer Roland Bouwman.[2]

McLoughlin took over the leadership at a time when the party was in unprecedented crisis; under her predecessor Jev Tothill, the party had run just five candidates provincewide in the 1979 election, and had failed to win a single seat in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for the first time in its history. She led the party to a modest resurgence, running 52 candidates in the 1983 provincial election and increasing the party's popular vote total by over 600 per cent compared to 1979, but again failed to win a seat.[5] She was defeated in her own dual-member district of Vancouver Centre by New Democrats Emery Barnes and Gary Lauk.

She announced her resignation as party leader in August 1983.[6] She was succeeded by Art Lee at the party's 1984 leadership convention.[7]

She later served two terms on the municipal council of Comox.

Electoral record

1980 Canadian federal election: Comox—Powell River
Party Candidate Votes%±%
New DemocraticRaymond Skelly25,00748.97+4.69
Progressive ConservativeAl Lazerte16,54532.40-2.81
LiberalShirley McLoughlin9,22118.06-1.82
CommunistSy Pederson2920.57-0.06
Total valid votes 51,065
New Democratic hold Swing +3.75
1983 British Columbia general election: Vancouver Centre
Party Candidate Votes%Elected
New DemocraticEmery Oakland Barnes18,96028.70Y
New DemocraticGary Vernon Lauk18,74328.37Y
Social CreditAvril Kim Campbell12,74019.28
Social CreditPhilip W. Owen12,41518.79
LiberalShirley McLoughlin2,0843.16
Progressive ConservativeKevin Baden Bruce8801.33
CommunistMaurice Rush2440.37
Total valid votes 66,066
Total rejected ballots 84
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gollark: And in practice you'll get less because stuff isn't optimized for the precise weirdness of phone codecs and there's some lossiness.
gollark: If your phone uses a bitrate of, say, 64kbps, for encoding "voice" audio, then by the pigeonhole principle it is literally impossible to send more than 64kbps down that by meddling with audio.
gollark: Low-bandwidth, at least.
gollark: But it will be very slow.

References

  1. "Liberal fortunes rising: leader". The Globe and Mail, October 17, 1983.
  2. "B.C. Liberal Party elects woman to lead its seatless, divided ranks". The Globe and Mail, May 25, 1981.
  3. "Liberal denounces 'childish' ads". The Globe and Mail, January 31, 1980.
  4. "Togetherness - it's rare: It seems only the NDP is on speaking terms with its provincial cousin on the West Coast". The Globe and Mail, February 9, 1980.
  5. "Bennett savors win, NDP ponders fate after B.C. election". The Globe and Mail, May 7, 1983.
  6. "B.C. Liberal leader resigns, cites lack of seats in House". The Globe and Mail, August 16, 1983.
  7. "End confrontation politics, new B.C. Liberal chief says". The Globe and Mail, April 2, 1984.
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