Pivot or Pirouette?

The 1993 Canadian General Election

By Tom Flanagan
Foreword by Gerald Baier & R. Kenneth Carty
Categories: Political Science, Government & Elections, Canadian Political Science
Series: Turning Point Elections
Publisher: UBC Press
Paperback : 9780774866835, 248 pages, October 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774867047, 248 pages, October 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774867740, 248 pages, October 2022

Table of contents

Foreword: Turning Point Elections ... and the Case of 1993 / Gerald Baier and R. Kenneth Carty

Preface

Introduction

1 Grand Coalition

2 Collapse of the Coalition

3 The Contestants

4 The Contest

5 Aftermath

6 The Punctuated Equilibrium of Canadian Politics

Appendix 1: List of Key Players

Appendix 2: Timeline of Events

Notes; Suggestions for Further Reading; Index

Description

The 1993 federal election was in many ways the strangest in Canada’s history. The results were unprecedented: the governing party was reduced to two seats, a separatist party became the official opposition, and a new regional party swept the West. Pivot or Pirouette? covers both the backstory and the aftermath, arguing that although the shocking results seemed pivotal, ultimately the pivot turned into a full pirouette as Canadian politics returned to historical norms. New parties shake up the system but are eventually absorbed into it, bringing innovation but not transformation. You can’t understand modern Canadian politics without understanding the 1993 election.

Reviews

As a research director for Reform in its foundational period and a key player in the Conservative Party under Stephen Harper, Flanagan is well placed to tell this story. The result is a well-written, first-rate election study.

- J. L. Granatstein, emeritus, York University