Who ran for the Liberal leadership in 2013?
Results. Justin Trudeau won the 2013 Liberal leadership in a landslide first-ballot victory and led the third-place party into a majority government in the 2015 federal election. The voter turnout was 82.16% of all registered voters.
Who are the Liberal candidates in Ontario?
Local Voting
| Candidate | Delegates Earned | % |
|---|---|---|
| Steven Del Duca | 1,172 | 56.24% |
| Michael Coteau | 370 | 17.75% |
| Kate Graham | 273 | 13.10% |
| Mitzie Hunter | 130 | 6.24% |
When did Justin Trudeau become Liberal leader?
Trudeau won the leadership of the Liberal Party in April 2013 and led his party to victory in the 2015 federal election, moving the third-placed Liberals from 36 seats to 184 seats, the largest-ever numerical increase by a party in a Canadian federal election.
Who is the Liberal premier of Ontario?
Ontario Liberal Party
| Ontario Liberal Party Parti libéral de l’Ontario | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Steven Del Duca |
| President | Brian Johns |
| Founded | 1857 |
| Headquarters | 344 Bloor Street W Suite 306 Toronto, Ontario M5S 3A7 |
When was the 2013 WA state general election held?
The 2013 WA state general election—held on 9 March 2013—was the first election to be held after legislation was proclaimed in 2011 to fix the date of state general elections as the second Saturday in March, every four years. [1]
When did the 2013 election campaign start in Australia?
The Barnett Government was not scheduled to enter caretaker mode until early February 2013, and the Premier had said that the campaign would not begin until after Australia Day, 26 January 2013. [15] But as the new year got underway it was apparent that the parties were already moving onto an election footing:
How many seats did the Liberal Party win in the election?
Of the 36 Legislative Council seats, the Liberals won 17 seats, the Nationals won five, Labor retained its 11 seats , the WA Greens dropped from four to two seats and the Shooters and Fishers Party won one seat. [182]
Are Labor candidates outnumbering their liberal counterparts on Twitter?
The Australian Financial Review, drawing on statistics from the #wapoll Twitter hashtag, reported that Labor candidates were outnumbering their Liberal counterparts two to one on Twitter. [203] All but two of the shadow cabinet were active on Twitter. [204]