Half a century of women in Manitoba elections: Big gains, but still work to do - Action News
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ManitobaAnalysis

Half a century of women in Manitoba elections: Big gains, but still work to do

CBC News analyzed the gender breakdowns of all candidates in Manitoba elections since 1962. The results show all parties have increased representation, but not necessarily across all ridings.

Most parties don't have official recruitment policies for female candidates

A headline in a 1920 Winnipeg Telegram announces, 'Women May Contest Every Seat in City for Legislature.' Some Manitoba women got the vote in 1916 but the first provincial election after the ruling was in 1920. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

It has been just over a century since Manitoba became the first province in Canada to allow women to vote. In 1916, theBill to Amend the Manitoba Elections Act received royal assent,extending the right to vote to nearly all citizens of the province.

What is often overlooked, however, is that this new law meant women were now also eligible to run as candidates in provincial elections.

The first female member of the Legislative Assembly in Manitobahistory was Edith Rogers, who was elected in Winnipeg in the 1920 general election, exactly 50 years after the first provincial elections were held in the province. This was at a time where the ballot would often indicate whether a female candidate was married or not.

Fast-forward to 2019, when last week, 15 of 57 ridingswere won by women.

While this is among the best female representationin Manitoba history, it still falls short of gender parity on Broadway. So just how far have we come, and why does equal representation across gender linesstill remain so elusive?

With the assistance of the Manitoba Historical Society, CBC News compiled a complete list of every party nomineeto have run in a general election or byelection since 1870 a total of 3,317 candidates and analyzed the records. The results show that while voters tend to not discriminate at the ballot box, women appear to more often than not be placed in hard-to-win races.

In the early days of universal suffrage, it was common practice to indicate directly on the ballot whether a female candidate was married or not. In this newspaper clipping from the Winnipeg Tribune in 1920, Edith Rogers, the first female MLA in Manitoba, has 'married woman' listed as her profession. (Winnipeg Tribune, June 26, 1920)

The general election in 1962 marksthe point when the three main parties the Progressive Conservatives, the New Democratic Party and the Liberal Party were fully formed and held the same party name we know today. To ensure apples-to-apples comparisonsof party performance over time, this date marks the starting point for the analysis.

It is worth noting that in about 20 cases, it was notpossible to reliably determine the gender of candidates and in a single case, the candidate wasgender non-conforming.

Another important historical factor in considering access to political life in the province is that many groupssuch as Indigenous people, those with mental and physical disabilities, inmates, hospitalized patients, justice officials, and government and political staff were barred from voting initially and in some cases, were only granted the right several decades later.

Female MLAs rare before 1980s

Up until the early 1980s, it was quite rare for women to win a riding. That began to change in 1981, around the time former Manitoba Liberal Party Leader Sharon Carstairs entered provincial politics.

Since that time, the highest proportion of female MLAs was reached in 2007, when Gary Doer led the NDP to a third consecutive victory. In total, 18 women were elected that year,representing 32 per cent of the assembly.

With partiesfacing pressure from the public, and from within, to strike a better balance along gender lines, parties of all stripes have increasingly been nominating women to run in ridings across the province.

Sharon Carstairs, who recently retired from the federal Senate after more than 20 years in that appointment, saysone thing that has changed the face of politics for women has been their advancement in workplaces and thus, their abilityto raise funds more effectively for their own campaigns.

"You also get a lot of money from people in your work group, if you will. If you're a lawyer, it's easier for you to raise money from fellow lawyers. If you're a doctor, same from fellow doctors," she said.

"You don't have the same advantage that men do.Now that has changed, but it was very much the case when I was running in electoral politics."

In 1988, the Manitoba Liberal Party surged to win an unprecedented 20 seats under the leadership of Sharon Carstairs. (CBC News)

Candidate nominations impactsuccess

The analysis also shows that once on the ballot, the electorate tends to not discriminate against female candidates. This is consistent with research and analyses done at the federal level.

On average, a female candidate tends to get as many votes as a male candidateduring any given modern-day election. Since 1962, female candidates have received an average 2,065 votesin their respective races, while men have averaged2,232 votes cast in their name.

But when brokendown by theproportion of female candidates who went on to win their election races,differences across time and parties emerge.

In the case of the NDP, female candidatesare overall just slightly behind their male counterparts in terms of successful outcomes, with 26 per cent of women securing a seat compared to 33 per cent this past election. But in the early days, many of their candidates failed to win a seat.

The PCs have a similar track record over the past decades. However, in the two most recentgeneral elections, the gap in success rate between men and women has grown.

In last Tuesday's election, 80 per centof male PC candidates won their race, while only 36 per cent of female PC candidates won. The gap was the same in 2011.

In total, 19of the 22 female PC candidates ran in urban ridings, many of which were either in tight races or in historically unwinnable ridings.

Since 1962, only 32 of 608 rural PC candidateshave been women. No other party has such a pronounced urban-rural divide across gender lines.

Christopher Adams, a political scientist based at St. Paul's College at the University of Manitoba, says thisurban-rural split reveals the history of the party.

"I think the gap between men and women in the rural areas by gender for the Progressive Conservatives is quite astounding," he says.

Adams says the PCs are effectively an umbrella for two parties: the red Tories in the Winnipeg region, and the socially conservativerural wing. He says studies in Manitoba have shown that while female PC party members are fiscally right-of-centre, socially, they diverge from the views of their male colleagues.

Other parties have more even representation across the province, including the NDP, who actually had more women than men running in rural ridings in 2019. However, much like urban-area PC candidates, NDP candidatesrunning in rural areas also face an uphill battle: only twoof 13 women running for the NDP in rural ridings won their race, both of whom were in northern Manitoba.

Carstairssays women, who still tend to shoulder a greater burden on the home front, are less likely to seek a nominationifthey live outside of major centres.

In her experience, long-distance travel from remote ridings is more likely to discourage women from entertaining the idea of running, which could explain in part why there are fewer female candidates in rural areas.

Party policies on recruitment

CBC surveyed the three major parties in Manitoba about their policies or guidelines on the recruitment of female candidates.

The Progressive Conservatives say they have no specific policy regarding gender when it comes to recruitment, but say theyhave made it a priority in recent years.

"The success of these efforts has been demonstrated in the sharp increase in the number of women running as PC candidates, from just 12 in the 2011 election to 22 female candidates running for our party in 2019," wrote a party spokesperson.

The Liberal Party told CBC News they also do not have a concrete policy in place. However, they do make additional funding available to female candidates through a special fund.

"We do have the Sharon Carstairs Fund,a fund set up to provide financial support to women choosing to run as candidates under the Manitoba Liberal banner," saysColin Roy, spokesperson for the Manitoba Liberal Party.

"We recognize that women face more challenges when running a campaign and this fund is in place to provide support and encourage more women to run for the Manitoba Liberal Party."

The New Democratic Party, which has a series of formal policies in place,says in the 1970s, the party established a committeeto promote the inclusion of women in their political activities. Like the Liberals, the NDP also maintains a fund designed to provide financial support for first-time female candidates.

"The Manitoba NDP constitution requires gender balance on party executive and provincial council, and this principle has extended to all other committees formed by the party," said Emily Coutts, a spokesperson for the party.

There is a requirement that all ridings formally solicit women to potentially run as candidates, she said. For the most recent election campaign, the party struck a headhunting task force designed to identify potential female nominees.

Furthermore, ridingassociationselection committees are required to have gender parity, Coutts said.


With volunteer research assistance fromGordon Goldsborough of the Manitoba Historical Society.

Data sources:

  • Manitoba election records (1870 to 1969):Manitoba Legislative Library.
  • 1970 to present:Elections Manitoba.
  • Supplementary research from historical news clippings from various newspaper publications.