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PoliticsAnalysis

For Scheer and Singh's 1st byelection tests, winning isn't everything - but it helps

History suggests the new leaders of the Conservative and New Democratic parties should be looking for positive signals in their first test with voters in two byelections on Monday.

Monday's federal byelections in Alberta and Quebec are the first under new Conservative and NDP leaders

Two byelections Monday will serve as the first for Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, left, and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh as leaders of their respective parties. (Canadian Press)

The destinies of Canada's two new opposition leaders Andrew Scheer of the Conservative Partyand Jagmeet Singh of the NDP won't be decided when they face their first electoral testsin two byelections on Monday.

But history suggests that those who see gains in their first trip to the polls as leaders are more likely to make gains nationwide later on when it really counts.

Byelections will be heldin the ridings of Sturgeon RiverParkland in AlbertaandLac-Saint-Jeanin Quebec to replace retired Conservative MPs Rona Ambrose and Denis Lebel. These are the first to take place since Scheer (on May 27) and Singh (on Oct. 1) were named the leaders of their respective parties.

Sturgeon RiverParkland is a safe Conservative seat.It was won by Ambrose with a margin of 55 percentage points over the Liberal candidate and has long been a stronghold for the party.

Lebel won Lac-Saint-Jean, however, by a margin of just five points over the New Democrats. Along with the Conservatives and the NDP, both the Liberals and Bloc Qubcois have hopes of taking the seat.

But having new leaders at the helm of their parties may not improve the odds for the Conservatives or NDP.

In 73applicable byelections since the beginning of the 20th century, new leaders have boosted their party's performance in a ridingover the previous general election by an average of just 1.4 points. The median shift in support has been a loss of 1.3 points.

Though the impact of individual leaders can varydepending on a number of factors, the arrival of a new leader alone does not appear to have any appreciable effect on the result of a byelection. Simply presenting anew face at the head of the party is not enough.

Rare to lose a seat, rare to win one

But new leaders still have a good track record in defending their territory.

When it is one of their party's own seats that is up for grabs, they have retained it 86 per cent of the time. Though the sample size is small just 22 cases that is better than incumbents' overall retention rate of 68 per cent in about 300 byelections since 1931.

New leaders have struggled to gain seats in their first byelection tests, doing it just six times in 51 opportunities.

This suggests Singh has history working against him in pulling off an upset in Lac-Saint-Jean. But it also means that a Scheer defeat there would put him in unenviable company.

Robert Manion, the newly-named Conservative leader of the day, saw his party lose the Manitoba riding of Brandon in 1938 beforegoing on to lose the 1940 federal election in such a manner as to give the Liberals their best results in the party's history.

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer with, on the bottom right, Rona Ambrose and Denis Lebel, whose vacant seats will be filled in two byelections on Monday. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)

In 1990, Jean Chrtien's Liberals lost LaurierSainte-Marieto Gilles Duceppe, who ran as an independent candidate because the Bloc Qubcois had yet to be officially registered. Though Chrtien would go on to win three majority governments, the byelection heralded the arrival of the Bloc on the federal scene.

And in 2007, new Liberal leader Stphane Dion fumbled the ball in Outremont, losing the once-safe Liberal riding to an NDP candidate named Tom Mulcair.

Singh has better examples to follow, including that of David Lewis. In his first byelection test as leader in 1971, the New Democrats wrestled the Ontario riding of Brant away from Pierre Trudeau's Liberals. In the general election held ayear later, the Liberals were reduced to a minority government duein partto gains made by the Lewis-led NDP.

Gains now signal gains later

Of the 16 applicable leaders who bumped up their party's average vote share in their first byelections, 10 of them increased their party's vote and seat total nationwide in the next general election. Only three of them led their party to a decrease in votes and seats.

The other three either did not contest a general election or increased their party's vote share, but not its seat haul.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh campaigns with Gisele Dallaire, the party's candidate in the Lac-Saint-Jean byelection. (Jacques Boissinot/Canadian Press)

Of the 15 individuals who led their parties to worse results in their first byelections, just four of them increased their party's votes and seats in the next general election. Five of them put up worse performances on both counts, while the others did not contest a general election.

This aligns with trends seen in byelections as a whole.

While the results can fluctuate greatly due to local factors and the candidates on the ballot, parties thatmakegains in byelectionseven though they are held in just a few individual parts of the country are twice as likely to also make gains nationwide in the next general election than the party that suffers losses.

That national vote is still two years away, but the byelections next week might provide some signals that party leaders, both new and old, can use to assess their political strategies.

Regardless of what the winners and losers make of Monday's results expect the losers to suggest they don't matter history seems to confirmwhat should beobvious: it is better to be thewinner.