Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Natural Law Party of Ontario: 1993-2000: Pro-Transcendental Meditation: New Reform Party of Ontario: 1987-2016: Known as Family Coalition Party of Ontario from 1987-2015 Multicultural Party of Ontario Parti Multiculturel de l'Ontario: 2018-before 2022 election: Single-issue politics: Ontario Social Reform Party: 2018-2019: Populism [1 ...
The agency collects information about political parties, candidates, constituency association, leadership contestants, and third parties involved in Ontario politics. [4] Elections Ontario is led by the Chief Electoral Officer, a non-partisan Officer of the Legislative Assembly chosen by an all-party committee.
Ontario uses a unicameral Westminster-style parliamentary government, in which the premier is the leader of the party that controls the most seats in the Legislative Assembly. The premier is Ontario's head of government. The premier picks a cabinet from the elected members to form the Executive Council of Ontario, and presides over that body.
Defunct provincial political parties in Ontario (16 P) G. Green Party of Ontario (2 C, 2 P) L. Ontario political party leaders (9 C, 5 P)
The Legislative Assembly of Ontario (OLA; French: Assemblée législative de l'Ontario) is the legislative chamber of the Canadian province of Ontario. Its elected members are known as Members of Provincial Parliament (MPPs). Bills passed by the Legislative Assembly are given royal assent by the lieutenant governor of Ontario to become law.
Map of Southern Ontario with the ridings shaded based on how they voted in the 2006 federal election. Ontario's federal political trends vary despite the fact that the federal Liberals dominated the province from 1993 to 2004 against a "divided right" between the centrist Progressive Conservative Party and strongly conservative Canadian Alliance.
When an election takes place, perhaps the most significant source of public funding for the federal political parties is the election expenses reimbursement which subsidizes 50% of the national campaign expenses of any party that obtains at least 2 per cent support, or at least 5 per cent in the ridings (electoral districts) in which they ...
The party has strong informal ties to the Liberal Party of Canada, but the two parties are organizationally independent and have separate, though overlapping, memberships. The provincial party and the Ontario wing of the federal party were organizationally one entity until members voted to split in 1976. [7]