<b>December 28, 1886</b><br />
<br />
Back in the 19th century, a candidate generally placed ads in publications slanted toward their political party. Such was the case with G.B. Smith, a Liberal endorsed by the <i>Richmond Hill Liberal</i>. It wouldn’t be a great shock to discover that the paper’s December 23, 1886, editorial portrayed him as “man whose every utterance is straight-forward and fair, for a man whose conduct is open and fearless, for a man whose character and abilities should commend themselves to all.” Voters in York East agreed—Smith represented the riding until 1894.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Liberal (Oliver Mowat): 57 seats<br />
Conservative (William Ralph Meredith): 32 seats<br />
Other: 1 seat<br />
Source: the <i>Richmond Hill Liberal</i>, December 23, 1886.
Source: the Richmond Hill Liberal, December 23, 1886.
87985
<b>March 1, 1898</b><br />
<br />
Short , sweet, to the point. The voters fulfilled the <i>Globe</i>’s vow, as the Liberals won their eighth consecutive term in office and their first without longtime premier <a href="http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?id_nbr=6944">Oliver Mowat</a> at the helm. Conservative leader <a href="http://biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?id_nbr=7769">James Pliny Whitney</a> was whacked again in the 1902 election, then finally won the premiership in 1905.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Liberal (Arthur Hardy): 51 seats<br />
Conservative (James Pliny Whitney): 42 seats<br />
Other: 1 seat
<b>January 25, 1905</b><br />
<br />
Liberal candidate Hugh Blain claimed nasty things were afoot in North Toronto as the campaign drew to a close. A poster entitled “Will Hugh Blain Deny” that alleged the candidate took advantage of government subsidies for beet sugar was circulated by Conservative supporters of incumbent MPP <a href="http://torontoist.com/2011/09/margaret-haile-socialist-candidate-for-north-toronto/">Dr. Beattie Nesbitt</a>. Attacks on the Grits were common during an election that saw the end of 34 years of Liberal government. Nesbitt won, but he resigned his seat a year later to accept an appointment as registrar of West Toronto.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Conservative (James Pliny Whitney): 69 seats<br />
Liberal (George William Ross): 28 seats<br />
Other: 1 seat<br />
<b>October 20, 1919</b><br />
<br />
The first postwar election was accompanied by a referendum on the prohibition of alcohol, which the province had enacted three years earlier. There were four questions regarding varying degrees of repeal, from dumping the Ontario Temperance Act altogether, to allowing beer to be sold through the government. Voting on each question ranged from 60 to 67 per cent against bringing legal booze back. <br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
United Farmers of Ontario (no official leader): 44 seats<br />
Liberal: (Hartley Dewart): 27 seats<br />
Conservative (William Hearst): 25 seats<br />
Labour (Walter Rollo): 11 seats<br />
Other: 4 seats
<b>December 1, 1926</b><br />
<br />
Alcohol was the key issue of the 1926 campaign. Premier <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Ferguson">Howard Ferguson‘s</a> Conservatives proposed repealing the act to allow government sales, which led to ads like this one. Killjoy drys were overruled in this election: Ferguson won a majority and introduced the Liquor License Act in March 1927, which led to the birth of the LCBO.<br />
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<b>Results</b>:<br />
Conservative (Howard Ferguson): 72 seats<br />
Liberal (W.E.N. Sinclair): 15 seats<br />
Other: 12 seats<br />
Progressive (William Raney): 10 seats<br />
United Farmers of Ontario (Leslie Oke): 3 seats
Source: the <i>Toronto Star</i>, November 30, 1926.
<b>June 19, 1934</b><br />
<br />
Proof scare tactics can backfire on a party: Premier <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Stewart_Henry">George Stewart Henry</a> (whose name lives on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Farm">in the North York neighbourhood named after his farm</a>) saw his party’s fortunes collapse as the Conservatives dropped from 90 to 17 seats against the populist appeal of Mitch Hepburn’s Liberals.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Liberal (Mitch Hepburn): 65 seats<br />
Conservative (George Stewart Henry) 17 seats<br />
Liberal-Progressive (Harry Nixon): 4 seats<br />
Other: 4 seats
<b>August 4, 1943</b><br />
<br />
Governor-generals have to start somewhere. Though unsuccessful in his 1943 campaign against future Toronto Mayor William Dennison, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Michener">Roland Michener</a> was elected to Queen’s Park two years later. <br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (George Drew): 38 seats<br />
CCF (Ted Jolliffe): 34 seats<br />
Liberal (Harry Nixon): 15 seats<br />
Labour-Progressive (no leader): 2 seats<br />
Other: 1 seat
Source: the <i>Globe and Mail</i>, August 4, 1943.
<b>August 4, 1943</b><br />
<br />
Following its opposition to Canada’s entry into World War II, the Communist Party of Canada was officially banned in 1940. Despite this, candidates continued to run in federal and provincial elections. In Toronto, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._A._MacLeod">A.A. MacLeod</a> (Bellwoods) and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J.B._Salsberg">J.B. Salsberg</a> (St. Andrew), who advertised themselves as “Labour” candidates, won their ridings. Shortly after the election, they agreed to sit as MPPs for the Communists’ new legal entity, the Labour-Progressive Party.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (George Drew): 38 seats<br />
CCF (Ted Jolliffe): 34 seats<br />
Liberal (Harry Nixon): 15 seats<br />
Labour-Progressive (no leader): 2 seats<br />
Other: 1 seat
<b>June 4, 1945</b><br />
<br />
Building on the success of Toronto MPPs A.A. MacLeod and J.B. Salsberg in the 1943 election, the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labour-Progressive_Party">Labour-Progressive Party</a> ran 31 candidates across the province, some of whom were allied with Mitch Hepburn’s Liberals. They failed to keep Drew out, as the Conservatives returned with a majority government. Part of the Tories’ success may have been due to a radio speech given by CCF leader Ted Jolliffe which accused Drew of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LeBel_Royal_Commission">establishing a “Gestapo”</a> within the Ontario Provincial Police to keep watch on the opposition. The speech backfired on Jolliffe, though evidence was found years later to support his claims of government spying.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (George Drew): 66 seats<br />
Liberal (Mitch Hepburn): 14 seats<br />
CCF (Ted Jolliffe): 8 seats<br />
Labour-Progressive (Leslie Morris): 2 seats
<b>November 22, 1951</b><br />
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The province didn’t feel the same chill: Premier Leslie Frost’s Progressive Conservatives won all but 11 of the 90 seats at Queen’s Park.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (Leslie Frost): 79 seats<br />
Liberal (Walter Thomson): 8 seats<br />
CCF (Ted Jolliffe): 2 seats<br />
Labour-Progressive (Stewart Smith): 1 seat
Source: the Weston Times and Guide, November 8, 1951.
Source: the Weston Times and Guide, November 8, 1951.
88018
<b>September 25, 1963</b><br />
<br />
Yes, the colour of margarine was once considered a major election issue, though butter-hued oil spread was not 100 per cent legal in Ontario until 1995. Note the promises related to the Toronto area—Robarts flipped the switch when the Bloor-Danforth line opened three years later.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (John Robarts): 77 seats<br />
Liberal (John Wintermeyer): 24 seats<br />
NDP (Donald MacDonald): 7 seats
Source: the <i>Don Mills Mirror</i>, September 18, 1963.
<b>October 17, 1967</b><br />
<br />
At least two of the “action politicians” were or would be easily recognized by the public. Stephen Lewis would win a second term in Scarborough West. Three years later, he became party leader. Over in High Park, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morton_Shulman">Dr. Morton Shulman</a> ran after he was fired from his role as Ontario’s chief coroner earlier in the year for embarrassing the government over inadequate fire protection in a new hospital. Shulman’s crusading medical career had also inspired one of CBC's most popular dramas that year, <i><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LMmYv1Cu5FU&feature=related">Wojeck</a></i>.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (John Robarts): 69 seats<br />
Liberal (Robert Nixon): 28 seats<br />
NDP (Donald MacDonald): 20 seats
Source: the <i>Globe and Mail</i>, October 16, 1967.
<b>October 21, 1971</b><br />
<br />
The Progressive Conservatives earned their ninth consecutive mandate under new leader <a href="http://torontoist.com/2011/09/catholic-schools-separate-but-equal-funding/">William Davis</a>. All of the candidates pictured in this ad, except for Deane (who lost to veteran Liberal Vern Singer) joined Davis at Queen’s Park.<br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (William Davis): 78 seats<br />
Liberal (Robert Nixon): 20 seats<br />
NDP (Stephen Lewis): 19 seats
Source: the <i>Don Mills Mirror</i>, October 6, 1971.
<b>September 18, 1975</b><br />
<br />
Who’s a better provincial candidate than <a href="http://torontoist.com/2010/10/vintage_toronto_ads_3/">Mel Lastman</a>? EVVVERYBODY! Well, actually former Toronto mayor Philip Givens, who won Armourdale for the Liberals in election that produced Ontario’s first minority government since 1943. <br />
<br />
<b>Results</b>:<br />
Progressive Conservative (William Davis): 51 seats<br />
NDP (Stephen Lewis): 38 seats<br />
Liberal (Robert Nixon): 36 seats
Source: the <i>Toronto Star</i>, September 16, 1975.
Besides lawn signs and public meetings, newspaper advertisements have long been a preferred method for Ontario politicians to spread their message to the public. Whether it’s a simple promise to provide “good government” or a full platform requiring a magnifying glass to read, the press has offered a forum for candidates to make their case to voters as long as they paid for the ad. Today’s gallery shows the evolution of Ontario election ads from short notices in partisan papers to spots where the reproduction quality barely hides the lines of a candidate’s toupee (sorry Mel).