Women in the 22nd Canadian Parliament

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The number of women sitting in the House of Commons increased to a new maximum during the 22nd Canadian Parliament; the number of women senators also increased. 47 women ran for seats in the Canadian House of Commons in the 1953 federal election; four were elected.

Two more women were named to the Canadian senate: Nancy Hodges in November 1953[1] and Florence Elsie Inman in July 1955,[2] bringing the total number of women senators to six. Senator Iva Campbell Fallis died in March 1956.[3]

Party Standings

Party Total women candidates % women candidates of total candidates Total women elected % women elected of total women candidates % women elected of total elected
Labor-Progressive 22 (of 100) 22% 0 (of 0) 0% -
Progressive Conservative 10 (of 248) 4.0% 3 (of 51) 30% 5.9%
Co-operative Commonwealth Federation 10 (of 170) 5.9% 0 (of 23) 0% 0%
Liberal 3 (of 262) 1.1% 1 (of 169) 33.3% 0.6%
Independent Liberal 1 (of 19) 5.3% 0 (of 2) 0% 0%
Social Credit 1 (of 71) 1.4% 0 (of 15) 0% 0%
Table source:[4]

Members of the House of Commons

Name Party Electoral district Notes
  Margaret Aitken Progressive Conservative York—Humber
  Sybil Bennett Progressive Conservative Halton
  Ellen Fairclough Progressive Conservative
Hamilton West
  Ann Shipley Liberal
Timiskaming

Senators

Senator Appointed on the advice of Term from Party
  Cairine Wilson King 1930.02.15 - 1962.03.03 Ontario Liberal
  Iva Campbell Fallis Bennett 1935.07.20 - 1956.03.07 Ontario Conservative
  Muriel McQueen Fergusson St. Laurent 1953.05.19 - 1975.05.23 New Brunswick Liberal
  Marianna Beauchamp Jodoin St. Laurent 1953.05.19 - 1966.06.01 Quebec Liberal
  Nancy Hodges St. Laurent 1953.11.05 - 1965.06.12 British Columbia Liberal
  Florence Elsie Inman St. Laurent 1955.07.28 - 1986.05.31 Prince Edward Island Liberal

References

  1. ^ "Nancy Hodges: Speaker and Trailblazer". Canadian Parliamentary Review.
  2. ^ "Senator Elsie Inman fonds". Memory PEI.
  3. ^ Iva Campbell Fallis – Parliament of Canada biography
  4. ^ Parliament of Canada: Women Candidates in General Elections