This article examines the role played by the Ontar- io and Alberta Progressive Conservative Parties in the movement to ‘unite the Right’ in Canada in the late 1990s and early 2000s. This movement sought to unify the Re- form/Canadian Alliance and the federal Progressive Con- servative party, who all suffered from frequent electoral losses as a result of vote-splitting on the right of the political spectrum. This movement resulted in the creation of the Conservative Party of Canada in 2003. The ‘unite the right’ movement was greatly aided by the power and influence of provincial Progressive Conservative parties, especially in Ontario and Alberta. The paper explores the various strate- gic and pragmatic concerns of the provincial wings, and d...
The 2011 Scottish Conservative leadership election presented the party with two radically different ...
The organizations of national and provincial parties in Canada are understood to be separated from o...
While there still seems to be majority support for the Canadian federal regime and political communi...
Abstract: 2003 marked a year of significant change in the political landscape, particularly for the ...
Like most other political parties, new radical right-wing parties generally aspire to public office ...
This paper explores a particular form of federal-provincial integration, behavioral integration, in ...
Relatively few inquiries have been made into the section-ally-derived characteristics of Canadian po...
Beginning with the 1993 election, Canada's Progressive Conservative Party was replaced as the domina...
In the 2004 federal election, the right-wing interests of Canadians were represented by a new party,...
This thesis explores the effects of the federal political system upon the organization of the Liber...
The thesis explores three questions: On what basis were Ontario voters courted during the 1993 feder...
A federal form of government presumes the existence of two forums for electoral competition— provinc...
In this article we trace the development of intra-party democracy within Canadian political parties ...
This dissertation investigates social conservative activism in the American Republican Party and in ...
This thesis studies the discursive behaviour of Canadian federal political parties with regards to i...
The 2011 Scottish Conservative leadership election presented the party with two radically different ...
The organizations of national and provincial parties in Canada are understood to be separated from o...
While there still seems to be majority support for the Canadian federal regime and political communi...
Abstract: 2003 marked a year of significant change in the political landscape, particularly for the ...
Like most other political parties, new radical right-wing parties generally aspire to public office ...
This paper explores a particular form of federal-provincial integration, behavioral integration, in ...
Relatively few inquiries have been made into the section-ally-derived characteristics of Canadian po...
Beginning with the 1993 election, Canada's Progressive Conservative Party was replaced as the domina...
In the 2004 federal election, the right-wing interests of Canadians were represented by a new party,...
This thesis explores the effects of the federal political system upon the organization of the Liber...
The thesis explores three questions: On what basis were Ontario voters courted during the 1993 feder...
A federal form of government presumes the existence of two forums for electoral competition— provinc...
In this article we trace the development of intra-party democracy within Canadian political parties ...
This dissertation investigates social conservative activism in the American Republican Party and in ...
This thesis studies the discursive behaviour of Canadian federal political parties with regards to i...
The 2011 Scottish Conservative leadership election presented the party with two radically different ...
The organizations of national and provincial parties in Canada are understood to be separated from o...
While there still seems to be majority support for the Canadian federal regime and political communi...