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Quebec general election, 1981

(Redirected from 1981 Quebec election)

The Quebec general election of 1981 was held on April 13, 1981, to elect members of the National Assembly of the Province of Quebec, Canada. The incumbent Parti Québécois, led by René Lévesque, won re-election, defeating the Quebec Liberal Party, led by Claude Ryan.

The PQ won re-election despite having lost the 1980 Quebec referendum on sovereignty-association, the party's proposal for political independence for Quebec in an economic union with the rest of Canada. To some extent, they were helped by Claude Ryan's old-fashioned campaign style: he refused to tailor sound bites for the evening news and ran a generally TV-unfriendly campaign.

The Union Nationale, which had won 11 seats in a modest comeback in the 1976 general election, was wiped off the map in this election, and never won another seat in any subsequent election. It is now disbanded. The party were not helped by the fact that its leader in the 1976 election, Rodrigue Biron, had resigned from the party and joined the Parti Québécois.

Results

Party Party Leader Candidates Seats Popular Vote
Before After % Change # % Change
Parti Québécois René Lévesque 122 71 80 +12.7% 1 773 237 49.26%
Liberal Claude Ryan 122 26 42 +53.8% 1 658 753 46.07%
Union Nationale 121 11 -100% 144 070 4.00%
Workers Communist 33 4 956 0.14%
Freedom of Choice 12 4 955 0.14%
Marxist-Leninist 40 3 299 0.09%
Libertarian 10 3 178 0.09%
United Social Credit 16 1 284 0.04%
Workers 10 1 027 0.03%
Communist 10 768 0.02%
Independents/no designation 29 4 570 0.12%
Total 525 110 122 +10.9% 3 600 097 100%
Source: Elections Quebec


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