「progressive」の共起表現一覧(1語右が「Conservative.」)
該当件数 : 1583件
Progressive Conservative leadership conventions | |
Dana Porter (1948-1949) | Progressive Conservative |
Thomas Connell, | Progressive Conservative, 1951-1971 |
Bill Attewell, | Progressive Conservative, 1988-1993 |
Egan Chambers, | Progressive Conservative, 1958-1962 |
His successor is | Progressive Conservative, Jim Baker. |
His successor is | Progressive Conservative, Felix Collins. |
PC: | Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba |
Ronald Russell, | Progressive Conservative, (1991-1993) 2nd time |
Ronald Russell (1978-1980), | Progressive Conservative, 1st time |
1978 election: Leland McGaw, | Progressive Conservative |
1974 election: Leland W. McGaw, | Progressive Conservative |
1982 election, Leland McGaw, | Progressive Conservative |
1982 election: Yvon Poitras, | Progressive Conservative |
1982 election: Joseph Mombourquette, | Progressive Conservative |
William James Stewart, Conservative | Progressive Conservative, 1938-1948 |
William James Stewart, Conservative | Progressive Conservative, 1951-1959 |
1999 election: Donald Kinney, | Progressive Conservative |
2006 election: Carl Urquhart, | Progressive Conservative |
The winner was | Progressive Conservative Oscar Bjornson. |
Robert Matthew T. McDonald, ( | Progressive Conservative), 1957-1963 |
He later rejoined the | Progressive Conservative Party, and defeated Liberal-Pr |
Progressive Conservative Party of Newfoundland and Labr | |
He defeated his | Progressive Conservative and Liberal-Progressive oppone |
ogressive Conservative coalition, defeating | Progressive Conservative leader Errick Willis. |
The 2004 general election saw | Progressive Conservative candidate George Groeneveld. |
Progressive Conservative candidate Harry Alger defeated | |
The | Progressive Conservative Party was the ruling party. |
The | Progressive Conservative Party finished second with nin |
Janet Ecker, former Ontario | Progressive Conservative Party cabinet minister |
He lost to | Progressive Conservative candidate Don Getty. |
His successor as MHA is | Progressive Conservative, Clayton Forsey. |
Huband was narrowly defeated by | Progressive Conservative Warren Steen. |
He served a term as the | Progressive Conservative Party's president. |
Bennett was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
Dave Clark (Canadian politician), | Progressive Conservative Canadian politician |
A | Progressive Conservative, he was re-elected in 1971. |
Progressive Conservative Party candidates, 2007 Ontario | |
It was won by the | Progressive Conservative party. |
He was a member of the Yukon | Progressive Conservative Party. |
Tkachuk joined the Saskatchewan | Progressive Conservative Party in 1974. |
He was a member of the | Progressive Conservative caucus. |
Prior to that it supported | Progressive Conservative candidates. |
Ernie Eves (Jun 1995 - Feb 2001) | Progressive Conservative |
Frank Miller (Aug 1978 - April 1981) 4 | Progressive Conservative |
James Allan (Dec 1961 - Nov 1966)1 | Progressive Conservative |
James Allan (Jan 1961 - Dec 1961)³ | Progressive Conservative |
She sat as a | Progressive Conservative and later a Conservative. |
He was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
She sat as a member of the | Progressive Conservative caucus. |
He is a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
The | Progressive Conservative party formed government in tha |
He was a member of the Ontario | Progressive Conservative Party. |
He would be defeated by | Progressive Conservative candidate Julian Koziak. |
Douglas finished second against | Progressive Conservative incumbent Gerry McAlpine. |
Heard was easily defeated by | Progressive Conservative candidate Bill Diachuk. |
See also: | Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership co |
Hilda Watson, leader of the Yukon | Progressive Conservative Party (d.1997) |
12: loss of the | Progressive Conservative party leadership in 1967 |
Pederson is a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
Briese is a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
She was a member of the Yukon | Progressive Conservative Party. |
A | Progressive Conservative, she was re-elected in 1982. |
Andrew Beniuk joins the | Progressive Conservative Caucus 1996 |
He defeated the | Progressive Conservative candidate by 250 votes. |
Taylor was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
She lost to | Progressive Conservative candidate Gary Stewart. |
Jack Reimer is a | Progressive Conservative politician in Manitoba, Canada |
Copithorne joined the | Progressive Conservative caucus on April 15, 1971. |
He lost to | Progressive Conservative candidate Pat Nowlan. |
Charles Van Horne, | Progressive Conservative (1955-1961) (resigned January |
He sat as a | Progressive Conservative until February 2004. |
She sat as a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
She is a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
It is currently represented by | Progressive Conservative MLA Doug Elniski. |
Eaton was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
Main article: | Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta leaders |
The winner was | Progressive Conservative incumbent Susan Fish. |
Gregory was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
He was a member of the | Progressive Conservative party. |
He was defeated by | Progressive Conservative Jim Hawkes. |
Sitting as a | Progressive Conservative, he resigned in 2000. |
A | Progressive Conservative, he was defeated in 1962. |
In politics, Archer was active with the | Progressive Conservative Party of Canada on the Ontario |
He was elected as a | Progressive Conservative, supporting the coalition gove |
nusual, in that Bend ran as an "Independent | Progressive Conservative" supporting the Liberal-Progre |
She lost to | Progressive Conservative fundraiser Bill Saunderson by |
of Canada, the Green Party of Ontario, the | Progressive Conservative Party of Canada and the Progre |
ne New Democrat incumbent was defeated by a | Progressive Conservative challenger, and one Progressiv |
figure in advertising and a senior Ontario | Progressive Conservative Party and Progressive Conserva |
She defeated Yukon | Progressive Conservative leader Hilda Watson in Kluane, |
again in the 1953 provincial election as a | Progressive Conservative, but finished third against Li |
, who was elected in 1949 as an independent | Progressive Conservative opposing Manitoba's coalition |
The 1993 | Progressive Conservative leadership election was held o |
Liberal-Progressive and | Progressive Conservative candidates ran against each ot |
Shortly before the 1993 | Progressive Conservative leadership convention, Roberge |
in a seat that was considered safe for the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
ncial election, he ran as an anti-coalition | Progressive Conservative and defeated a pro-coalition P |
deau adopted a policy of replacing retiring | Progressive Conservative Senators with other Progressiv |
oalition government which also included the | Progressive Conservative Party, Social Credit and some |
Greenlay was re-elected as a coalition | Progressive Conservative in the general election of 194 |
He is currently the president of the | Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick. |
im Baker (politician), Canadian legislator; | Progressive Conservative from Labrador West; in Newfoun |
Conservative change is from combination of | Progressive Conservative and Canadian Alliance votes. |
She stood as a | Progressive Conservative candidate in the electoral dis |
Anderson ran as a | Progressive Conservative candidate in the 1979 Alberta |
He was a | Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Asse |
hat election he finished a strong second to | Progressive Conservative candidate Richard Marz. |
She was a | Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Asse |
e cabinet is derived from the caucus of the | Progressive Conservative Party of Newfoundland and Labr |
Benoit was defeated in the 1975 election by | Progressive Conservative candidate George Wolstenholme. |
Dion was defeated by Marc Ferland of the | Progressive Conservative party. |
He was unsuccessful, losing to | Progressive Conservative Craig Stewart by over 3,500 vo |
al politics in 2006, becoming leader of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
He was a | Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Asse |
Paproski ran as a | Progressive Conservative candidate in the 1971 Alberta |
ved as Minister of Municipal Affairs in the | Progressive Conservative government of John Robarts. |
The | Progressive Conservative government led by Danny Willia |
He defeated | Progressive Conservative challenger Harley Torgerson by |
be defeated in his bid for a third term by | Progressive Conservative Greg Melchin. |
hed in fourth place, well behind victorious | Progressive Conservative candidate Lee Clark. |
the mood of Ontarians who were upset at the | Progressive Conservative government. |
She lost by 758 votes to the | Progressive Conservative candidate Harry Bradley. |
The NDP won 32 seats, against 24 for the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
He resigned to run as a | Progressive Conservative in 1980 election in the riding |
They finished forth behind the Liberal, | Progressive Conservative and Green parties. |
- John Diefenbaker is elected leader of the | Progressive Conservative Party of Canada. |
was defeated in 1958 by Bert Cadieu of the | Progressive Conservative party. |
2007 provincial election as a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
hair of both the Conservative Party and the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
The majority party was the Ontario | Progressive Conservative Party led by Leslie Frost. |
He would be defeated by | Progressive Conservative candidate Al Adair in a hotly |
He was defeated in the 2008 election by | Progressive Conservative Doug Elniski. |
was defeated in a closely contested race by | Progressive Conservative candidate Len Werry. |
eceived 745 votes, finishing fourth against | Progressive Conservative candidate Marilyn Mushinski. |
The | Progressive Conservative Party led by Hugh John Flemmin |
The | Progressive Conservative Party led by Hugh John Flemmin |
th times, he again finished well behind the | Progressive Conservative winner. |
He was easily defeated by | Progressive Conservative candidate Larry Shaben finishi |
A | Progressive Conservative, he was re-elected in 1958, 19 |
active in politics, and was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
He defeated | Progressive Conservative candidate Michael Symth in wha |
86 votes in Oxford (winner: Ernie Hardeman, | Progressive Conservative) |
93 votes in Oxford (winner: Dick Treleaven, | Progressive Conservative) |
22 votes in Oxford (winner: Bruce Halliday, | Progressive Conservative) |
n the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a | Progressive Conservative from 1958 to 1962. |
rrowly re-elected in the 1973 election over | Progressive Conservative challenger John Vaags. |
He was the leader of the PEI | Progressive Conservative Party from 1981 to 1987. |
He was elected leader of the | Progressive Conservative Party of Nova Scotia in 1971. |
Cheema defeated | Progressive Conservative candidate John Baluta by 585, |
n's son, Robert Layton, served as a federal | Progressive Conservative cabinet minister in the 1980s. |
He represented Muskoka as a | Progressive Conservative member from 1955 to 1971. |
Oda was for many years a volunteer with the | Progressive Conservative Party. |
The current representative is | Progressive Conservative Carl Benito who was first elec |
He was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party before 2004. |
In the 1959 election, he defeated | Progressive Conservative challenger Earl Murray by only |
He defeated incumbent | Progressive Conservative MLA Mary LeMessurier by a marg |
d to the total of the Canadian Alliance and | Progressive Conservative votes. |
ood was defeated by John A. Charlton of the | Progressive Conservative party in the 1945 election. |
Oberg, Strathmore-Brooks suspended from the | Progressive Conservative caucus |
from a combination of Canadian Alliance and | Progressive Conservative votes. |
He finished second to | Progressive Conservative Dick Fowler, a former mayor of |
on the combination of Canadian Alliance and | Progressive Conservative Party totals. |
n his unsuccessful campaign for the federal | Progressive Conservative leadership in 1983. |
current representative for this district is | Progressive Conservative Wayne Drysdale. |
oks-High River was jointly nominated by the | Progressive Conservative and Liberal parties. |
ted with the combined Canadian Alliance and | Progressive Conservative percentages from 2000. |
ange is from combined Canadian Alliance and | Progressive Conservative totals. |
She was defeated by | Progressive Conservative candidate Gary Mar in a closel |
A member of the | Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan, Swan re |
votes (winning candidate: Steve Gilchrist, | Progressive Conservative) |
votes (winning candidate: Steve Gilchrist, | Progressive Conservative) |
4, she was the president of the Durham-York | Progressive Conservative Association. |
current representative for the district is | Progressive Conservative Neil Brown who was elected in |
and its antecedents have primarily elected | Progressive Conservative candidates in recent years. |
249 votes (2.30%), finishing fourth against | Progressive Conservative candidate Rosemary Vodrey. |
This page also includes information about | Progressive Conservative candidates in by-elections bet |
He was re-elected as a | Progressive Conservative MP from Alberta in the 1968 el |
Robert (Bob) Lane was a | Progressive Conservative party member of the Canadian H |
The Official Opposition was the | Progressive Conservative Party, led by Robert Stanfield |
Unlike most | Progressive Conservative MPs, Vankoughnet opposed the M |
He was a member of the | Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario. |
ht was defeated by Henry Frank Jones of the | Progressive Conservative party in the 1957 election. |
Gordon supported Larry Grossman at the | Progressive Conservative Party's leadership convention |
e Centre, 81 votes (winner: Michael Wilson, | Progressive Conservative) |
He lost the seat to | Progressive Conservative candidates in the 1965 federal |
She ran as the | Progressive Conservative candidate in the electoral dis |
5 election, Lennard (who by that time was a | Progressive Conservative) defeated Corman. |
76 votes (0.16%), finishing seventh against | Progressive Conservative candidate Louis Plamondon. |
Richardson endorsed Joe Clark's | Progressive Conservative Party in the 1980 federal elec |
Running in Portage-Neepawa, he lost to | Progressive Conservative Siegfried Enns by 3,510 votes. |
463 votes (3.01%), finishing fourth against | Progressive Conservative candidate Louis Plamondon. |
A | Progressive Conservative, he was re-elected in 1972 and |
April 2 - | Progressive Conservative Party of Newfoundland and Labr |
The riding has swung between Liberal and | Progressive Conservative control since it was created. |
was defeated by Joseph Warner Murphy of the | Progressive Conservative party in the 1945 election. |
He was appointed whip of the small | Progressive Conservative caucus by the party leader Jea |
His widow, Carolyne Morrison, served as a | Progressive Conservative MLA from 1960 to 1969. |
Lambert is also a supporter of the | Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba. |
has also served on the board of Brantford's | Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario association. |
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