The
Ontario Progressive Conservative Party, led by
George Drew, defeated the
Ontario Liberal Party government. The Liberal government had disintegrated over the previous two years because of a conflict between
Mitchell Hepburn, the Ontario
caucus and the federal
Liberal Party of Canada. Hepburn resigned and was eventually succeeded by
Harry Nixon in early 1943. The change in leadership was not enough to save the government. The election held later that year resulted in the Conservative Party, recently renamed the "Progressive Conservative Party", winning a
minority government. This began forty-two uninterrupted years of government by the Tories who combined moderate progressive policies with pragmatism and caution. The Liberals fell to third place behind a new force, the
socialist Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), led by
Ted Jolliffe, went from obscurity to form the
Official Opposition, winning 32% of the vote and 34 seats in the legislature, just four short of Drew's Tories. The Liberals and their
Liberal-Progressive allies fell from 66 seats to a mere 15. Two members of the banned
Communist Party of Ontario running as "Labour" candidates won seats in the Legislature for the first time in this election:
A.A. MacLeod in the
Toronto riding of Bellwoods, and
J.B. Salsberg in the
Toronto riding of St. Andrews. Several days following the election the
Labor-Progressive Party was officially formed and Salsberg and MacLeod agreed to sit in the legislature as the party's representatives. The Legislature's first two female MPPs were elected in 1943: ==Results==