Until the
2011 federal election, the 1988 election was the most successful in the New Democratic Party's history. The party dominated in
British Columbia and
Saskatchewan, won significant support in
Ontario and elected its first (and, until the
2008 election, only) member from
Alberta. This is the most recent election in which the New Democrats won the most seats in British Columbia and Saskatchewan. This was the second election contested by the
Green Party, and it saw a more than 50 percent increase in its vote, but it remained a minor party. The election was the last for Canada's
Social Credit Party. The party won no seats, and won an insignificant portion of the popular vote. The party attempted to fight the 1993 election, but lost its registration after being unable to field enough candidates. This was the first election for the newly founded
Reform Party which for this vote only contested seats in
Western Canada. It was led by
Preston Manning, who was himself a one time Socred candidate and the son of longtime Alberta Social Credit premier
Ernest Manning. Reform won no seats and a negligible percentage of the vote. However,
Deborah Grey would win the first seat for Reform,
Beaver River in Alberta, in a
by-election held four months later. Grey, who had finished a distant fourth running in the same riding in the general election, succeeded rookie
Progressive Conservative MP
John Dahmer, who died of
pancreatic cancer before taking office. For the
Progressive Conservatives, this was the last federal election they would ever win. A centre-right party would not win government until 2006, and a conservative party would not win over 40 percent of the vote until
2025. ==Notes==