U.K. ELECTION
Coalition government
Precedents from around the world
Last Updated: Thursday, May 13, 2010 | 3:00 PM ET
By Daniel Schwartz, CBC News
Related
Internal Links
- U.K. coalition government holds 1st meeting
- U.K. coalition united: Cameron
- IN DEPTH: Electoral reform: Wrong issue, wrong lesson to take from the British election
- Political scientist Jonathan Malloy on how a coalition might work in Canada (Nov. 28, 2008)
- When the majority doesn't rule: Survival isn't easy in often short-lived minority governments (2008)
- Liberals, NDP, Bloc sign deal on proposed coalition (Dec. 1, 2008)
External Links
- John A. Macdonald: The Young Politician, the Old Chieftain By Donald Creighton
- Making minority governments work: Hung parliaments and the challenges for Westminster and Whitehall
- Debate: Is coalition government preferable to government by a single political party?
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Newly minted British PM David Cameron, right, has entered a coalition with the Liberal Democrats under Nick Clegg, who becomes deputy PM. (Reuters) As it became clear that British voters were not going to give any one party a majority of seats in Parliament in the country's recent national election, the mainstream media began running stories explaining minority and coalition governments. In The Guardian the day after the vote, columnist Simon Tisdall explained how such governments work, and his prime example was … Canada.
Canada has had many examples of minority government, but Tisdall also wrote about the 2008 attempt by Canada's opposition parties to form a coalition and replace Stephen Harper's Conservatives. That attempt failed — but not before Canadian media had carried stories explaining coalition government to Canadians.
While coalition and minority governments are the exception in Britain and Canada, in many other countries, they are more the rule.
Europe's long coalition trip
Since Finland gained independence in 1917, it has been governed by coalitions. In the last election, in 2007, the two most popular parties each won about a quarter of the seats. A coalition of those two parties plus two smaller parties governs Finland.
Ride from Finland through Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria and then Italy, and the entire trip will be through coalition country.
A few trip notes: When Germany's two biggest parties, the Christian Democrats and the Social Democrats, formed a government in 2005 it was called a "grand coalition." It lasted until 2009, but the current coalition government is not "grand" because the Social Democrats are now in opposition. Chancellor Angela Merkel headed both coalitions.
Dutch Prime Minister Jan Balkenende, a Christian Democrat, has headed four coalition governments since 2002, but none lasted a full term. (Fred Ernst/Associated Press) In the Netherlands, coalitions have governed since 1918. And until 1994, all those coalition governments included the Christian Democrats. Then the Purple Coalition took over (so named because it blended socialist red with liberal blue) until 2002. Since then, Christian Democrat Jan Peter Balkenende has headed four coalition governments, but none lasted a full term. His last government fell in February over the issue of extending the Dutch mission in Afghanistan. Elections take place June 9.
In Switzerland, a coalition of four parties has governed since 1959. They share power by an agreement know as the "magic formula."
Italy is famous for its short-lived coalition governments. Since 1945, Italy's squabbling politicians have formed 61 governments.
India, Pakistan, Brazil, Israel and Japan are a few examples of coalition governments outside of Europe.
But the British do not need to look so far to see a coalition government in action. Across the Irish Sea is a country ruled, since 1989, by coalitions headed by one or the other of the two big parties, Fianna Fail or Fine Gael. Since 1997, Fianna Fail has headed Ireland's ruling coalition, currently with the Greens as their major partner.
U.K.'s coalition history
The British can also look back in time to their own coalition governments. In 1915, during the First World War, an all-party coalition was formed, first under prime minister Herbert Asquith and a year later under David Lloyd George. The 1915 coalition replaced the last Liberal government in British history.
Lloyd George's coalition met its end in 1922, when the Conservatives, the largest party in the group, decided to leave. The Conservative Party secessionists were led by New Brunswick-born statesman Andrew Bonar Law, who took the keys to No. 10 Downing St. when Lloyd George resigned.
Then in 1924, Britain had a nine-month experience with minority government under the country's first Labour prime minister, Ramsay MacDonald. Another coalition came to power in 1931, and like the government of newly minted British PM David Cameron, it faced an economic crisis. It was the Great Depression, and Britain's Labour government had been split on how to deal with it. MacDonald, in his second stint as prime minister, resigned as Labour leader and formed the "National Government," which included "men from all parties." In the general election two months later, and again in 1935, voters clearly expressed their support for coalition.
British prime minister Winston Churchill, left, welcomes Canadian PM William Lyon Mackenzie King in London on Sept. 1, 1941. Churchill was then leading a coalition government. King headed minority governments in the 1920s. (Library and Archives Canada/Canadian Press) Conservatives Stanley Baldwin and Neville Chamberlain followed as prime ministers at the head of the National Government, which ended in 1940. It was replaced by another coalition, this one an all-party variant under Winston Churchill, following Chamberlain's resignation after Germany invaded Belgium, the Netherlands, France and Luxembourg.
In 1974, Britain again had a brief taste of minority government. Conservative prime minister Edward Heath had lost the election to Labour's Harold Wilson, but the result was a hung Parliament. Heath tried to form a coalition with the Liberals but failed. Wilson headed a minority government for eight months and then won a majority at the polls.
Canada's coalition experience
Coalition governments are less common in Westminster-style, first-past-the-post electoral systems than in legislatures with proportional representation, but they do happen.
In Australia, National-Liberal coalition governments have been in office for most of the last half-century. New Zealand also had experience with coalition governments before going to a mixed-member proportional electoral system in 1996.
What about Canada?
Coalition government created Canada. The pre-Confederation Province of Canada had coalitions, most importantly the "Great Coalition" from 1864 to 1867. Politicians formed the coalition for the express purpose of creating a "federal union of British North America."
John A. Macdonald became prime minister of Canada's first post-Confederation government and, "in Macdonald's view, the government had begun as a bona fide coalition in 1867," his biographer Donald Creighton wrote.
Robert Borden, a Tory, was prime minister of Canada from 1911 to 1920 and for a while during the First World War had Liberals in his government. This photo is undated. (Library and Archives Canada) In discussions of coalitions, Canada's first government is frequently forgotten. "Certainly his first government from 1867 to '72 was formally a coalition government," Canadian historian Michael Bliss told CBC News.
In 1917, during the First World War, Conservative Prime Minister Robert Borden sought a coalition with the opposition Liberals to bring in conscription. Liberal leader Wilfrid Laurier rejected the coalition proposal, but some Liberals left the party caucus and joined Borden's ensuing Unionist government.
Although that government is often called a coalition, University of Toronto political scientist Nelson Wiseman argues that the Unionists do not fit the definition because there was no formal agreement between political parties to govern together and the Liberals who joined "did so without the sanction of their party."
There have been coalition governments at the provincial level in Canada, too.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Nigel Wright has resigned as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's chief of staff, following revelations he wrote a $90,000 cheque to repay living expenses claimed by Senator Mike Duffy. more »
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- A man claiming to be the driver of a Jeep that struck and killed a spectator at a charity event in Edmonton says he is sorry for what happened. more »
- Senior Pakistani politician Zahra Shahid shot dead
- Voting in Karachi goes ahead a day after gunmen killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- Saudi coronavirus work stymied at Canadian lab
- The National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg is working with a sample of the new coronavirus that's causing clusters of infections abroad - but can't share the material with other researchers across the country despite the public health urgency. more »
Must Watch
Latest World News Headlines
- Hot air balloon crash in Turkey kills 1, injures 24
- An official says a hot air balloon has crashed in central Turkey, killing one person and injuring 24 others on board. more »
- Jodi Arias jurors to consider life sentence or execution
- Jodi Arias returns to court for the continuation of her trial in Phoenix, Ariz., after being convicted of murder in her lover's killing as jurors consider a life sentence or execution. more »
- Virginia parade crash driver likely had medical problem
- Authorities believe the driver who plowed into dozens of hikers marching in a Virginia mountain town parade suffered from a medical condition and did not cause the crash intentionally, an emergency official said Sunday. more »
- Canadian military gear stranded in Afghanistan
- A team of 15 Canadian soldiers has been dispatched to Kandahar on a month-long assignment to assess whether dozens of military containers are still seaworthy enough to be brought home. more »
The National
The Current
- Why thousands of people want a one-way trip to Mars May. 17, 2013 4:08 PM Nearly 80,000 people are eager to blast off on a one-way colonizing mission to Mars - but some experts believe no one is likely to get off the ground.
- Remains found on murder suspect Millard's Ontario farm
- Petition looks to rename Victoria Day
- Vancouver man attacked, killed in Costa Rica
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- Rob Ford should resign if allegations true, councillors say
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Missing Toronto woman's parents unfazed by Millard link
- Saudi coronavirus work stymied at Canadian lab
- Man charged in stabbings near Kingsway transit station

