Since the first time I looked at this a bit more than two years ago four women have won general elections. This is also a dramatic change from the past. Interestingly two of the more dramatic wins in Canadian history were by Alison Redford and Christy Clark.
Here is how they all stack up by time in office - bold means currently in office
- Eva Aariak Nunavut 1788 days
- Nellie Cournoyea NWT 1469 days
- Catherine Callbeck PEI 1353 days
- Kathy Dunderdale NF 1033 days
- Christy Clark BC 932 days
- Pat Duncan Yukon 884 days
- Alison Redford Alberta 725 days
- Pauline Marois Quebec 377 days
- Kathleen Wynne Ontario 232 days
- Rita Johnson BC 217 days
- Kim Campbell Federal 132 days
Each time I have looked at this I have considered how many person days each first minister has governed for - this is time in office multiplied by population governed. I think that in many ways it is a better measure of the relative impact of women in politics. A little bit more than two months ago Christy Clark finally passed Kim Campbell by this measure. Recently Kathleen Wynne and Pauline Marois passed ahead of Alison Redford and Wynne passed Marois today.
- Christy Clark BC 4,101,000,000 Lib
- Kim Campbell Fed 3,786,000,000 PC
- Kathleen Wynne Ont 2,982,000,000 Lib
- Pauline Marois Que 2,979,000,000 PQ
- Alison Redford Ab 2,645,000,000 PC
- Rita Johnson BC 715,500,000 Socred
- Kathy Dunderdale Nf 532,000,000 PC
- Catherine Callbeck PEI 149,000,000 Lib
- Nellie Cournoyea NWT 92,000,000 na
- Eva Aariak Nu 57,000,000 na
- Pat Duncan Yk 24,800,000 Lib
bold won an election, underlined currently in power
It has been more than year now that half of Canadians have lived in a province or territory with a woman as premier.
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