======Canada Federal Election Maps====== Maps of OTL Canadian elections. ====1968:==== New Liberal leader and incumbent PM Pierre Trudeau transforms a minority into a majority government, in part due to his personal popularity ('Trudeaumania'). {{:resources:z-canada_1968.png|}} ====1972:==== A slumping economy and the unpopular policy of official bilingualism leaves Trudeau's Liberals only two seats ahead of the Progressive Conservatives, but he continues as PM via a minority government. {{:resources:z-canada_1972.png|}} ====1974:==== Trudeau regains his majority in an election largely fought over spiralling inflation. {{:resources:z-canada_1974.png|}} ====2004:==== The first election which the Conservatives fought as a reunited party, but Paul Martin's Liberals remain the largest party and form a minority government {{:resources:canada_2004.png|}} ====2006:==== Stephen Harper's Conservatives win the most seats in a divided hung parliament and form the smallest minority government in Canadian history {{:resources:canada_2006.png|}} ====2008:==== Stephen Harper's Conservatives make gains but remain short of a majority, while the Liberals suffer losses under Stéphane Dion {{:resources:canada_2008.png|}} ====2011:==== In a very dramatic election, the Conservatives win a majority, the NDP smash the Bloc Québecois and achieve Official Opposition status, and the Liberals are reduced to a third party for the first time in Canadian history {{:resources:canada_2011_4_.png|}} **Navigation** **[[resources:OTL Election Maps Database]]**