2007 Manitoba general election

2007 Manitoba general election

← 2003 May 22, 2007 2011 →

57 seats of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba
29 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Gary Doer Hugh McFadyen Jon Gerrard
Party New Democratic Progressive Conservative Liberal
Leader since March 30, 1988 April 29, 2006 October 17, 1998
Leader's seat Concordia Fort Whyte River Heights
Last election 35 20 2
Seats won 36 19 2
Seat change Increase1 Decrease1 Steady0
Popular vote 200,834 158,511 51,857
Percentage 48.00% 37.89% 12.39%
Swing Decrease1.47% Increase1.70% Decrease0.80%

Popular vote by riding. As this is an FPTP election, seat totals are not determined by popular vote, but instead via results by each riding. Click the map for more details.

Premier before election

Gary Doer
New Democratic

Premier after election

Gary Doer
New Democratic

Riding-by-riding results

The 2007 Manitoba general election was held on May 22, 2007 to elect Members of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Manitoba, Canada. It was won by the New Democratic Party, which won 36 seats out of 57. The Progressive Conservative Party finished second with nineteen seats. The Liberal Party won two seats. As a result, Premier of Manitoba Gary Doer received a mandate to form a third consecutive majority government, becoming the first Premier of Manitoba to achieve this since Duff Roblin in 1966.

The election resulted in very few changes from the party standings at the dissolution of the previous legislature. One New Democrat incumbent was defeated by a Progressive Conservative challenger, and one Progressive Conservative incumbent was defeated by a New Democrat. The PCs picked up one seat that was previously held by an independent, and the NDP picked up one seat that was vacant at dissolution. The other 53 seats in the legislature were all retained by their incumbent parties. The popular vote was also very similar, with the New Democrats dropping 1.47% and the Progressive Conservatives gaining 1.70% overall.