1962 Quebec general election

1962 Quebec general election

November 14, 1962

95 seats in the 27th Legislative Assembly of Quebec
48 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Jean Lesage Daniel Johnson Sr.
Party Liberal Union Nationale
Leader since May 31, 1958 September 23, 1961
Leader's seat Québec-Ouest Bagot
Last election 51 seats, 51.38% 43 seats, 46.61%
Seats won 63 31
Seat change 12 12
Popular vote 1,205,253 900,817
Percentage 56.40% 42.15%
Swing 5.02% 4.46%

Premier before election

Jean Lesage
Liberal

Premier after election

Jean Lesage
Liberal

The 1962 Quebec general election was held on November 14, 1962, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Quebec, Canada. The incumbent Quebec Liberal Party, led by Jean Lesage, was re-elected, defeating the Union Nationale (UN) led by Daniel Johnson, Sr.

In an unusual move, the election was called just two years after the previous 1960 general election. Lesage sought a mandate for the nationalization of the electricity industry, using the slogan Maîtres chez nous, 'Masters in our own home', and declaring it to be the single issue on which he was ready to stake his political career.

A few days before the election, the Union Nationale's chief organizer André Lagarde was arrested for fraud. The Liberals claimed this was proof of lingering corruption dating from the Maurice Duplessis era, but the UN cried foul. While Lagarde's innocence was eventually confirmed by the courts after the election had already taken place, the incident may well have contributed to the UN's defeat.

The Liberal Party won an increased number of seats and a higher percentage of the popular vote compared to the previous election. Their majority government allowed them to pursue their campaign promise of electricity nationalization, spearheaded by future Parti Québécois founder René Lévesque, who at the time served as a cabinet minister in the Lesage government.

Action provinciale, a new group founded by Hertel Larocque (a former secretary of Camillien Houde), fielded 11 candidates in the election but failed to gather a significant number of votes. Johnson opted not to have the UN join forces with it, keeping in mind the failure the Liberals had had in attempting the same manoeuvre with the Créditistes in 1956. However, Social Credit was still a force to reckon with even while not campaigning on the provincial scene, and Johnson did not hesitate to use its vocabulary in his speeches while on the campaign trail.

Riding contests, by number of candidates (1960)
Candidates Lib UN Ind I-Lib I-UN AP Con Comm Total
2 6767134
3 242467181172
4 22228
5 22311110
Total 959591021111224