Yukon’s nail-biter election ended with two parties claiming eight seats each and a tie in Vuntut Gwitchin that could decide the final result. Here’s what happens next.
Yukon’s nail-biter election night is over, but the final result is anything but clear.
After hard-fought campaigns, Currie Dixon’s Yukon Party and Sandy Silver’s Liberal Party both ended the night with eight seats. Kate White’s NDP claimed just two.
The final seat, in Vuntut Gwitchin, appeared to be an even split between Liberal cabinet minister Pauline Frost and the NDP’s Annie Blake. Monday’s results showed each with 78 votes.
So what happens now? CBC’s Yukon Morning spoke to Floyd McCormick, a former clerk of the legislative assembly, to find out.
First, a recount
Yukon elections law requires that any election that comes within 10 votes triggers an automatic judicial recount.
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Once the votes are certified, they’ll be recounted by a judge. All of this is expected to happen by Thursday.
If there was an error, it’s possible ballot counters would find it and be able to declare a clear winner.
But if the results still show a tie, something rare — but not unprecedented — happens.
“Sometime on Thursday, we’ll find out,” said McCormick. “Either the count delivered on election night was not accurate — somebody has actually won — or there will have to be some kind of drawing of lots.”
Next, a lucky draw
Yukon’s elections law clearly states that in the event of a tie, the result “shall be decided immediately by the drawing of lots by the returning officer.”
The draw must be held “in the presence” of the judge who did the recount and any candidate or representative present at the time.
McCormick notes the “receptacle” is not specified — hats, bins, and raffle drums are all acceptable options.
Has this ever happened before?
It would be unusual to see a vote come down to a random draw almost anywhere in Canada, but it’s not unprecedented in Yukon.
In 2018’s municipal elections, the mayor of Faro was chosen by random draw after a tie between Leonard Faber and incumbent mayor Jack Bowers. In the end, Faber unseated Bowers.
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It has even happened in Vuntut Gwitchin, Yukon’s least-populated riding, once before. In 1996, a tie between the NDP’s Robert Bruce and the Yukon Party’s Esau Schafer resulted in a random draw.
“It ended up being a much longer story than that,” said McCormick, “because Mr. Schafer contested the results of the election based on the fact that … there were ineligible people on the electors list.”
The judge eventually sided with Schafer and Bruce’s election was voided, but not before he was elected as Speaker of the legislature. It wasn’t until a by-election the following year that the matter was settled — with a resounding victory for Bruce.
What does this mean for the government?
While electoral ties may be old hat in Yukon, it’s not often that the overall outcome is also so close.
A win for Frost in Vuntut Gwitchin would give the Liberals nine seats to the Yukon Party’s eight and the NDP’s two. A loss would mean a tie between the Liberals and the Yukon Party at eight seats each.
McCormick says even then, Sandy Silver’s Liberals will get the first chance to form a government.
“Given that they are the government right now, I would expect that they will continue as government, even after this is determined on Thursday,” he said.
That doesn’t necessarily mean a coalition with one of the opposition parties.
“In a coalition government, you would have members of both parties sitting in cabinet, which is not generally the way these things go,” he said.
Instead, they could opt for “some sort of agreement … about what kinds of bills and policies the government will bring forward,” or simply win support on a “vote-by-vote basis.”
Either way, with a minority of the assembly’s 19 seats, they can’t govern alone.
There is, of course, the chance that no party can form a government, and voters head back to the polls.
But McCormick says, even amid all this uncertainty, one thing is clear:
“I don’t think any one of them wants to go back on the hustings anytime soon.”