The election was fought over issues relating to the economy, the environment, First Nations reconciliation.Premier Darrell Pasloski lost his own seat.During the campaign, the issues of economic diversification, environmental management, and First Nations reconciliation were central themes, as was each party's stance on fracking.The incumbent Yukon Party, led by Darrell Pasloski since 2011, had governed the Yukon since 2002 when it defeated the Yukon Liberal Party. All results are unofficial until final ballot counts are verified by.Liberal Don Inverarity won the riding in 2006 beating the Yukon Party's Dean Hassard by only 6 votes. But rather than having another major plant, he suggested it would be in the best interest of residents, including First Nations, to have smaller ones widely dispersed throughout the territory.“It may not have as much bang for your dollar at the end of the day and you may have a greater environmental footprint cumulatively from multiple smaller sites as opposed to one big one, but that way you’d spread out the environmental footprint across multiple First Nations’ traditional territories and no one is impacted too significantly at once,” he said. The party had been critical of the Yukon Party's relationship with First Nations, its stewardship of the economy, and its management of government services such as healthcare.The Yukon New Democratic Party ran on a campaign of.All six Yukon New Democratic Party MLAs sought re-election.The Yukon Liberal Party, led by Sandy Silver, held only one seat after,Despite having only one seat, the party gained visibility in late 2015 following the election the,Controversy arose when the Chief Electoral Officer launched two inquiries during the campaign, citing concerns about proxy voting, special ballots, and purposeful misinformation by all three candidates in the.The election also marked a continued trend in the turnout at advance polls, which had doubled in each of the previous two elections.The Yukon Liberal Party was elected to a majority government on November 7, 2016, with 11/19 seats. All of Yukon now shown as one map, with urban areas shown in insets for closer detail.This page was last edited on 29 April 2019, at 20:02.Files are available under licenses specified on their description page. Premier Darrell Pasloski lost his own seat ... (PPC) will have a spot on the ballot in the Yukon this federal election. In 2011, rural Yukon lost a seat, and so did the Yukon Party. Great, you think, tensions may flare up and I would rather, well, not — avoid certain embarrassment or the evening’s untimely end altogether, sure.You’re unprepared. The Yukon Party won its third majority government from the voters. He was re-elected in the 2015 federal election. Video blog Street talk Yukoners talk to us about the election. Report of the Chief Electoral Officer of Yukon on Political Contributions, 2013.pdf Download: 105.42 KB: Report of the Chief Electoral Officer of Yukon on Political Contributions, 2012.pdf Download: 102.22 KB: Addendum - Report of the Chief Electoral Officer of Yukon on Election Financing and Political Contributions, 2011.pdf Download: 74.61 KB 2006 voter turnout: 67% (661 of 993 registered voters) All rights reserved,A complete list of all the candidates running in the 2011 Yukon election,Look through our coverage of the campaign. However, the Governor General of Canada, on the advice of the Prime Minister of Canada; the provincial lieutenant governors, on the advice of the relevant premier; and the territorial commissioners do still have the constitutional power to, on the advice of the relevant premier, call a general election at any point before the fixed date. On nomination day, September 19, 2011, there were 62 candidates, two of whom were independents. However, despite winning the popular vote comfortably, many Liberal margins of victory were quite narrow.A judicial recount was later held to confirm the results in the districts of.The Yukon Party saw five of its MLAs re-elected, with one new candidate,The New Democratic Party lost four of its six seats, with party leader Liz Hanson and incumbent,Surprisingly, the number of individual votes received by the Yukon Party and the New Democrats was also largely unchanged; each party received only about 200 votes less than it had in 2011. In ridings where the population had increased notably in that time -.Turnout was 79.9% (18,787 votes), the highest in Yukon history and the highest since 1996.The election marked the highest-ever levels of expenditures and revenue (cash and in-kind) by the Yukon political parties in an election year. The election was fought over issues relating to the economy, the environment, First Nations reconciliation, fracking, and the merits of a territorial carbon tax. The Yukon Party entered the 2016 campaign with ten of its twelve MLAs seeking re-election, albeit it with two running in different ridings (Scott Kent and Doug Graham). The incumbent Yukon Party government, led by Darrell Pasloski, was defeated by the third party Liberal Party of Sandy Silver, ending 14 years of Yukon Party rule.