I'm sorry, but I need more context to provide an accurate answer. Could you please specify which party and which election or parliament you are referring to?
The Conservative Party currently holds 166 of the 308 seats in the Canadian Parliament.
A hung Parliament is where one party IE Conservatives have lets say 250 seats. labour has 200 and Lib Dem's have 60. the Conservatives cannot win on the majority as labours and Lib Dem's seats are more than the Conservatives. That is a hung Parliament.
the green party has no seats a the current time
87 federal seats or more
John A. Macdonald, as a leader of the Conservative Party, won a total of 129 seats in the 1867 federal election, making him the first Prime Minister of Canada. His party secured a majority in the first Parliament of Canada, which consisted of 206 seats. This victory was pivotal in the establishment of Canada as a self-governing dominion.
The Conservative Party won 306 seats in the House of Commons, 20 seats short of an overall majority.
274
You are to have at least 326 which is a majority so they can make decisions without coming to a deadlock. There are 650 seats altogether in Parliament
In Canada, to win a federal election, a political party must secure a majority of the seats in the House of Commons, which has 338 seats. This means a party needs at least 170 seats to achieve a majority. The number of votes needed to win those seats can vary significantly by region and riding, as voting patterns differ across the country.
The House of Commons has 308 seats for the whole House.Her Majesty's Government for Canada (the Conservative Party) presently holds 144 seats, Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition (the Liberal Party) holds 77 seats, the Bloc Québécois holds 48 seats, the New Democratic Party holds 36 seats, and there are two independent members of the House. One seat is currently vacant.
The party vote determines the share each party has of seats in parliament. If a party wins 50% of the party vote, it's entitled to 50% of the seats. The electorate vote determines who your local MP is. New Zealand is divided into 70 electorate seats, each with one MP. To become an MP you must win the most electorate votes in your seat (this doesn't always mean a majority, for example, if one candidate wins 10% but the next wins 11% and 4 others win 9.5%, the candidate with the greatest number of votes wins).
The monster raving looney party is aloud to win the election but it is highly unlikly as they have no mps so therefore no seats.