Maybank again ran in Manitoba, finished tenth on the first count, and narrowly won election for the final seat.
On the final count, he defeated Leslie Morris by 309 votes for tenth place.
For the next three years, Maybank served as a backbench supporter of John Bracken's government.
He resigned his seat on October 1, 1935, to run for the Canadian House of Commons in the 1935 federal election.
The Liberal Party won this election, and Maybank served as a backbench supporter of William Lyon Mackenzie King's government.
[1] In the 1940s, Maybank led a revolt of Liberal Members of Parliament from western Canada against a proposed rise in the cross-border tariff.