37th Parliament of Ontario
37th Parliament of Ontario | |||
---|---|---|---|
Majority parliament | |||
June 8, 1999 – May 5, 2003 | |||
Parliament leaders | |||
Premier | Mike Harris | ||
Ernie Eves April 15, 2002 – October 22, 2003 | |||
Leader of the Opposition | Dalton McGuinty | ||
Party caucuses | |||
Government | Progressive Conservative Party | ||
Opposition | Liberal Party | ||
Recognized | New Democratic Party | ||
Legislative Assembly | |||
Speaker of the Assembly | Gary Carr | ||
Sovereign | |||
Monarch | Elizabeth II 6 February 1952 – present | ||
|
The 37th Legislative Assembly of Ontario, Canada's most populous province, was in session from June 8, 1999, until May 5, 2003. Its membership was set by the general election of 1999. Majority was held by the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party led by Mike Harris.
During the 36th Legislative Assembly of Ontario, Harris' government had passed legislation which realigned provincial electoral districts to match the boundaries in use for federal districts; accordingly, the 37th Assembly had a reduced number of seats, with just 103 members compared to 130 in the previous session.
In the March 2002 leadership convention, following Mike Harris' resignation announcement, Ernie Eves was elected party leader.
Gary Carr served as speaker for the assembly.[1]
Members[]
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Riding | Member | Party | Notes |
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Algoma—Manitoulin | Michael A. Brown | Liberal | |
Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Aldershot | Ted McMeekin | Liberal | By-election in 2000. See Wentworth—Burlington below for predecessor. |
Barrie—Simcoe—Bradford | Joe Tascona | Progressive Conservative | |
Beaches—East York | Frances Lankin[nb 1] | New Democratic Party | |
Michael Prue | New Democratic Party | By-election in 2001. | |
Bramalea—Gore—Malton—Springdale | Raminder Gill | Progressive Conservative | |
Brampton Centre | Joe Spina | Progressive Conservative | |
Brampton West—Mississauga | Tony Clement | Progressive Conservative | |
Brant | Dave Levac | Liberal | |
Bruce—Grey—Owen Sound | Bill Murdoch | Progressive Conservative | Riding named Bruce—Grey from 1999 to June 2000 |
Burlington | Cam Jackson | Progressive Conservative | |
Cambridge | Gerry Martiniuk | Progressive Conservative | |
Chatham—Essex—Kent | Pat Hoy | Liberal | |
Davenport | Tony Ruprecht | Liberal | |
Don Valley East | David Caplan | Liberal | |
Don Valley West | David Turnbull | Progressive Conservative | |
Dufferin—Peel—Wellington—Grey | David Tilson[nb 1] | Progressive Conservative | |
Ernie Eves | Progressive Conservative | By-election on May 2, 2002. Premier of Ontario from April 15, 2002. | |
Durham | John O'Toole | Progressive Conservative | |
Eglinton—Lawrence | Mike Colle | Liberal | |
Elgin—Middlesex—London | Steve Peters | Liberal | |
Erie—Lincoln | Tim Hudak | Progressive Conservative | |
Essex | Bruce Crozier | Liberal | |
Etobicoke Centre | Chris Stockwell | Progressive Conservative | |
Etobicoke North | John Hastings | Progressive Conservative | |
Etobicoke—Lakeshore | Morley Kells | Progressive Conservative | |
Glengarry—Prescott—Russell | Jean-Marc Lalonde | Liberal | |
Guelph—Wellington | Brenda Elliott | Progressive Conservative | |
Haldimand—Norfolk—Brant | Toby Barrett | Progressive Conservative | |
Haliburton—Victoria—Brock | Chris Hodgson | Progressive Conservative | |
Halton | Ted Chudleigh | Progressive Conservative | |
Hamilton East | Dominic Agostino | Liberal | |
Hamilton Mountain | Marie Bountrogianni | Liberal | |
Hamilton West | David Christopherson | New Democratic Party | |
Hastings—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington | Leona Dombrowsky | Liberal | |
Huron—Bruce | Helen Johns | Progressive Conservative | |
Kenora—Rainy River | Howard Hampton | New Democratic Party | Party leader. |
Kingston and the Islands | John Gerretsen | Liberal | |
Kitchener Centre | Wayne Wettlaufer | Progressive Conservative | |
Kitchener—Waterloo | Elizabeth Witmer | Progressive Conservative | |
Lambton—Kent—Middlesex | Marcel Beaubien | Progressive Conservative | |
Lanark—Carleton | Norm Sterling | Progressive Conservative | |
Leeds—Grenville | Bob Runciman | Progressive Conservative | |
London North Centre | Dianne Cunningham | Progressive Conservative | |
London West | Bob Wood | Progressive Conservative | |
London—Fanshawe | Frank Mazzilli | Progressive Conservative | |
Markham | David Tsubouchi | Progressive Conservative | |
Mississauga Centre | Rob Sampson | Progressive Conservative | |
Mississauga East | Carl DeFaria | Progressive Conservative | |
Mississauga South | Margaret Marland | Progressive Conservative | |
Mississauga West | John Snobelen | Progressive Conservative | |
Nepean—Carleton | John Baird | Progressive Conservative | |
Niagara Centre | Peter Kormos | New Democratic Party | |
Niagara Falls | Bart Maves | Progressive Conservative | |
Nickel Belt | Shelley Martel | New Democratic Party | |
Nipissing | Mike Harris[nb 1] | Progressive Conservative | Premier to April 15, 2002. |
Al McDonald | Progressive Conservative | By-election in 2002. | |
Northumberland | Doug Galt | Progressive Conservative | |
Oak Ridges | Frank Klees | Progressive Conservative | |
Oakville | Gary Carr | Progressive Conservative | |
Oshawa | Jerry Ouellette | Progressive Conservative | |
Ottawa Centre | Richard Patten | Liberal | |
Ottawa South | Dalton McGuinty | Liberal | Leader of the Liberal Party; Leader of the Opposition. |
Ottawa West—Nepean | Garry Guzzo | Progressive Conservative | |
Ottawa—Orléans | Brian Coburn | Progressive Conservative | Riding named Carleton—Gloucester from 1999 to June 2000. |
Ottawa—Vanier | Claudette Boyer | Liberal[nb 2] | Died in 2013 |
Oxford | Ernie Hardeman | Progressive Conservative | |
Parkdale—High Park | Gerard Kennedy | Liberal | |
Parry Sound—Muskoka | Ernie Eves[nb 1] | Progressive Conservative | Resigned in 2001; later returned to Legislature in another seat. |
Norm Miller | Progressive Conservative | By-election in 2001. | |
Perth—Middlesex | Bert Johnson | Progressive Conservative | |
Peterborough | Gary Stewart | Progressive Conservative | |
Pickering—Ajax—Uxbridge | Janet Ecker | Progressive Conservative | |
Prince Edward—Hastings | Ernie Parsons | Liberal | |
Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke | Sean Conway | Liberal | |
Sarnia—Lambton | Caroline Di Cocco | Liberal | |
Sault Ste. Marie | Tony Martin | New Democratic Party | |
Scarborough Centre | Marilyn Mushinski | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough East | Steve Gilchrist | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough Southwest | Dan Newman | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough West | Jim Brown | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough—Agincourt | Gerry Phillips | Liberal | |
Scarborough—Rouge River | Alvin Curling | Liberal | |
Simcoe North | Garfield Dunlop | Progressive Conservative | |
Simcoe—Grey | Jim Wilson | Progressive Conservative | |
St. Catharines | Jim Bradley | Liberal | |
St. Paul's | Michael Bryant | Liberal | |
Stoney Creek | Brad Clark | Progressive Conservative | |
Stormont—Dundas—Charlottenburgh | John Cleary | Liberal | |
Sudbury | Rick Bartolucci | Liberal | |
Thornhill | Tina Molinari | Progressive Conservative | |
Thunder Bay—Atikokan | Lyn McLeod | Liberal | |
Thunder Bay—Superior North | Michael Gravelle | Liberal | |
Timiskaming—Cochrane | David James Ramsay | Liberal | |
Timmins—James Bay | Gilles Bisson | New Democratic Party | |
Toronto Centre—Rosedale | George Smitherman | Liberal | |
Toronto—Danforth | Marilyn Churley | New Democratic Party | Riding named Broadview—Greenwood from 1999 to June 2000. |
Trinity—Spadina | Rosario Marchese | New Democratic Party | |
Vaughan—King—Aurora | Al Palladini | Progressive Conservative | Died 2001. |
Greg Sorbara | Liberal | By-election in 2002. | |
Waterloo—Wellington | Ted Arnott | Progressive Conservative | |
Wentworth—Burlington | Toni Skarica | Progressive Conservative | Resigned in 2000; riding was renamed. See Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Aldershot above for successor. |
Whitby—Ajax | Jim Flaherty | Progressive Conservative | |
Willowdale | David Young | Progressive Conservative | |
Windsor West | Sandra Pupatello | Liberal | |
Windsor—St. Clair | Dwight Duncan | Liberal | |
York Centre | Monte Kwinter | Liberal | |
York North | Julia Munro | Progressive Conservative | |
York South—Weston | Joseph Cordiano | Liberal | |
York West | Mario Sergio | Liberal |
Notes[]
References[]
- ^ "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
- Terms of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
- 1999 establishments in Ontario
- 2003 disestablishments in Ontario