38th General Assembly of Nova Scotia
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The 38th General Assembly of Nova Scotia represented Nova Scotia between June 25, 1925, through September 5, 1928. The first session of this assembly was convened on February 9, 1926. There were three sessions of the assembly during this period.
The election of 1925 represented a shift in Nova Scotia politics as the 37th General Assembly would mark the return of the Conservatives to government after a forty-three year absence.
One of the most significant pieces of legislation to come out of this General Assembly is that of , in 1928. This act abolished the Legislative Council of the Nova Scotia Legislature, the legislature's upper house. When Rhodes came into office in 1926, it had only one Conservative member and 17 Liberal members, with three vacancies; Rhodes would ultimately appoint 15 new Councillors in order to pack the Council for means of abolition, while dismissing all but a handful of Liberal Councillors.
Division of seats[]
There were 42 members of this General Assembly, elected in the 1925 Nova Scotia general election.
Leader | Party | # of Seats | |
---|---|---|---|
Edgar Nelson Rhodes | Liberal-Conservative | 38 | |
Ernest Howard Armstrong | Liberal | 3 | |
Archibald Terris | Labour-Conservative | 1 | |
Total | 42 |
List of members[]
Former members of the 37th General Assembly[]
Name | Party | Electoral District | Cause of departure | Succeeded by | Elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
John Alexander MacDonald | Conservatives | Cape Breton West | resigned to run federally | , Con. | February 24, 1926 | |
Frank J.D. Barnjum | Conservatives | Queens County | resigned March 16, 1926 | N/A | N/A | |
John Carey Douglas | Conservatives | Cape Breton East | resigned to run federally | N/A | N/A |
- Barnjum resigned due to a failed election promise. Upon being nominated Barnjum promised a mill project for Queens County. By 1928 this had not happened and Barnjum resigned due to the failed promise.
References[]
- Terms of the General Assembly of Nova Scotia
- 1925 establishments in Nova Scotia
- 1928 disestablishments in Nova Scotia
- 20th century in Nova Scotia