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Ontario : November 16, 2017 61 Elaine McCoy Canadian Senators Group: Alberta : December 29, 2020 74 Judith Keating Independent Senators Group: New Brunswick (New Brunswick) July 15, 2021 64 Josée Forest-Niesing Independent Senators Group: Ontario : November 20, 2021 59 COVID-19 [7] Ian Shugart Independent: Ontario : October 25, 2023 66
The 43rd Parliament of Ontario was the session of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from August 8, 2022 to January 28, 2025 with the membership having been determined by the results of the 2022 general election held on June 2. [1] It was led by a Progressive Conservative Party majority government under the premiership of Doug Ford.
The first state funeral in Canada was held for Thomas D'Arcy McGee after his assassination in April 1868. [6] The first Governor General of Canada to receive a state funeral was the Lord Tweedsmuir in 1940, who died in office. Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada's first prime minister was also the first to receive a state funeral.
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Liberal – Ontario Liberal Party; Libert. – Ontario Libertarian Party; Mod. – Ontario Moderate Party; N. Ont – Northern Ontario Party; NB – New Blue Party of Ontario; NDP – Ontario New Democratic Party; NOTA – None of the Above Party; PC – Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario; PPO – Populist Party Ontario; Prog ...
The Legislative Assembly has existed since 1867 when the British North America Act, 1867 severed the Province of Canada into two new provinces, with the portion then called Canada West becoming Ontario. For the Parliaments prior to Confederation, see Parliament of the Province of Canada (1841 to 1867) and Parliament of Upper Canada (1791 to 1841).
The 2022 Ontario general election was held on June 2, 2022, to elect Members of the Provincial Parliament to serve in the 43rd Parliament of Ontario. The governing Progressive Conservatives , led by Premier Doug Ford , were re-elected to a second majority government , winning 7 more seats than they had won in 2018.
Part of the Province of Quebec colony. 1791–1841 Split into Lower Canada (now Quebec) and Upper Canada (now Ontario). 1841–1867 Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada: Legislative Council of the Province of Canada: Governor General of the Province of Canada: Parliament of the Province of Canada: 1867–1968 Split into Ontario and ...