42nd Manitoba Legislature
Majority parliament
12 August 2019  5 September 2023
Parliament leaders
PremierBrian Pallister
August 12, 2019 - September 1, 2021
Kelvin Goertzen
September 1, 2021 - November 2, 2021
Heather Stefanson
November 2, 2021 - September 5, 2023
Leader of the
Opposition
Wab Kinew
Party caucuses
GovernmentProgressive Conservative
OppositionNew Democrat
UnrecognizedLiberal
Legislative Assembly
Speaker of the
Assembly
Myrna Driedger
August 12, 2019 - September 5, 2023
Members57 MLA seats
Sovereign
MonarchElizabeth II
6 February 1952 – 8 September 2022
Charles III
8 September 2022 – present
Lieutenant
Governor
Hon. Janice Filmon
until 24 October 2022
Hon. Anita Neville
from 24 October 2022
Sessions
1st session
September 30, 2019 – October 10, 2019
2nd session
November 19, 2019 – May 27, 2020
3rd session
October 7, 2020 – November 4, 2021
4th session
November 23, 2021 – November 3, 2022
5th session
November 15, 2022 – June 1, 2023
 41st  43rd

The 42nd Manitoba Legislature was created following a general election in 2019.

The Progressive Conservative Party, led by Brian Pallister, formed a majority government after winning a majority of seats in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.[1] Pallister stepped down from the role in 2021, and was replaced on an interim basis by Kelvin Goertzen and on a permanent basis by Heather Stefanson.

Members of the 42nd Legislative Assembly

Member Party Constituency Notes
  Danielle Adams New Democratic Thompson Died in office December 9, 2021
  Eric Redhead From June 7, 2022
  Nello Altomare New Democratic Transcona
  Uzoma Asagwara New Democratic Union Station
  Diljeet Brar New Democratic Burrows
  Ian Bushie New Democratic Keewatinook
  Eileen Clarke Progressive Conservative Agassiz
  Cathy Cox Progressive Conservative Kildonan-River East
  Cliff Cullen Progressive Conservative Spruce Woods
  Myrna Driedger[lower-alpha 1] Progressive Conservative Roblin
  Ralph Eichler Progressive Conservative Lakeside
  Wayne Ewasko Progressive Conservative Lac du Bonnet
  Scott Fielding Progressive Conservative Kirkfield Park Until June 20, 2022
  Kevin Klein From December 13, 2022
  Nahanni Fontaine New Democratic St. Johns
  Cameron Friesen Progressive Conservative Morden-Winkler Resigned February 3, 2023 to run federally
  Jon Gerrard Liberal River Heights
  Kelvin Goertzen Progressive Conservative Steinbach
  Audrey Gordon Progressive Conservative Southdale
  Josh Guenter Progressive Conservative Borderland
  Sarah Guillemard Progressive Conservative Fort Richmond
  Reg Helwer Progressive Conservative Brandon West
  Len Isleifson Progressive Conservative Brandon East
  Derek Johnson Progressive Conservative Interlake-Gimli
  Scott Johnston Progressive Conservative Assiniboia
  Wab Kinew New Democratic Fort Rouge
  Bob Lagassé Progressive Conservative Dawson Trail
  Alan Lagimodiere Progressive Conservative Selkirk
  Dougald Lamont Liberal St. Boniface
  Cindy Lamoureux Liberal Tyndall Park
  Amanda Lathlin New Democratic The Pas-Kameesak
  Tom Lindsey New Democratic Flin Flon
  Jim Maloway New Democratic Elmwood
  Malaya Marcelino New Democratic Notre Dame
  Shannon Martin Progressive Conservative McPhillips
  Jamie Moses New Democratic St. Vital
  Brad Michaleski Progressive Conservative Dauphin
  Andrew Micklefield Progressive Conservative Rossmere
  Janice Morley-Lecomte Progressive Conservative Seine River
  Lisa Naylor New Democratic Wolseley
  Greg Nesbitt Progressive Conservative Riding Mountain
  Brian Pallister Progressive Conservative Fort Whyte Until October 4, 2021
  Obby Khan From March 22, 2022
  Blaine Pedersen Progressive Conservative Midland
  Doyle Piwniuk Progressive Conservative Turtle Mountain
  Jon Reyes Progressive Conservative Waverley
  Adrien Sala New Democratic St. James
  Mintu Sandhu New Democratic The Maples
  Ron Schuler Progressive Conservative Springfield-Ritchot
  Andrew Smith Progressive Conservative Lagimodière
  Bernadette Smith New Democratic Point Douglas
  Dennis Smook Progressive Conservative La Verendrye
  Rochelle Squires Progressive Conservative Riel
  Heather Stefanson Progressive Conservative Tuxedo
  James Teitsma Progressive Conservative Radisson
  Mark Wasyliw New Democratic Fort Garry
  Jeff Wharton Progressive Conservative Red River North
  Matt Wiebe New Democratic Concordia
  Ian Wishart Progressive Conservative Portage la Prairie
  Rick Wowchuk Progressive Conservative Swan River

By-elections prior to 2023 election

Manitoba provincial by-election, March 22, 2022: Fort Whyte
Resignation of Brian Pallister
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
Progressive ConservativeObby Khan3,05042.51–14.68
LiberalWillard Reaves2,85339.77+22.53
New DemocraticTrudy Schroeder1,11215.50–2.38
IndependentPatrick Allard1011.41
GreenNicolas Geddert550.77–6.00
Total valid votes 7,174
Total rejected ballots 150.21–0.33
Turnout 7,18942.62–14.57
Eligible voters 15,907–0.29
Progressive Conservative hold Swing -18.61
Source: Elections Manitoba[2][3]
Manitoba provincial by-election, June 7, 2022: Thompson
Death of Danielle Adams
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticEric Redhead1,46570.74+16.19
Progressive ConservativeCharlotte Larocque58128.05–7.63
Total valid votes 2,046
Total rejected ballots 251.20
Turnout 2,07119.34
Eligible voters 10,706
New Democratic hold Swing +12.44
Manitoba provincial by-election, December 13, 2022: Kirkfield Park
Resignation of Scott Fielding
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
Progressive ConservativeKevin Klein2,35737.04–13.32
New DemocraticLogan Oxenham2,19634.51+8.82
LiberalRhonda Nichol1,74127.36+11.68
GreenDennis Bayomi701.10–7.19
Total valid votes 6,36499.86
Total rejected ballots 110.17–0.58
Turnout 6,37536.50–24.75
Eligible voters 17,468
Progressive Conservative hold Swing –11.07
Source: Elections Manitoba[4]


Notes

  1. Speaker of the Assembly.

References

  1. "Manitoba Election: Incumbent premier Brian Pallister's full victory speech after PCs re-elected | Watch News Videos Online". Global News. Retrieved 2020-08-03.
  2. "Election Night Results Fort Whyte". Elections Manitoba. 22 March 2022. Archived from the original on 23 March 2022. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  3. "2022". Elections Manitoba. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  4. "2022 KIRKFIELD PARK BYELECTION RESULTS". Elections Manitoba. Retrieved 21 December 2022.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.