From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
34th Canadian Parliament
1988-93 seating of the national legislature of the North American country
1988-93 seating of the national legislature of the North American country
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| jurisdiction | CA |
| # | 34th |
| type | Majority |
| houseimage | Canada 1988 Federal Election seats.svg |
| senateimage | Senate of Canada - Seating Plan (34th Parliament).svg |
| status | inactive |
| term-begin | 1988-12-12 |
| term-end | 1993-09-08 |
| sc | Hon. John Allen Fraser |
| scterm | – |
| pm | Rt. Hon. Brian Mulroney |
| pm-begin | 1984-09-17 |
| pm-end | 1993-06-25 |
| pm2 | Rt. Hon. Kim Campbell |
| pm-begin2 | 1993-06-25 |
| pm-end2 | 1993-11-04 |
| lo | Rt. Hon. John Turner |
| loterm | – |
| lo2 | Hon. Herb Gray |
| loterm2 | – |
| lo3 | Hon. Jean Chrétien |
| loterm3 | – |
| ghl | Hon. Don Mazankowski |
| ghlterm | – |
| ghl2 | Hon. Doug Lewis |
| ghlterm2 | – |
| ghl3 | Hon. Harvie Andre |
| ghlterm3 | – |
| ghl4 | Hon. Doug Lewis |
| ghlterm4 | – |
| ohl | Hon. Herb Gray |
| ohlterm | – |
| ohl2 | Hon. Jean-Robert Gauthier |
| ohlterm2 | – |
| ohl3 | Hon. David Charles Dingwall |
| ohlterm3 | – |
| ss | Hon. Guy Charbonneau |
| ssterm | – |
| gsl | Hon. Lowell Murray |
| gslterm | – |
| osl | Hon. Allan MacEachen |
| oslterm | – |
| osl2 | Hon. Royce Herbert Frith |
| oslterm2 | – |
| party | Progressive Conservative Party |
| party2 | Liberal Party |
| party3 | New Democratic Party |
| sessionbegin | |
| sessionend | |
| sessionbegin2 | |
| sessionend2 | |
| sessionbegin3 | |
| sessionend3 | |
| monarch | Elizabeth II |
| monarchterm | 6 February 1952 – 8 September 2022 |
| viceroy | Jeanne Sauvé |
| viceroyterm | 14 May 1984 – 28 January 1990 |
| viceroy2 | Ray Hnatyshyn |
| viceroyterm2 | 29 January 1990 – 8 February 1995 |
| ministry | [24th Canadian Ministry](24th-canadian-ministry) |
| ministry2 | [25th Canadian Ministry](25th-canadian-ministry) |
| ministrybegin | |
| ministryend | |
| ministrybegin2 | |
| ministryend2 | |
| members | 295 |
| senators | 104 |
| lastparl | 33rd |
| nextparl | 35th |
| # = 34th
| term-begin = 1988-12-12 | term-end = 1993-09-08
| pm-begin = 1984-09-17 | pm-end = 1993-06-25 | pm-begin2 = 1993-06-25 | pm-end2 = 1993-11-04
The 34th Canadian Parliament was in session from December 12, 1988, until September 8, 1993. The membership was set by the 1988 federal election on November 21, 1988, and it changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections until it was dissolved prior to the 1993 election.
It was controlled by a Progressive Conservative Party majority, led first by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and the 24th Canadian Ministry, and then Prime Minister Kim Campbell and the 25th Canadian Ministry. The official opposition was the Liberal Party, led first by John Turner, and after 1990, by Jean Chrétien.
The speaker of the House of Commons was John Allen Fraser. See also list of Canadian electoral districts 1987-1997 for a list of the ridings in this parliament.
There were three sessions of the 34th Parliament:
| Session | Start | End |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | December 12, 1988 | February 28, 1989 |
| 2nd | April 3, 1989 | May 12, 1991 |
| 3rd | May 13, 1991 | September 8, 1993 |
Party standings
The party standings as of the election and as of dissolution were as follows:
| Affiliation | House members | Senate members | 1988 election | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| results | At dissolution | On election | ||||
| day 1988 | At dissolution | |||||
| 169 | 156 | 36 | 58 | 83 | 81 | 57 |
| **Total members** | **295** | **295** | **98** | **104** | 0 | 0 |
| Total seats | 295 | 104*** |
***** After dissolution but before turning over power to Kim Campbell, Brian Mulroney filled all Senate vacancies with Progressive Conservative members, for a total caucus of 58.
****** There was one Reform senator in the middle of the 34th Parliament.
******* In the middle of the 34th Parliament, Brian Mulroney used a little-known clause in the constitution to fill the Senate above its normal seat limit by eight, to 112.
Members of the House of Commons
Members of the House of Commons in the 34th parliament arranged by province.
Key:
- Party leaders are italicized.
- Parliamentary secretaries is indicated by "".
- Cabinet ministers are in boldface.
- The Prime Minister is both.
- The Speaker is indicated by "()".
Newfoundland
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bonavista—Trinity—Conception | Fred Mifflin | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Burin—St. George's | Roger Simmons | Liberal | 1979, 1988 | 3rd term* |
| Gander—Grand-Falls | George Baker | Liberal | 1974 | 5th term |
| Humber—St. Barbe—Baie Verte | Brian Tobin | Liberal | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Labrador | Bill Rompkey | Liberal | 1972 | 6th term |
| St. John's East | **Ross Reid** {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| St. John's West | **John Crosbie** | Progressive Conservative | 1976 | 5th term |
Prince Edward Island
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardigan | Lawrence MacAulay | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Egmont | Joe McGuire | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Hillsborough | George Proud | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Malpeque | Catherine Callbeck | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
Nova Scotia
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annapolis Valley—Hants | Pat Nowlan | Progressive Conservative | 1965 | 8th term |
| Independent Conservative ¥ | ||||
| Cape Breton Highlands—Canso | Francis LeBlanc | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Cape Breton—East Richmond | David Dingwall | Liberal | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Cape Breton—The Sydneys | Russell MacLellan | Liberal | 1979 | 4th term |
| Central Nova | **Elmer MacKay** | Progressive Conservative | 1971, 1984 | 7th term* |
| Cumberland—Colchester | Bill Casey | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Dartmouth | Ron MacDonald | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Halifax | Mary Clancy | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Halifax West | Howard Crosby {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1978 | 5th term |
| South Shore | **Peter McCreath** {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| South West Nova | Coline Campbell | Liberal | 1974, 1980, 1988 | 3rd term* |
:¥ Pat Nowlan quit the Tory party on October 24, 1990, to protest against the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax. He sat as an "Independent Conservative" for the remainder of the parliament.
New Brunswick
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beauséjour | Fernand Robichaud (until September 1990) | Liberal | 1984 | 2nd term |
| *Jean Chrétien* (from December 1990)* | Liberal | 1963, 1990 | 9th term* | |
| Carleton—Charlotte | Greg Thompson | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Fredericton | Bud Bird | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Fundy—Royal | Robert Corbett | Progressive Conservative | 1978 | 5th term |
| Gloucester | Doug Young | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Madawaska—Victoria | **Bernard Valcourt** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Miramichi | Maurice Dionne | Liberal | 1974, 1988 | 4th term* |
| Moncton | George Rideout | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Restigouche—Chaleur | Guy Arseneault | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Saint John | **Gerald Merrithew** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 1st term |
:* When Jean Chrétien was elected Liberal leader in 1990, Fernand Robichaud stepped aside 24 September 1990 to cause a by-election that would allow Chrétien to enter Parliament. Chrétien was elected in the December 10 by-election.
Quebec
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abitibi | Guy St-Julien | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Ahuntsic | Nicole Roy-Arcelin {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Anjou—Rivière-des-Prairies | **Jean Corbeil** | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Argenteuil—Papineau | Lise Bourgault {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Beauce | Gilles Bernier | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Independent § | ||||
| Beauharnois—Salaberry | Jean-Guy Hudon {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Bellechasse | **Pierre Blais** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Berthier—Montcalm | **Robert de Cotret** | Progressive Conservative | 1978, 1984 | 3rd term* |
| Blainville—Deux-Montagnes | **Monique Landry** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Bonaventure—Îles-de-la-Madeleine | Darryl Gray | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Bourassa | Marie Gibeau | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Brome—Missisquoi | Gabrielle Bertrand | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Chambly | Richard Grisé {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Phil Edmonston (from February 1990) | New Democrat ‡ | 1990 | 1st term | |
| Champlain | Michel Champagne {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Charlesbourg | Monique Tardif {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Charlevoix | ***Brian Mulroney*** | Progressive Conservative | 1983 | 3rd term |
| Chateauguay | Ricardo Lopez | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Chicoutimi | André Harvey {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Drummond | Jean-Guy Guilbault {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Duvernay | Vincent Della Noce {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Frontenac | **Marcel Masse** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Gaspé | Charles-Eugène Marin | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Gatineau—La Lièvre | Mark Assad | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Hochelaga—Maisonneuve | Allan Koury | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Hull—Aylmer | Gilles Rocheleau | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Joliette | Gaby Larrivée | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Jonquiere | Jean-Pierre Blackburn {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Kamouraska—Rivière-du-Loup | André Plourde {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| La Prairie | Fernand Jourdenais | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Lac-Saint-Jean | ***Lucien Bouchard*** | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 2nd term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Lachine—Lac-Saint-Louis | Robert Layton | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| LaSalle—Émard | Paul Martin | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Laurentides | Jacques Vien | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Laurier—Sainte-Marie | Jean-Claude Malépart (until September 1989) | Liberal | 1979 | 4th term |
| Gilles Duceppe (from 1990) | Independent | 1990 | 1st term | |
| Bloc Québécois Ø | ||||
| Laval | Guy Ricard | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Laval-des-Rapides | Jacques Tétreault | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Lévis | Gabriel Fontaine | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Langelier | **Gilles Loiselle** | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Longueuil | Nic Leblanc | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Lotbiniere | Maurice Tremblay | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Louis-Hébert | Suzanne Duplessis {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Manicouagan | Charles Langlois {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Matapédia—Matane | Jean-Luc Joncas | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Mégantic—Compton—Stanstead | François Gérin | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Mercier | Carole Jacques | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Montmorency—Orléans | Charles Deblois | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Mount Royal | Sheila Finestone | Liberal | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Notre-Dame-de-Grâce | Warren Allmand | Liberal | 1965 | 8th term |
| Outremont | Jean-Pierre Hogue | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Papineau—Saint-Michel | André Ouellet | Liberal | 1967 | 8th term |
| Pierrefonds—Dollard | **Gerry Weiner** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Pontiac—Gatineau—Labelle | Barry Moore {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Portneuf | Marc Ferland | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Quebec East | Marcel Tremblay {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Richelieu | Louis Plamondon | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Richmond—Wolfe | Yvon Côté | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Rimouski—Témiscouata | **Monique Vézina** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Roberval | **Benoît Bouchard** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Rosemont | Benoît Tremblay {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Saint-Denis | Marcel Prud'homme | Liberal | 1964 | 9th term |
| Saint-Henri—Westmount | David Berger | Liberal | 1979 | 4th term |
| Saint-Hubert | Pierrette Venne | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot | Andrée Champagne | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Saint-Jean | Clément Couture | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Saint-Laurent | Shirley Maheu | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Saint-Léonard | Alfonso Gagliano | Liberal | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Saint-Maurice | Denis Pronovost | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Independent Δ | ||||
| Shefford | Jean Lapierre₴ | Liberal | 1979 | 4th term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Sherbrooke | **Jean Charest** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Témiscamingue | Gabriel Desjardins | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Terrebonne | Jean-Marc Robitaille {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Trois-Rivières | **Pierre H. Vincent** {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Vaudreuil | **Pierre Cadieux** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Vercheres | **Marcel Danis** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Verdun—Saint-Paul | Gilbert Chartrand | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Independent | ||||
| Bloc Québécois † | ||||
| Progressive Conservative |
:§ Just before the 1993 election, Gilles Bernier left the Tories to sit as an independent :† On May 5, 1990, seven Conservative and two Liberal MPs, led by Lucien Bouchard, left their parties to form the Bloc Québécois :‡ Richard Grisé left Parliament after being sentenced to jail for corruption. He was replaced by Philip Edmonston in a February 12, 1990 by-election. :Ø Jean-Claude Malépart died in office on September 16, 1989. The next year he was replaced by Gilles Duceppe in a by-election. :Δ On June 17, 1993, Denis Pronovost left the PC party to sit as an independent following conviction on criminal charges. :₴ On August 23, 1992 Jean Lapierre resigned from parliament and the seat remains vacant for the reminder of parliament
Ontario
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Algoma | Maurice Foster | Liberal | 1968 | 7th term |
| Beaches—Woodbine | Neil Young | New Democrat | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Brampton—Malton | Harry Chadwick | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Brampton | **John McDermid** | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Brant | Derek Blackburn | New Democrat | 1971 | 7th term |
| Broadview—Greenwood | Dennis Mills | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Bruce—Grey | Gus Mitges | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Burlington | Bill Kempling {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Cambridge | Pat Sobeski | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Carleton—Gloucester | Eugène Bellemare | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Cochrane—Superior | Réginald Bélair | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Davenport | Charles Caccia | Liberal | 1968 | 7th term |
| Don Valley East | **Alan Redway** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Don Valley North | Barbara Greene {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Don Valley West | John Bosley | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Durham | K. Ross Stevenson | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Eglinton—Lawrence | Joe Volpe | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Elgin | Ken Monteith | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Erie | Girve Fretz | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Essex-Kent | Jerry Pickard | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Essex-Windsor | Steven Langdon | New Democrat | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Etobicoke Centre | **Michael Wilson** | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Etobicoke North | Roy MacLaren | Liberal | 1979, 1988 | 3rd term* |
| Etobicoke—Lakeshore | Patrick Boyer {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Glengarry—Prescott—Russell | Don Boudria | Liberal | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Guelph—Wellington | **William Winegard** {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Haldimand—Norfolk | Bob Speller | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Halton—Peel | **Garth Turner** | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Hamilton East | Sheila Copps | Liberal | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Hamilton Mountain | Beth Phinney | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Hamilton—Wentworth | Geoffrey Scott | Progressive Conservative | 1978 | 5th term |
| Hamilton West | Stan Keyes | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Hastings—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington | Bill Vankoughnet | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Huron—Bruce | Murray Cardiff {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Kenora—Rainy River | Bob Nault | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Kent | Rex Crawford | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Kingston and the Islands | Peter Milliken | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Kitchener | John Reimer | Progressive Conservative | 1979, 1984 | 3rd term* |
| Lambton—Middlesex | Ralph Ferguson | Liberal | 1980, 1988 | 2nd term* |
| Lanark—Carleton | **Paul Dick** | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Leeds—Grenville | Jim Jordan | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Lincoln | **Shirley Martin** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| London East | Joe Fontana | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| London—Middlesex | Terry Clifford | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| London West | **Tom Hockin** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Markham | Bill Attewell {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Mississauga East | Albina Guarnieri | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Mississauga South | Don Blenkarn | Progressive Conservative | 1972, 1979 | 5th term* |
| Mississauga West | Robert Horner | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Nepean | Beryl Gaffney | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Niagara Falls | **Rob Nicholson** {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Nickel Belt | John Rodriguez | New Democrat | 1972, 1984 | 5th term* |
| Nipissing | Bob Wood | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Northumberland | Christine Stewart | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Oakville—Milton | **Otto Jelinek** | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Ontario | René Soetens | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Oshawa | *Ed Broadbent* (until December 1989) | New Democrat ± | 1968 | 7th term |
| Michael Breaugh (from October 1990) | New Democrat ± | 1990 | 1st term | |
| Ottawa Centre | Mac Harb | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Ottawa South | John Manley | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Ottawa West | Marlene Catterall | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Ottawa—Vanier | Jean-Robert Gauthier | Liberal | 1972 | 6th term |
| Oxford | Bruce Halliday | Progressive Conservative | 1974 | 5th term |
| Parkdale—High Park | Jesse Flis | Liberal | 1979, 1988 | 3rd term* |
| Parry Sound-Muskoka | Stan Darling | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Perth—Wellington—Waterloo | Harry Brightwell | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Peterborough | Bill Domm {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Prince Edward—Hastings | Lyle Vanclief | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Renfrew | Len Hopkins | Liberal | 1965 | 8th term |
| Rosedale | David MacDonald | Progressive Conservative | 1965, 1988 | 6th term* |
| Sarnia—Lambton | Ken James {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Sault Ste. Marie | Steve Butland | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Scarborough Centre | **Pauline Browes** {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Scarborough East | Robert Hicks | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Scarborough West | Tom Wappel | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Scarborough—Agincourt | Jim Karygiannis | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Scarborough—Rouge River | Derek Lee | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Simcoe Centre | Edna Anderson | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Simcoe North | **Doug Lewis** | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| St. Catharines | Ken Atkinson | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| St. Paul's | **Barbara McDougall** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Stormont—Dundas | Bob Kilger | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Sudbury | Diane Marleau | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Thunder Bay—Atikokan | Iain Angus | New Democrat | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Thunder Bay—Nipigon | Joe Comuzzi | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Timiskaming | John MacDougall {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1982 | 3rd term |
| Timmins—Chapleau | Cid Samson | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Trinity—Spadina | Dan Heap | New Democrat | 1981 | 3rd term |
| Victoria—Haliburton | William C. Scott {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1965 | 8th term |
| Waterloo | Walter McLean | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Welland—St. Catharines—Thorold | Gilbert Parent | Liberal | 1974, 1988 | 4th term* |
| Wellington—Grey—Dufferin—Simcoe | **Perrin Beatty** | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Willowdale | Jim Peterson | Liberal | 1980, 1988 | 2nd term* |
| Windsor West | *Herb Gray* | Liberal | 1962 | 10th term |
| Windsor—Lake St. Clair | Howard McCurdy | New Democrat | 1984 | 2nd term |
| York Centre | Bob Kaplan | Liberal | 1968, 1974 | 6th term* |
| York North | Maurizio Bevilacqua | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| York South—Weston | John Nunziata | Liberal | 1984 | 2nd term |
| York—Simcoe | John Cole | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| York West | Sergio Marchi | Liberal | 1984 | 2nd term |
: ± Ed Broadbent retired from politics and was replaced by Michael Breaugh on October 13, 1990, after a by-election.
Manitoba
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brandon—Souris | Lee Clark {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1983 | 3rd term |
| Churchill | Rodney Murphy | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| Dauphin—Swan River | Brian White | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Lisgar—Marquette | **Charles Mayer** | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Portage—Interlake | Felix Holtmann | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Provencher | **Jake Epp** | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Selkirk—Red River | David Bjornson | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Saint Boniface | Ron Duhamel | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Winnipeg North Centre | David Walker | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Winnipeg North | Rey Pagtakhan | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Winnipeg South | Dorothy Dobbie {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Winnipeg St. James | John Harvard | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Winnipeg South Centre | Lloyd Axworthy | Liberal | 1979 | 4th term |
| Winnipeg—Transcona | Bill Blaikie | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
Saskatchewan
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kindersley—Lloydminster | **Bill McKnight** | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Mackenzie | Vic Althouse | New Democrat | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Moose Jaw—Lake Centre | Rod Laporte | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Prince Albert—Churchill River | Ray Funk | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Regina—Lumsden | Les Benjamin | New Democrat | 1968 | 7th term |
| Regina—Qu'Appelle | Simon De Jong | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| Regina—Wascana | **Larry Schneider** | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Saskatoon—Clark's Crossing | Chris Axworthy | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Saskatoon—Dundurn | Ron Fisher | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Saskatoon—Humboldt | Stan Hovdebo | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| Souris—Moose Mountain | Lenard Gustafson {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Swift Current—Maple Creek—Assiniboia | Geoff Wilson | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| The Battlefords—Meadow Lake | Len Taylor | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Yorkton—Melville | Lorne Nystrom | New Democrat | 1968 | 7th term |
Alberta
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Athabasca | Jack Shields {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Beaver River | John Dahmer (until November 1988) | Progressive Conservative ÷ | 1988 | 1st term |
| Deborah Grey (from March 1989) | Reform ÷ | 1989 | 1st term | |
| Calgary Centre | **Harvie Andre** | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Calgary North | Al Johnson | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Calgary Northeast | Alex Kindy | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Independent ¥ | ||||
| Calgary Southeast | Lee Richardson {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Calgary Southwest | **Bobbie Sparrow** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Calgary West | Jim Hawkes {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Crowfoot | Arnold Malone | Progressive Conservative | 1974 | 5th term |
| Edmonton East | Ross Harvey | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Edmonton North | Steve Paproski | Progressive Conservative | 1968 | 7th term |
| Edmonton Northwest | Murray Dorin | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Edmonton Southeast | David Kilgour | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Independent | ||||
| Liberal ≈ | ||||
| Edmonton Southwest | **Jim Edwards** {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Edmonton—Strathcona | Scott Thorkelson | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Elk Island | Brian O'Kurley | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Lethbridge | Blaine Thacker {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Macleod | Ken Hughes {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Medicine Hat | Robert Harold Porter | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Peace River | Albert Cooper {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Red Deer | Douglas Fee | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| St. Albert | Walter van de Walle | Progressive Conservative | 1986 | 2nd term |
| Vegreville | **Don Mazankowski** | Progressive Conservative | 1968 | 7th term |
| Wetaskiwin | Willie Littlechild | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Wild Rose | Louise Feltham | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Yellowhead | **Joe Clark** | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
:÷ John Dahmer died on November 26, 1988, after winning election but before being formally sworn in as a Member of Parliament. He was replaced by Deborah Grey in a 13 March 1989 by-election. :¥ Alex Kindy quit the Tory party on May 5, 1993, in protest over the GST. He sat as an Independent for the remainder of the parliament. :≈ David Kilgour quit the Tory party on October 24, 1990, in protest over the GST. He later joined the Liberals. (In 2005, he left the Liberals to sit as an independent.)
British Columbia
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burnaby—Kingsway | Svend Robinson | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| Capilano—Howe Sound | **Mary Collins** | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Cariboo—Chilcotin | Dave Worthy {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Comox—Alberni | Bob Skelly | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Delta | Stan Wilbee | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Esquimalt—Juan de Fuca | Dave Barrett | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Fraser Valley East | Ross Belsher {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1984 | 2nd term |
| Fraser Valley West | Robert Wenman | Progressive Conservative | 1974 | 5th term |
| Kamloops | Nelson Riis | New Democrat | 1980 | 3rd term |
| Kootenay East | Sid Parker | New Democrat | 1980, 1988 | 2nd term* |
| Kootenay West—Revelstoke | Lyle Kristiansen | New Democrat | 1980, 1988 | 2nd term* |
| Mission—Coquitlam | Joy Langan | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Nanaimo—Cowichan | David Stupich | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| New Westminster—Burnaby | Dawn Black | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| North Island—Powell River | Ray Skelly | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| North Vancouver | Chuck Cook* | Progressive Conservative | 1979 | 4th term |
| Okanagan Centre | Al Horning | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Okanagan—Shuswap | Lyle MacWilliam | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Okanagan—Similkameen—Merritt | Jack Whittaker | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Port Moody—Coquitlam | Ian Waddell | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| Prince George—Bulkley Valley | Brian Gardiner | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Prince George—Peace River | **Frank Oberle Sr.** | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Richmond | **Tom Siddon** | Progressive Conservative | 1978 | 5th term |
| Saanich—Gulf Islands | Lynn Hunter | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Skeena | James Fulton | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| Surrey North | Jim Karpoff | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
| Surrey—White Rock | Benno Friesen {{double dagger}} | Progressive Conservative | 1974 | 5th term |
| Vancouver Centre | ***Kim Campbell*** | Progressive Conservative | 1988 | 1st term |
| Vancouver East | Margaret Mitchell | New Democrat | 1979 | 4th term |
| Vancouver Quadra | *John Turner* | Liberal | 1962, 1984 | 8th term* |
| Vancouver South | John Allen Fraser (†) | Progressive Conservative | 1972 | 6th term |
| Victoria | John Brewin | New Democrat | 1988 | 1st term |
:* Chuck Cook died in office on February 23, 1993 and the seat remains vacant for the reminder of parliament
Territories
| Riding | Member | Political party | First elected / previously elected | No. of terms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Western Arctic | Ethel Blondin-Andrew | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Nunatsiaq | Jack Anawak | Liberal | 1988 | 1st term |
| Yukon | *Audrey McLaughlin* | New Democrat | 1987 | 2nd term |
By-elections
Main article: By-elections to the 34th Canadian Parliament
Notes
References
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 34th Canadian Parliament — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report