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38th Parliament of Ontario

Parliamentary session of the Ontario Provincial Parliament


Parliamentary session of the Ontario Provincial Parliament

FieldValue
jurisdictionON
#38th
typeMajority
houseimage
statusinactive
term-beginNovember 19, 2003
term-endSeptember 10, 2007
scHon. Alvin Curling
scterm2003-2005
sc2Hon. Michael Brown
scterm22005-2007
pmHon. Dalton McGuinty
pmtermOctober 23, 2003 - February 11, 2013
loErnie Eves
loterm2003-2004
lo2John Tory
loterm22004-2007
ghlDwight Duncan
ghltermOctober 23, 2003 — October 11, 2005
ohlJohn Baird
ohltermNovember 19, 2003 - March 29, 2005
ohl2Bob Runciman
ohlterm2March 29, 2005 — September 10, 2007
partyLiberal Party
party2Progressive Conservative Party
party3New Democratic Party
sessionbeginNovember 19, 2003
sessionendSeptember 19, 2005
sessionbegin2October 11, 2005
sessionend2June 5, 2007
monarchElizabeth II
monarchterm6 February 1952 – present
members103
lastparl37th
nextparl39th

| # = 38th

| term-begin = November 19, 2003 | term-end = September 10, 2007

The 38th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was a legislature of the government of the Province of Ontario, Canada. It officially opened November 19, 2003, at Queen's Park in Toronto, and ended on June 5, 2007. The membership was set by the 2003 Ontario general election on October 2, 2003, and it changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections.

It was controlled by a Liberal Party majority under Premier Dalton McGuinty. The Official Opposition was the Progressive Conservative Party, led first by Ernie Eves, and later by John Tory. The speaker was Michael A. Brown.

There were two sessions of the 38th Legislature:

SessionStartEnd
1stNovember 19, 2003September 19, 2005
2ndOctober 11, 2005June 5, 2007

Timeline of the 38th Parliament of Ontario

  • November 19, 2003: The legislature conducted a secret vote to elect the Speaker of the legislature. Liberal Party of Ontario Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) Alvin Curling is elected as Speaker. He was the first black Speaker of the Ontario legislature.
  • March 24, 2004: Dominic Agostino, Liberal MPP for Hamilton East, died suddenly of liver cancer.
  • May 13, 2004: A by-election was held in Hamilton East to replace Dominic Agostino. Ontario New Democratic Party candidate Andrea Horwath defeated Liberal candidate Ralph Agostino, Mr. Agostino's brother. This win returned the NDP to 8 seats and official party status.
  • August 19, 2005: Speaker Alvin Curling resigned to accept an appointment as Ambassador to the Dominican Republic.
  • November 24, 2005: In a by-election, Bas Balkissoon held the seat of Scarborough-Rouge River for the Liberals.
  • September 18, 2006: Joe Cordiano, Liberal MPP for York South-Weston, resigned from cabinet and the legislature, citing a desire to spend more time with family.
  • September 25, 2006: Tony Wong, Liberal MPP for Markham, resigned from the legislature to make a successful bid for a seat on York Regional Council.
  • September 28, 2006: Cam Jackson, Progressive Conservative MPP for Burlington, resigned from the legislature to make a successful bid for the mayoralty of Burlington.
  • February 8, 2007: Three by-elections were held. Paul Ferreira won York South-Weston for the NDP (the seat was previously held by the Liberals); former Halton Region chair Joyce Savoline retained Burlington for the PCs; and Michael Chan held Markham for the Liberals.
  • March 29, 2007: Tim Peterson, brother of former Ontario Premier David Peterson, left the Liberal caucus to sit as an Independent until the next election, in which he ran for the PCs.
  • June 5, 2007: The 38th Parliament 2nd Session is prorogued.
  • July 12, 2007: Liberal MPP Ernie Parsons resigned his seat in order to accept an appointment as Justice of the Peace.
  • September 10, 2007: 38th Parliament dissolved.

Party standings

AffiliationElectionToday
Liberal Party7267
Progressive Conservative Party2424
New Democratic Party710
Independent01
Vacant0
Total
103
Government Majority
2117
************************************************************

Seating Plan

P = Premier, LO = Leader of Opposition, L = Leader of the NDP.

List of members

RidingMemberPartyFirst elected / previously electedNotes
Algoma—ManitoulinMichael A. BrownLiberal1987Speaker of the Legislature from October 11, 2005.
Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—AldershotTed McMeekinLiberal2000
Barrie—Simcoe—BradfordJoe TasconaProgressive Conservative1995
Beaches—East YorkMichael PrueNDP2001
Bramalea—Gore—Malton—SpringdaleKuldip KularLiberal2003
Brampton CentreLinda JeffreyLiberal2003
Brampton West—MississaugaVic DhillonLiberal2003
BrantDave LevacLiberal1999
Bruce—Grey—Owen SoundBill MurdochProgressive Conservative1990
BurlingtonCam JacksonProgressive Conservative1985Resigned seat September 28, 2006, to run for Mayor of Burlington.
Joyce Savoline (2007)Progressive Conservative2007Won by-election February 8, 2007.
CambridgeGerry MartiniukProgressive Conservative1995
Chatham-Kent—EssexPat HoyLiberal1995
DavenportTony RuprechtLiberal1981
Don Valley EastDavid CaplanLiberal1997
Don Valley WestKathleen WynneLiberal2003
Dufferin—Peel—Wellington—GreyErnie EvesProgressive Conservative1981, 2002PC Party Leader and Leader of the Opposition until September 28, 2004.
John Tory (2005)Progressive Conservative2005PC Party Leader from September 28, 2004.
DurhamJohn O'TooleProgressive Conservative1995
Eglinton—LawrenceMichael ColleLiberal1995
Elgin—Middlesex—LondonSteve PetersLiberal1999
Erie—LincolnTim HudakProgressive Conservative1995
EssexBruce CrozierLiberal1993
Etobicoke CentreDonna CansfieldLiberal2003
Etobicoke NorthShafiq QaadriLiberal2003
Etobicoke—LakeshoreLaurel BrotenLiberal2003
Glengarry—Prescott—RussellJean-Marc LalondeLiberal1995
Guelph—WellingtonLiz SandalsLiberal2003
Haldimand—Norfolk—BrantToby BarrettProgressive Conservative1995
Haliburton—Victoria—BrockLaurie ScottProgressive Conservative2003
HaltonTed ChudleighProgressive Conservative1995
Hamilton EastDominic AgostinoLiberal1995Died March 24, 2004.
Andrea Horwath (2004)NDP2004Won by-election May 13, 2004.
Hamilton MountainMarie BountrogianniLiberal1999
Hamilton WestJudy MarsalesLiberal2003
Hastings—Frontenac—Lennox and AddingtonLeona DombrowskyLiberal1999
Huron—BruceCarol MitchellLiberal2003
Kenora—Rainy RiverHoward HamptonNDP1987NDP Party Leader
Kingston and the IslandsJohn GerretsenLiberal1995
Kitchener CentreJohn MilloyLiberal2003
Kitchener—WaterlooElizabeth WitmerProgressive Conservative1990
Lambton—Kent—MiddlesexMaria Van BommelLiberal2003
Lanark—CarletonNorm SterlingProgressive Conservative1977
Leeds—GrenvilleBob RuncimanProgressive Conservative1981Leader of the Opposition, September 28, 2004 to March 29, 2005.
London North CentreDeb MatthewsLiberal2003
London WestChris BentleyLiberal2003
London—FanshawKhalil RamalLiberal2003
MarkhamTony WongLiberal2003Resigned seat September 25, 2006 in order to run for York Regional Council
Mississauga CentreHarinder TakharLiberal2003
Mississauga EastPeter FonsecaLiberal2003
Mississauga SouthTim PetersonLiberal2003Resigned from Liberal caucus March 29, 2007 to sit as independent. Joined PC caucus June 6, 2007.
Independent
Progressive Conservative
Mississauga WestBob DelaneyLiberal2003
Nepean—CarletonJohn BairdProgressive Conservative1995Resigned seat November 30, 2005, to run in 2006 Canadian Federal Election.
Niagara CentrePeter KormosNDP1988
Niagara FallsKim CraitorLiberal2003
Nickel BeltShelley MartelNDP1987
NipissingMonique SmithLiberal2003
NorthumberlandLou RinaldiLiberal2003
Oak RidgesFrank KleesProgressive Conservative1995
OakvilleKevin FlynnLiberal2003
OshawaJerry OuelletteProgressive Conservative1995
Ottawa CentreRichard PattenLiberal1987, 1995
Ottawa South*Dalton McGuinty*Liberal1990Liberal Party Leader and Premier of Ontario
Ottawa West—NepeanJim WatsonLiberal2003
Ottawa—OrléansPhil McNeelyLiberal2003
Ottawa—VanierMadeleine MeilleurLiberal2003
OxfordErnie HardemanProgressive Conservative1995
Parkdale—High ParkGerard KennedyLiberal1996Resigned seat May 23, 2006, in order to run in 2006 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election.
Parry Sound—MuskokaNorm MillerProgressive Conservative2001
Perth—MiddlesexJohn WilkinsonLiberal2003
PeterboroughJeff LealLiberal2003
Pickering—Ajax—UxbridgeWayne ArthursLiberal2003
Prince Edward—HastingsErnie ParsonsLiberal1999
Renfrew—Nipissing—PembrokeJohn YakabuskiProgressive Conservative2003
Sarnia—LambtonCaroline Di CoccoLiberal1999
Sault Ste. MarieDavid OraziettiLiberal2003
Scarborough CentreBrad DuguidLiberal2003
Scarborough EastMary Anne ChambersLiberal2003
Scarborough SouthwestLorenzo BerardinettiLiberal2003
Scarborough—AgincourtGerry PhillipsLiberal1987
Scarborough—Rouge RiverAlvin CurlingLiberal1985Speaker of the Legislature November 19, 2003 to August 19, 2005.
Simcoe NorthGarfield DunlopProgressive Conservative1999
Simcoe—GreyJim WilsonProgressive Conservative1990
St. CatharinesJim BradleyLiberal1977
St. Paul'sMichael BryantLiberal1999
Stoney CreekJennifer MossopLiberal2003
Stormont—Dundas—CharlottenburghJim BrownellLiberal2003
SudburyRick BartolucciLiberal1995
ThornhillMario RaccoLiberal2003
Thunder Bay—AtikokanBill MauroLiberal2003
Thunder Bay—Superior NorthMichael GravelleLiberal1995
Timiskaming—CochraneDavid RamsayLiberal1985
Timmins—James BayGilles BissonNDP1990
Toronto Centre—RosedaleGeorge SmithermanLiberal1999
Toronto—DanforthMarilyn ChurleyNDP1990Resigned seat November 29, 2005, in order to run in 2006 Canadian Federal Election.
Trinity—SpadinaRosario MarcheseNDP1990
Vaughan—King—AuroraGreg SorbaraLiberal1985, 2002
Waterloo—WellingtonTed ArnottProgressive Conservative1990
Whitby—AjaxJim FlahertyProgressive Conservative1995Resigned seat November 29, 2005, in order to run in 2006 Canadian Federal Election.
WillowdaleDavid ZimmerLiberal2003
Windsor WestSandra PupatelloLiberal1995
Windsor—St. ClairDwight DuncanLiberal1995
York CentreMonte KwinterLiberal1985
York NorthJulia MunroProgressive Conservative1995
York South—WestonJoseph CordianoLiberal1985Resigned seat September 18, 2006.
York WestMario SergioLiberal1995
  • Cabinet ministers are in bold. Party leaders are in italics. Premier is in both.

Notes

References

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