39th Parliament of Ontario explained

Jurisdiction:ON
#:39th
Type:Majority
Status:inactive
Term-Begin: November 29, 2007
Term-End: September 7, 2011
Sc:Hon. Steve Peters
Scterm:2007-2011
Pm:Hon. Dalton McGuinty
Pmterm:October 23, 2003 - February 11, 2013
Loterm:2007-2009
Lo2:Tim Hudak
Loterm2:2009-2011
Ghl:Michael Bryant
Ghlterm:October 30, 2007 — February 04, 2009
Ghl2:Monique Smith
Ghlterm2:September 18, 2008 — September 07, 2011
Ohl:Bob Runciman
Ohlterm:July 27, 2009 — January 29, 2010
Party:Liberal Party
Party2:Progressive Conservative Party
Party3:New Democratic Party
Sessionbegin:November 29, 2007
Sessionend:March 4, 2010
Sessionbegin2:March 8, 2010
Sessionend2:June 1, 2011
Monarchterm:6 February 1952  - present
Members:107
Lastparl:38th
Nextparl:40th

The 39th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was a legislature of the government of the Province of Ontario, Canada. It officially opened November 29, 2007, and ended on June 1, 2011. The membership was set by the 2007 Ontario general election on October 10, 2007.

It was controlled by a Liberal Party majority under Premier Dalton McGuinty. The Official Opposition was the Progressive Conservative Party. It was initially led by John Tory but the leadership changed in 2009 when the PCs elected Tim Hudak as their new leader. The third party was the New Democrats led by Howard Hampton until they chose Andrea Horwath as their leader in 2009. The speaker was Steve Peters.

Sessions

There were two sessions of the 39th Legislature:

SessionStartEnd
1stNovember 29, 2007March 4, 2010
2ndMarch 8, 2010June 1, 2011

Timeline of the 39th Parliament of Ontario

Party standings

AffiliationLeader of the PartyLeader in the LegislatureOntLA StatusMembers[1]
Dalton McGuintyTim HudakAndrea Horwath
Total
Government Majority

Seating plan

MurdochMartiniukClarkBaileyShurmanSavolineJonesOuelletteGélinasP. MillerPendergastJohnson
O'TooleHillierChudleighArnottDunlopHardemanMacLeodMunroBarrettPrueDiNovoTabunsBissonJaczekMagnatMoridiNaqvi
WilsonSterlingWitmerN. MillerElliottHudakYakabuskiKleesKormosHorwathMarcheseHamptonBalkissoonAlbaneseCarrollDickson
Peters
SmithBradleyDombrowskyPhilipsDuncanMcGuintyPupatelloMatthewsWynneGerretsenRuprechtKwinterRamsaySorbara
LealBrownTakharAggelonitisBentleyBartolucciBestDuguidMeilleurMilloyHoskinsGravelleCrozierColleHoyLalonde
SergioCaplanMurrayChiarelliJeffreyWilkinsonMitchellBrotenChanSousaMcMeekinLevacArthursBerardinettiBrownellCansfield
CraitorDelaneyDhillonFlynnFonsecaKularMauroMcNeelyOraziettiQaadriRamalRinaldiSandalsVanBommelZimmerPeters

List of members

NamePartyRidingNotes
Joe DicksonLiberalAjax—Pickering
Mike BrownLiberalAlgoma—Manitoulin
Ted McMeekinLiberalAncaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale
Aileen CarrollLiberalBarrie
Michael PrueNew DemocratBeaches—East York
Kuldip KularLiberalBramalea—Gore—Malton
Linda JeffreyLiberalBrampton—Springdale
Vic DhillonLiberalBrampton West
Dave LevacLiberalBrant
Bill MurdochProgressive ConservativeBruce—Grey—Owen SoundRemoved from caucus September 12, 2008; rejoined April 23, 2009
Suspended from the Legislature, November 30, 2009, pursuant to S.O. 15(c)
Joyce SavolineProgressive ConservativeBurlington
Gerry MartiniukProgressive ConservativeCambridge
Norm SterlingProgressive ConservativeCarleton—Mississippi Mills
Pat HoyLiberalChatham-Kent—Essex
Tony RuprechtLiberalDavenport
David CaplanLiberalDon Valley East
Kathleen WynneLiberalDon Valley West
Sylvia JonesProgressive ConservativeDufferin—Caledon
John O'TooleProgressive ConservativeDurham
Mike ColleLiberalEglinton—Lawrence
Steve PetersLiberalElgin—Middlesex—LondonSpeaker
Bruce CrozierLiberalEssexDied June 3, 2011.
Donna CansfieldLiberalEtobicoke Centre
Laurel BrotenLiberalEtobicoke—Lakeshore
Shafiq QaadriLiberalEtobicoke North
Jean-Marc LalondeLiberalGlengarry—Prescott—Russell
Liz SandalsLiberalGuelph
Toby BarrettProgressive ConservativeHaldimand—Norfolk
Laurie ScottProgressive ConservativeHaliburton—Kawartha Lakes—BrockResigned on January 9, 2009.
Rick JohnsonLiberalHaliburton—Kawartha Lakes—BrockElected March 5, 2009.
Ted ChudleighProgressive ConservativeHalton
Andrea HorwathNew DemocratHamilton CentreLeader of the New Democratic Party from March 7, 2009.
Paul MillerNew DemocratHamilton East—Stoney Creek
Sophia AggelonitisLiberalHamilton Mountain
Carol MitchellLiberalHuron—Bruce
Howard HamptonNew DemocratKenora—Rainy RiverLeader of the New Democratic Party to March 7, 2009.
John GerretsenLiberalKingston and the Islands
John MilloyLiberalKitchener Centre
Leeanna PendergastLiberalKitchener—Conestoga
Elizabeth WitmerProgressive ConservativeKitchener—Waterloo
Maria Van BommelLiberalLambton—Kent—Middlesex
Randy HillierProgressive ConservativeLanark—Frontenac—Lennox and AddingtonSuspended from the Legislature, November 30, 2009, pursuant to S.O. 15(c)
Bob RuncimanProgressive ConservativeLeeds—GrenvilleInterim Leader of the Opposition until June 27, 2009. Resigned January 29, 2010 to accept appointment to the Senate of Canada.
Steve ClarkProgressive ConservativeLeeds—GrenvilleElected March 4, 2010
Khalil RamalLiberalLondon—Fanshawe
Deb MatthewsLiberalLondon North Centre
Chris BentleyLiberalLondon West
Michael ChanLiberalMarkham—Unionville
Amrit MangatLiberalMississauga—Brampton South
Peter FonsecaLiberalMississauga East—Cooksville
Harinder TakharLiberalMississauga—Erindale
Charles SousaLiberalMississauga South
Bob DelaneyLiberalMississauga—Streetsville
Lisa MacLeodProgressive ConservativeNepean—Carleton
Frank KleesProgressive ConservativeNewmarket—Aurora
Kim CraitorLiberalNiagara Falls
Tim HudakProgressive ConservativeNiagara West—GlanbrookLeader of the Opposition and leader of the Progressive Conservatives from June 27, 2009
France GélinasNew DemocratNickel Belt
Monique SmithLiberalNipissing
Lou RinaldiLiberalNorthumberland—Quinte West
Helena JaczekLiberalOak Ridges—Markham
Kevin FlynnLiberalOakville
Jerry OuelletteProgressive ConservativeOshawa
Yasir NaqviLiberalOttawa Centre
Phil McNeelyLiberalOttawa—Orléans
Dalton McGuintyLiberalOttawa SouthPremier, leader of the Liberal Party.
Madeleine MeilleurLiberalOttawa—Vanier
Jim WatsonLiberalOttawa West—NepeanResigned February 1, 2010.
Bob ChiarelliLiberalOttawa West—NepeanElected March 4, 2010
Ernie HardemanProgressive ConservativeOxford
Cheri DiNovoNew DemocratParkdale—High Park
Norm MillerProgressive ConservativeParry Sound-Muskoka
John WilkinsonLiberalPerth Wellington
Jeff LealLiberalPeterborough
Wayne ArthursLiberalPickering—Scarborough East
Leona DombrowskyLiberalPrince Edward—Hastings
John YakabuskiProgressive Conservative(federal electoral district)|Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke
Reza MoridiLiberalRichmond Hill
Jim BradleyLiberalSt. Catharines
Michael BryantLiberalSt. Paul'sResigned June 7, 2009.
Eric HoskinsLiberalSt. Paul'sElected September 17, 2009.
Bob BaileyProgressive ConservativeSarnia—Lambton
David OraziettiLiberalSault Ste. Marie
Gerry PhillipsLiberalScarborough—Agincourt
Brad DuguidLiberalScarborough Centre
Margarett BestLiberalScarborough-Guildwood
Bas BalkissoonLiberalScarborough—Rouge River
Lorenzo BerardinettiLiberalScarborough Southwest
Jim WilsonProgressive ConservativeSimcoe—Grey
Garfield DunlopProgressive ConservativeSimcoe North
Jim BrownellLiberalStormont—Dundas—South Glengarry
Rick BartolucciLiberalSudbury
Peter ShurmanProgressive ConservativeThornhill
Bill MauroLiberalThunder Bay—Atikokan
Michael GravelleLiberalThunder Bay—Superior North
David RamsayLiberalTimiskaming—Cochrane
Gilles BissonNew DemocratTimmins—James Bay
George SmithermanLiberalToronto CentreResigned January 4, 2010.
Glen MurrayLiberalToronto CentreElected February 4, 2010.
Peter TabunsNew DemocratToronto—Danforth
Rosario MarcheseNew DemocratTrinity—Spadina
Greg SorbaraLiberalVaughan
Peter KormosNew DemocratWelland
Ted ArnottProgressive ConservativeWellington—Halton Hills
Christine ElliottProgressive ConservativeWhitby—Oshawa
David ZimmerLiberalWillowdale
Dwight DuncanLiberalWindsor—Tecumseh
Sandra PupatelloLiberalWindsor West
Monte KwinterLiberalYork Centre
Julia MunroProgressive ConservativeYork—Simcoe
Laura AlbaneseLiberalYork South—Weston
Mario SergioLiberalYork West

Standings changes since the 38th general election

Number of members
per party by date
20072008200920102011
Oct 10Sep 12Jan 9Mar 5Apr 23Jun 7Sep 17Jan 4Jan 29Feb 1Feb 4Mar 4Mar 26Jun 3Liberal71727172717071727170Progressive Conservative262524252425NDP10Independent010
Total members107106107106107106105104105107106105
Vacant010101232012
Government Majority3536373637363736373635

Membership changes

Office holders

Major legislation

Committees

There are two forms which committees can take. The first, standing committees, are struck for the duration of the Parliament pursuant to Standing Orders. The second, select committees, are struck usually by a Motion or an Order of the House to consider a specific Bill or issue which would otherwise monopolize the time of the standing committees.

Standing Committees

See main article: Standing committee (Canada). Standing committees in the current Parliament

Select committees in the current Parliament

The 39th Parliament had 3 select committees.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.cbc.ca/ontariovotes2007/ CBC.ca OntarioVotes2007