Leader of the Opposition (Manitoba) explained

The Leader of the Opposition in Manitoba is the Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba who leads the party recognized as the Official Opposition. This status generally goes to the leader of the second largest party in the Legislative Assembly.

William Alexander Macdonald was the first officially recognized Leader of the Opposition in Manitoba, although Rodmond Roblin is considered to have been the de facto opposition leader from 1890 until he lost his seat in the 1892 provincial election.

, the Leader of the Opposition of Manitoba has been Wayne Ewasko, the interim head of the Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba.[1]

List of Opposition Leaders

Below is a list of parliamentary opposition leaders in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, from 1870 to the present.

PortraitName
Electoral district
(Birth–Death)
Term of officeParty
William Alexander Macdonald
MLA for Brandon City
(1860–1946)
1892–1893Conservative
John Andrew Davidson
MLA for Beautiful Plains
(1852–1903)
1893–1894Conservative
James Fisher
MLA for Russell
(1840–1927)
1894–1896Independent
Rodmond Roblin
MLA for Woodlands
(1853–1937)
1896–1900Conservative
Thomas Greenway
MLA for Mountain
(1838–1908)
1900–1904Liberal
Charles Mickle
MLA for Birtle
(1849–1919)
1904–1906Liberal
1908–1909
Tobias Norris
MLA for Lansdowne
(1861–1936)
1910–1915Liberal
Albert Prefontaine
MLA for Carillon
(1861–1935)
1915–1920Conservative
Unknown
1920–1922
Tobias Norris
MLA for Lansdowne
(1861–1936)
1922–1927Liberal
Fawcett Taylor
MLA for Portage la Prairie
(1878–1940)
1927–1933Conservative
William Sanford Evans
MLA for Winnipeg
(1869–1949)
1933–1936Conservative
Errick Willis
MLA for Deloraine
(1896–1967)
1936–1940Conservative
Lewis Stubbs
MLA for Winnipeg
(1878–1958)
1940–1941Independent
Huntly Ketchen
MLA for Winnipeg
(1872–1959)
1941–1943Anti-Coalition Conservative
Seymour Farmer
MLA for Winnipeg
(1878–1951)
1943–1947Co-operative Commonwealth
Edwin Hansford
MLA for St. Boniface
(1895–1959)
1948–1950Co-operative Commonwealth
Errick Willis
MLA for Deloraine
(1896–1967)
1950–1954Progressive Conservative
Dufferin Roblin
MLA for Winnipeg South
(1917–2010)
1954–1958Progressive Conservative
Douglas Lloyd Campbell
MLA for Lakeside
(1895–1995)
1958–1961Liberal
Gildas Molgat
MLA for Ste. Rose
(1895–1995)
1961–1969Liberal
Walter Weir
MLA for Minnedosa
(1929–1985)
1969–1971Progressive Conservative
Sidney Spivak
MLA for River Heights
(1928–2002)
1971–1975Progressive Conservative
Donald Craik
MLA for Riel
(1931–1985)
1975–1976Progressive Conservative
Sterling Lyon
MLA for Souris-Killarney
(1927–2010)
1976–1977Progressive Conservative
Edward Schreyer
MLA for Rossmere
(born 1935)
1977–1979New Democratic
Howard Pawley
MLA for Selkirk
(1934–2015)
1979–1981New Democratic
Sterling Lyon
MLA for Charleswood
(1927–2010)
1981–1983Progressive Conservative
Gary Filmon
MLA for Tuxedo
(born 1942)
1983–1988Progressive Conservative
Sharon Carstairs
MLA for River Heights
(born 1942)
1988–1990Liberal
Gary Doer
MLA for Concordia
(born 1948)
1990–1999New Democratic
Gary Filmon
MLA for Tuxedo
(born 1942)
1999–2000Progressive Conservative
Bonnie Mitchelson
MLA for River East
(born 1947)
2000Progressive Conservative
Stuart Murray
MLA for Kirkfield Park
(born 1954)
2000–2006Progressive Conservative
Hugh McFadyen
MLA for Fort Whyte
(born 1967)
2006–2012Progressive Conservative
Brian Pallister
MLA for Fort Whyte
(born 1954)
2012–2016Progressive Conservative
Flor Marcelino
MLA for Logan
(born 1951 or 1952)
2016–2017New Democratic
Wab Kinew
MLA for Fort Rouge
(born 1981)
2017–2023New Democratic
Heather Stefanson
MLA for Tuxedo
(born 1970)
2023–2024Progressive Conservative
Wayne Ewasko
MLA for Lac du Bonnet
2024–presentProgressive Conservative

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Premiers of Canada and Leaders of Opposition . 2023-04-18 . www.legassembly.sk.ca.