List of third party leaders of Quebec
This is a list of politicians who served as third party parliamentary leaders (chefs parlementaires) at the National Assembly of Quebec. Parties with fewer than twelve Members of the National Assembly (MNA) 12 members and less than 20% of the vote do not have official party status and their members sit as Independents.[1]
Third party leaders with party status
Third party leaders without party status
See also
- List of Quebec general elections
- Timeline of Quebec history
- National Assembly of Quebec
- List of Quebec premiers
- List of Deputy Premiers of Quebec
- List of leaders of the Official Opposition (Quebec)
- History of Quebec
References
- ↑ Standing Orders of the National Assembly
- ↑ In 1935, the Conservatives formed a coalition with the Action libérale nationale (ALN). The ALN ran 60 candidates and won 26 seats. The Conservatives ran 30 candidates and won 16 seats. However, Conservative Maurice Duplessis rather than Paul Gouin served as leader of the coalition and therefore remained Leader of the Opposition.
- ↑ Parti Québécois Leader René Lévesque lost his seat in Laurier. While he remained Party Leader, Camille Laurin rather than René led the party in the legislature.
- ↑ Following the resignation of Camil Samson, Armand Bois served as Acting Leader.
- ↑ Newly chosen Leader Yvon Dupuis' tried to win a seat to the legislature in the district of Saint-Jean. In the meantime Camil Samson remained as leader of the party's parliamentary wing. However, Dupuis was defeated.
- ↑ From September to December 1973, the Ralliement créditiste du Québec was called Parti créditiste.
- ↑ In 1976, Members of the National Assembly (MNA) agreed to grant the Union Nationale official party status, even though it had not quite met the guidelines.
- ↑ In 1980, Rodrigue Biron resigned as Leader of the Union Nationale and joined the Parti Québécois. Michel Le Moignan served as Acting Leader until newly selected Leader Roch Lasalle tried to win a seat to the legislature in the district of Berthier. Lasalle was defeated.
- ↑ Following the resignation of André Boisclair (May 8, 2007), François Gendron became Acting Leader. Pauline Marois became party Leader on June 26, 2007, but Gendron still led the party's parliamentary wing until Marois could win a seat to the legislature.
- ↑ Marois won a by-election on September 24, 2007 and was sworn in as MNA for the district of Charlevoix on October 11, 2007. The district had been vacated in her favor by MNA Rosaire Bertrand. See the following articles:
Marois haut la main, Malorie Beauchemin and Tommy Chouinard, La Presse, September 25, 2007
Pauline Marois assermentée comme députée, Info 690, October 11, 2007 - ↑ Sylvie Roy served as parliamentary leader from March 2009 to October 2009.
- ↑ "Le statut de parti reconnu accordé à la formation politique - L'ADQ a mis de l'eau dans son vin". Le Devoir (in French). La Presse canadienne. March 26, 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2012.
L'Action démocratique du Québec obtiendra finalement le statut de parti reconnu par l'Assemblée nationale
- ↑ François Bonnardel served as parliamentary leader from October 2009 to November 2009.
- ↑ Gérard Deltell served as parliamentary leader from November 2009 to January 2012, when the ADQ merged with the CAQ.
- ↑ Laurendeau sat as an Independent by July 6, 1947.
- ↑ CCF Leader in Quebec Romuald-Joseph Lamoureux was defeated in Montréal-Saint-Henri. David Côté rather than Lamoureux led the party in the legislature.
- ↑ By July 22, 1945 Côté sat as an Independent.
- ↑ Elected to legislature as the Member for Laurier, René Lévesque left the Liberals in 1967 and co-founded the Parti Québécois in 1968.
- ↑ In 1973, Party Leader Yvon Dupuis was defeated in Saint-Jean. Fabien Roy succeeded him as Socred Leader.
- ↑ Maurice Bellemare won a by-election in 1974. He served as Acting Leader of the Union Nationale until 1976, when Rodrigue Biron was chosen as leader and won a seat to the legislature.
- ↑ Dumont announced that he would resign as party leader when he gave his concession speech on December 8, 2008. On February 24, 2009, he submitted a resignation letter to party president Mario Charpentier. The letter indicated that his resignation as party leader and as MNA would be effective on March 6, 2009. Lettre de démission officielle de Mario Dumont, La Vie Rurale, February 24, 2009
- ↑ Gérard Deltell became CAQ parliamentary leader in January 2012, when his former party (the ADQ) merged with the CAQ.
- ↑ Elected co-spokersperson of QS in the National Assembly.
External links
- Les chefs de l'opposition officielle depuis 1869 (in French)
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