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词条 40th General Assembly of Newfoundland
释义

  1. Members of the Assembly

  2. By-elections

  3. References

{{Infobox legislature
| name = 40th General Assembly of Newfoundland
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| legislature =
| coa_pic = ConfederationBuildingStJohnsNewfoundland.JPG
| image_size = 200px
| coa_caption = Confederation Building East Block. Seat of the Newfoundland and Labrador government and the House of Assembly from 1960 to present.
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| foundation = {{Start date|1985|04|25}}
| disbanded = {{End date|1989|03|29}}
| preceded_by = 39th General Assembly of Newfoundland
| succeeded_by = 41st General Assembly of Newfoundland
| new_session =
| leader1_type = Premier
| leader1 = Brian Peckford
(Until March 1989)
| party1 =
| leader2_type = Premier
| leader2 = Tom Rideout
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| last_election1 = Newfoundland general election, 1985
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The members of the 40th General Assembly of Newfoundland were elected in the Newfoundland general election held in April 1985.[1] The general assembly sat from April 25, 1985 to March 29, 1989.

The Progressive Conservative Party led by Brian Peckford formed the government. Tom Rideout succeeded Peckford as party leader and Premier in March 1989.[1]

Patrick McNicholas served as speaker.[2]

There were four sessions of the 40th General Assembly:[3]

SessionStartEnd
1st April 25, 1985 February 21, 1986
2nd March 18, 1986 February 19, 1987
3rd February 26, 1987 March 8, 1988
4th March 10, 1988 March 29, 1989
William Anthony Paddon served as lieutenant governor of Newfoundland until 1986.[4] James McGrath succeeded Paddon as lieutenant governor.[5]

Members of the Assembly

The following members were elected to the assembly in 1985:[6]

MemberElectoral districtAffiliation
Thomas Gerard RideoutBaie Verte-White BayProgressive Conservative
Ted BlanchardBay of IslandsProgressive Conservative
Wilson Elwood CallanBellevueLiberal
Tom LushBonavista NorthLiberal
James MorganBonavista SouthProgressive Conservative
Dave GilbertBurgeo-Bay d'EspoirLiberal
Glenn TobinBurin-Placentia WestProgressive Conservative
Milton PeachCarbonearProgressive Conservative
John ButtConception Bay SouthProgressive Conservative
Eugene HiscockEagle RiverLiberal
Hugh Matthew TwomeyExploitsProgressive Conservative
Charlie PowerFerrylandProgressive Conservative
Beaton TulkFogoLiberal
Roger SimmonsFortune-HermitageLiberal
Winston BakerGanderLiberal
Bill MatthewsGrand BankProgressive Conservative
Len SimmsGrand FallsProgressive Conservative
A. Brian PeckfordGreen BayProgressive Conservative
Haig YoungHarbour GraceProgressive Conservative
Norman E. DoyleHarbour MainProgressive Conservative
Lynn VergeHumber EastProgressive Conservative
Rick WoodfordHumber ValleyProgressive Conservative
Raymond BairdHumber WestProgressive Conservative
Robert AylwardKilbrideProgressive Conservative
Calvin MitchellLa PoileProgressive Conservative
Maxwell James RussellLewisporteProgressive Conservative
Peter FenwickMenihekNew Democrat
H. Neil WindsorMount PearlProgressive Conservative
Leo BarryMount ScioLiberal
Jim KellandNaskaupiLiberal
William G. PattersonPlacentiaProgressive Conservative
Jerome W. DinnPleasantvilleProgressive Conservative
James HodderPort au PortProgressive Conservative
John EffordPort de GraveLiberal
Chuck FureySt. BarbeLiberal
Ronald Gilbert DaweSt. George'sProgressive Conservative
Patrick J. McNicholasSt. John's CentreProgressive Conservative
William MarshallSt. John's EastProgressive Conservative
Thomas V. HickeySt. John's East ExternProgressive Conservative
John CarterSt. John's NorthProgressive Conservative
John F. CollinsSt. John's SouthProgressive Conservative
Harold BarrettSt. John's WestProgressive Conservative
Loyola HearnSt. Mary's-The CapesProgressive Conservative
Kevin AylwardStephenvilleLiberal
Chris DeckerStrait of Belle IsleLiberal
Glen C. GreeningTerra NovaProgressive Conservative
Garfield E. WarrenTorngat MountainsProgressive Conservative
James G. ReidTrinity-Bay de VerdeProgressive Conservative
Charlie BrettTrinity NorthProgressive Conservative
Walter Carmichael CarterTwillingateLiberal
Gerald Ryan OttenheimerWaterford-KenmountProgressive Conservative
Graham FlightWindsor-BuchansLiberal

Notes:

1. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.heritage.nf.ca/articles/politics/peckford-government.php |title=The Peckford Government 1979-1989 |work=Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage |publisher=Memorial University}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.assembly.nl.ca/members/speaker.htm |title=The Speaker of the House of Assembly |publisher=House of Assembly |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091013233930/http://www.assembly.nl.ca/members/speaker.htm |archivedate=2009-10-13 }}
3. ^{{cite book |title=Canadian Parliamentary Guide |year=1997 |last=O'Handley |first=Kathryn |ISBN=1-896413-43-9}}
4. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.heritage.nf.ca/articles/politics/lieutenant-governor-william-paddon.php |title=Paddon, Hon. William Anthony (1914-1995) |work=Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage |publisher=Memorial University}}
5. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.heritage.nf.ca/articles/politics/lieutenant-governor-james-mcgrath.php |title=McGrath, Hon. James Aloysius (1932- ) |work=Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage |publisher=Memorial University}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.elections.gov.nl.ca/elections/ElectionReports/PDF/General.Elections/GEreport1985.pdf |title=Election Returns 1985 |publisher=Elections Newfoundland and Labrador |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029202526/http://www.elections.gov.nl.ca/elections/ElectionReports/PDF/General.Elections/GEreport1985.pdf |archivedate=2013-10-29 }}
7. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.elections.gov.nl.ca/elections/ElectionReports/PDF/By.Elections/86.st.johns.east.and.st.johns.east.extern.dec.9.pdf |title=Election Statistics 1986: |publisher=Elections Newfoundland and Labrador}}
8. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.elections.gov.nl.ca/elections/ElectionReports/PDF/By.Elections/87.windsor.buchans.dec.17.pdf |title=Election Statistics 1987: |publisher=Elections Newfoundland and Labrador}}
9. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.elections.gov.nl.ca/elections/ElectionReports/PDF/By.Elections/88.waterford.kenmount.mar.9.pdf |title=Election Statistics 1988: |publisher=Elections Newfoundland and Labrador}}

By-elections

By-elections were held to replace members for various reasons:

Electoral districtMember electedAffiliationElection dateReason
St. John's EastGene LongNew DemocratDecember 9, 1986T V Hickey resigned seat in November 1986[7]
St. John's East ExternKevin ParsonsProgressive ConservativeW W Marshall resigned seat in November 1986[7]
Windsor-BuchansClyde WellsLiberalDecember 17, 1987G Flight resigned seat in June 1987 to allow Liberal Party leader to run for a seat in the assembly[8]
Waterford-KenmountEric GullageLiberalMarch 9, 1988G R Ottenheimer named to Senate of Canada in December 1987[9]

Notes:

References

{{General Assemblies of Newfoundland and Labrador}}{{Newfoundland and Labrador politics}}

1 : Terms of the General Assembly of Newfoundland and Labrador

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