释义 |
- Seats per political party
- Member list
- Other elected MLAs
- Cabinet Ministers
- New electoral districts
- Notes and references
The 17th Quebec Legislature was the provincial legislature that existed in Quebec, Canada from May 16, 1927, to July 30, 1931. The Liberal Party, led by Louis-Alexandre Taschereau as Premier of Quebec had a majority of seats in the Legislative Assembly of Quebec and was the governing party. Seats per political partyAffiliation | Members
| {{Canadian party colour|QC|Liberal|row}}Liberal Party | 75 | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Conservative Party | 9 | {{Canadian party colour|QC|NDP|row}}Labour | 1 | Total
| 85 | Government Majority
| 66 |
Member listThis was the list of members of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec that were elected in the 1927 election: Name | Party | Riding | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Hector Authier | Liberal | Abitibi | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Georges-Étienne Dansereau | Liberal | Argenteuil | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Édouard Perrault | Liberal | Arthabaska | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Émery Phaneuf | Liberal | Bagot | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Hugues Fortier | Liberal | Beauce | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Louis-Joseph Papineau | Liberal | Beauharnois | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Antonin Galipeault | Liberal | Bellechasse | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Cléophas Bastien | Liberal | Berthier | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Pierre-Émile Côté | Liberal | Bonaventure | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Carlton James Oliver | Liberal | Brome | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Alexandre Thurber | Liberal | Chambly | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}William-Pierre Grant | Liberal | Champlain | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Edgar Rochette | Liberal | Charlevoix et Saguenay | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Honoré Mercier Jr. | Liberal | Châteauguay | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Gustave Delisle | Liberal | Chicoutimi | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Jacob Nicol | Liberal | Compton | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Arthur Sauvé | Conservative | Deux-Montagnes | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Ernest Ouellet | Liberal | Dorchester | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Hector Laferté | Liberal | Drummond | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Cyrille Baillargeon | Liberal | Frontenac | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Gustave Lemieux | Liberal | Gaspé | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Aimé Guertin | Conservative | Hull | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Andrew Philps | Liberal | Huntingdon | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Lucien Lamoureux | Liberal | Iberville | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Édouard Caron | Liberal | Îles-de-la-Madeleine | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Victor Marchand | Liberal | Jacques-Cartier | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Lucien Dugas | Liberal | Joliette | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Nérée Morin | Liberal | Kamouraska | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Pierre Lortie | Liberal | Labelle | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Émile Moreau | Liberal | Lac-Saint-Jean | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Walter Reed | Liberal | L'Assomption | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Joseph-Olier Renaud Sr. | Conservative | Laval | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Alfred-Valère Roy | Liberal | Lévis | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Élisée Thériault | Liberal | L'Islet | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Napoléon Francoeur | Liberal | Lotbinière | {{Canadian party colour|QC|NDP|row}}William Tremblay | Labour | Maisonneuve | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-William Gagnon | Liberal | Maskinongé | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Arthur Bergeron | Liberal | Matane | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Dufour | Liberal | Matapédia | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Lauréat Lapierre | Liberal | Mégantic | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Alexandre Saurette | Liberal | Missisquoi | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Ferdinand Daniel | Liberal | Montcalm | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Charles-Abraham Paquet | Liberal | Montmagny | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Louis-Alexandre Taschereau | Liberal | Montmorency | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Aldéric Blain | Conservative | Montréal-Dorion | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Ernest Poulin | Liberal | Montréal-Laurier | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Anatole Plante | Liberal | Montréal-Mercier | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Henry Dillon | Liberal | Montréal–Sainte-Anne | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Gauthier | Liberal | Montréal–Sainte-Marie | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Charles Ernest Gault | Conservative | Montréal–Saint-Georges | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Alfred Leduc | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Henri | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Irénée Vautrin | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Jacques | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Cohen | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Laurent | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Peter Bercovitch | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Louis | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Pierre-Auguste Lafleur | Conservative | Montréal-Verdun | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Euclide Charbonneau | Liberal | Napierville-Laprairie | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Alcide Savoie | Liberal | Nicolet | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Désiré Lahaie | Liberal | Papineau | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Wallace Reginald McDonald | Liberal | Pontiac | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Édouard Hamel | Liberal | Portneuf | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Ephraim Bédard | Liberal | Québec-Comté | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Samson | Liberal | Québec-Centre | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Louis-Alfred Létourneau | Liberal | Québec-Est | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Ignatius Power | Liberal | Québec-Ouest | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Jean-Baptiste Lafrenière | Liberal | Richelieu | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Stanislas-Edmond Desmarais | Liberal | Richmond | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Louis-Joseph Moreault | Liberal | Rimouski | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Cyril-Améric Bernard | Liberal | Rouville | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Télesphore-Damien Bouchard | Liberal | Saint-Hyacinthe | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Alexis Bouthillier | Liberal | Saint-Jean | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Auguste Frigon | Liberal[1] | Saint-Maurice | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Charles-Édouard Cantin | Liberal | Saint-Sauveur | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}William Stephen Bullock | Liberal | Shefford | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Armand-Charles Crépeau | Conservative | Sherbrooke | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Avila Ferland | Liberal | Soulanges | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Alfred-Joseph Bissonnet | Liberal | Stanstead | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph-Édouard Piché | Liberal | Témiscamingue | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Léon Casgrain | Liberal | Témiscouata | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Athanase David | Liberal | Terrebonne | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Maurice Duplessis | Conservative | Trois-Rivières | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Hormisdas Pilon | Liberal | Vaudreuil | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Félix Messier | Liberal | Verchères | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Charles Allan Smart | Conservative | Westmount | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Cyrénus Lemieux | Liberal | Wolfe | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}David Lapperrière | Liberal | Yamaska |
Other elected MLAsOther MLAs were elected during by-elections in this term - Pierre Gagnon, Liberal Party, Kamouraska, October 31, 1927[2]
- Pierre Gauthier, Liberal Party, Portneuf, October 31, 1927[3]
- Amédée Caron, Liberal Party, Iles-de-la-Madeleine, July 14, 1928[4]
- Oscar Drouin, Liberal Party, Québec-Est, October 24, 1928[5]
- Camillien Houde, Conservative Party, Montréal-Sainte-Marie, October 24, 1928[6]
- Adélard Godbout, Liberal Party, L'Islet, May 13, 1929[7]
- Andrew Ross McMaster, Liberal Party, Compton, September 30, 1929[8]
- Avila Turcotte, Liberal Party, Richelieu, October 28, 1929[9]
- Joseph-Léonide Perron, Liberal Party, Montcalm, November 16, 1929[10]
- Joseph-Édouard Fortin, Liberal Party, Beauce, December 9, 1929[11]
- Robert Taschereau, Liberal Party, Bellechasse, October 20, 1930[12]
- Paul Sauvé, Conservative Party, Deux-Montagnes, November 4, 1930[13]
- Martin Beattie Fisher, Conservative Party, Huntingdon, November 4, 1930[14]
- Louis-Joseph Thisdel, Liberal Party, Maskinongé, November 4, 1930[15]
Cabinet Ministers- Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
- Agriculture: Joseph-Édouard Caron (1927-1929), Joseph-Léonide Perron (1929-1930), Adélard Godbout (1930-1931)
- Colonization, Mines and Fishing: Joseph-Édouard Perrault (1927-1929), Hector Laferté (1929-1930)
- Colonization, Hunting and Fishing: Hector Laferté (1929-1930)
- Mines: Joseph-Édouard Perrault (1930-1931)
- Public Works and Labour: Antonin Galipeault (1927-1930), Joseph-Napoléon Francoeur (1930-1931)
- Lands and Forests: Honoré Mercier Jr
- Roads: Joseph-Léonide Perron (1927-1929), Joseph-Édouard Perrault (1929-1931)
- Municipal Affairs: Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
- Attorney General: Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
- Provincial secretary: Athanase David
- Treasurer: Jacob Nicol (1927-1929), Andrew Ross McMaster (1929-1930), Gordon Wallace Scott (1930), Louis-Alexandre Taschereau (1930-1931)
- Members without portfolios: Joseph-Charles-Ernest Ouellet (1929-1931), Narcisse Pérodeau (1929-1931), Gordon Wallace Scott (1930-1931)
New electoral districtsThe electoral map was reformed in 1930 and the new map was first used in the general election of August 24, 1931.[16] - Gaspé was split into two ridings: Gaspé-Nord and Gaspé-Sud.
- Gatineau was created from parts of Hull.
- Laviolette was created from parts of Champlain.
- Roberval was created from parts of Lac-Saint-Jean
- Rivière-du-Loup was created from parts of Témiscouata.
Notes and references1. ^Elected as Independent Liberal 2. ^ 3. ^ 4. ^ 5. ^ 6. ^ 7. ^ 8. ^ 9. ^ 10. ^ 11. ^ 12. ^ 13. ^ 14. ^ 15. ^ 16. ^
- 1927 election results
- List of historical Cabinet Ministers
{{National Assembly of Quebec}} 1 : Terms of the Quebec Legislature |