15th Canadian Parliament
| 15th Canadian Parliament | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Minority parliament | |||
| Jan. 7, 1926 – Jul. 2, 1926 | |||
![]() | |||
| Parliament leaders | |||
| Prime minister | William Lyon Mackenzie King Dec. 29, 1921 – Jun. 28, 1926 | ||
| Arthur Meighen Jun. 29, 1926 – Sep. 25, 1926 | |||
| Cabinets | 12th Canadian Ministry 13th Canadian Ministry | ||
| Leader of the Opposition | Arthur Meighen Dec. 29, 1921 – Jun. 28, 1926 | ||
| William Lyon Mackenzie King Jun. 29, 1926 – Sep. 25, 1926 | |||
| Party caucuses | |||
| Government | Liberal Party[a] (until June 1926) | ||
| Conservative Party (after June 1926) | |||
| Opposition | Conservative Party (until June 1926) | ||
| Liberal Party (after June 1926) | |||
| Crossbench | Progressive Party | ||
| Labour | |||
| United Farmers of Alberta | |||
| House of Commons | |||
![]() Seating arrangements of the House of Commons | |||
| Speaker of the Commons | Rodolphe Lemieux 8 March 1922 – 2 June 1930 | ||
| Members | 245 MP seats List of members | ||
| Senate | |||
| Speaker of the Senate | Hewitt Bostock 7 February 1922 – 12 May 1930 | ||
| Government Senate leader | Raoul Dandurand 29 December 1921 – 28 June 1926 | ||
| William Benjamin Ross 28 June 1926 – 24 September 1926 | |||
| Opposition Senate leader | William Benjamin Ross 1 January 1926 – 28 June 1926 | ||
| Raoul Dandurand 29 June 1926 – 31 December 1926 | |||
| Senators | 96 senator seats List of senators | ||
| Sovereign | |||
| Monarch | George V 6 May 1910 – 20 January 1936 | ||
| Governor general | Viscount Byng of Vimy 11 August 1921 – 2 October 1926 | ||
| Sessions | |||
| 1st session January 7, 1926 – July 2, 1926 | |||
| |||

The 15th Canadian Parliament was in session from 7 January 1926, until 2 July 1926. The membership was set by the 1925 federal election on 29 October 1925, and it changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections until it was dissolved prior to the 1926 election.
Initially, it was controlled by a Liberal Party House minority under Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King and the 12th Canadian Ministry. The Liberal caucus did not have a majority of seats in the House - it only had the second most seats - and was propped up by the Progressive Party of Canada MPs. The Official Opposition was the Conservative Party, led by Arthur Meighen. When the Liberal government fell, Meighen's Conservatives were allowed to form government (the 13th Canadian Ministry), triggering the "King-Byng Affair". Quickly the 13th Ministry fell as well.
The Speaker was Rodolphe Lemieux. See also List of Canadian electoral districts 1924-1933 for a list of the ridings in this parliament.
The unusual case of a new party taking control of the government between elections has only happened twice in Canadian history; the other occasion was in the 2nd Canadian parliament.
There was only one session of the 15th Parliament:
| Session | Start | End |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | 7 January 1926 | 2 July 1926 |
List of members
Following is a full list of members of the fifteenth Parliament listed first by province, then by electoral district.
Key:
- Party leaders are italicized.
- Cabinet ministers are in boldface.
- The Prime Minister is both.
- The Speaker is indicated by "(†)".
Electoral districts denoted by an asterisk (*) indicates that district was represented by two members.
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acadia | Robert Gardiner | Progressive | 1921 | 3rd term | |
| Athabaska | Charles Wilson Cross | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Battle River | Henry Elvins Spencer | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Bow River | Edward Joseph Garland | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Calgary East | Fred Davis | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Calgary West | Richard Bedford Bennett | Conservative | 1911, 1925 | 2nd term* | |
| Camrose | William Thomas Lucas | United Farmers of Alberta | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Edmonton East | Ambrose Upton Gledstanes Bury | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Edmonton West | Charles Stewart | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Lethbridge | Lincoln Henry Jelliff | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Macleod | George Gibson Coote | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Medicine Hat | Frederick William Gershaw | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Peace River | Donald MacBeth Kennedy | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Red Deer | Alfred Speakman | United Farmers of Alberta | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Vegreville | Arthur Moren Boutillier | Progressive | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Wetaskiwin | Stanley Gilbert Tobin | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cariboo | John Anderson Fraser | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Comox—Alberni | Alan Webster Neill | Independent | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Fraser Valley | Harry James Barber | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Kootenay East | James Horace King | Liberal | 1922 | 2nd term | |
| Kootenay West | William Kemble Esling | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Nanaimo | Charles Herbert Dickie | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| New Westminster | William Garland McQuarrie | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Skeena | Alfred Stork | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Vancouver—Burrard | John Arthur Clark | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Vancouver Centre | Henry Herbert Stevens | Conservative | 1911 | 4th term | |
| Vancouver North | Dugald Donaghy | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Vancouver South | Leon Johnson Ladner | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Victoria | Simon Fraser Tolmie | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Yale | Grote Stirling | Conservative | 1924 | 2nd term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brandon | Robert Forke | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Dauphin | William John Ward | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Lisgar | John Livingstone Brown | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Macdonald | William James Lovie | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Marquette | Henry Alfred Mullins | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Neepawa | Thomas Gerow Murphy | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Nelson | Thomas William Bird | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Portage la Prairie | Arthur Meighen | Conservative | 1908, 1922 | 5th term* | |
| Provencher | Arthur-Lucien Beaubien | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Selkirk | Hannes Marino Hannesson | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Souris | James Steedsman | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Springfield | Thomas Hay | Conservative | 1917,[b] 1925 | 2nd term* | |
| St. Boniface | John Power Howden | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Winnipeg North | Abraham Albert Heaps | Labour | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Winnipeg North Centre | James Shaver Woodsworth | Labour | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Winnipeg South | Robert Rogers | Conservative | 1911, 1925 | 2nd term* | |
| Winnipeg South Centre | William Walker Kennedy | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charlotte | Robert Watson Grimmer | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Gloucester | Jean George Robichaud | Liberal | 1922 | 2nd term | |
| Kent | Alexandre-Joseph Doucet | Conservative | 1923 | 2nd term | |
| Northumberland | Charles Elijah Fish | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Restigouche—Madawaska | Arthur Culligan | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Royal | George Burpee Jones | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| St. John—Albert* | Thomas Bell | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Murray Maclaren | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | ||
| Victoria—Carleton | James Kidd Flemming | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Westmorland | Otto Baird Price | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| York—Sunbury | Richard Hanson | Conservative | 1921 | 3rd term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antigonish—Guysborough | Edward Mortimer Macdonald | Liberal | 1904,[c] 1921 | 5th term* | |
| Cape Breton North—Victoria | Lewis Wilkieson Johnstone | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Cape Breton South | Finlay MacDonald | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Colchester | George Taylor Macnutt | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Cumberland | Robert Knowlton Smith | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Digby—Annapolis | Harry Bernard Short | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Halifax* | William Anderson Black | Conservative | 1923 | 2nd term | |
| Felix Patrick Quinn | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | ||
| Hants—Kings | Arthur de Witt Foster | Conservative | 1911, 1925 | 2nd term* | |
| Inverness | Isaac Duncan MacDougall | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Pictou | Thomas Cantley | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Queens—Lunenburg | William Duff | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Richmond—West Cape Breton | John Alexander MacDonald | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Shelburne—Yarmouth | Paul Lacombe Hatfield | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Algoma East | George Brecken Nicholson | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Algoma West | Thomas Edward Simpson | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Brantford City | Robert Edwy Ryerson | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Brant | Franklin Smoke | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Bruce North | James Malcolm | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Bruce South | Walter Allan Hall | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Carleton | William Foster Garland | Conservative | 1912, 1921 | 3rd term* | |
| Dufferin—Simcoe | William Earl Rowe | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Durham | Fred Wellington Bowen | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Elgin West | Hugh Cummings McKillop | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Essex East | Raymond Ducharme Morand | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Essex South | Eccles James Gott | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Essex West | Sidney Cecil Robinson | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Fort William | Robert James Manion | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Frontenac—Addington | John Wesley Edwards | Conservative | 1908, 1925 | 4th term* | |
| Glengarry | Archibald John Macdonald | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Grenville—Dundas | Arza Clair Casselman | Conservative | 1921, 1925 | 2nd term* | |
| Grey North | Matthew Robert Duncan | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Grey Southeast | Agnes Campbell Macphail | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Haldimand | Mark Cecil Senn | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Halton | Robert King Anderson | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Hamilton East | Sydney Chilton Mewburn | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Hamilton West | Charles William Bell | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Hastings—Peterborough | Alexander Thomas Embury | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Hastings South | William Ernest Tummon | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Huron North | John Warwick King | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Huron South | Thomas McMillan | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Kenora—Rainy River | Peter Heenan | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Kent | Alexander Dew Chaplin | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Kingston City | Arthur Edward Ross | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Lambton East | Joseph Elijah Armstrong | Conservative | 1904, 1925 | 6th term* | |
| Lambton West | William Thomas Goodison | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Lanark | Richard Franklin Preston | Conservative | 1922 | 2nd term | |
| Leeds | Hugh Alexander Stewart | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Lincoln | James Dew Chaplin | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| London | John Franklin White | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Middlesex East | Adam King Hodgins | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Middlesex West | John Campbell Elliott (until 8 March 1926 ministerial appointment) | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| John Campbell Elliott (by-election of 1926-03-29) | Liberal | ||||
| Muskoka—Ontario | Peter McGibbon | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Nipissing | Edmond Lapierre | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Norfolk—Elgin | John Lawrence Stansell | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Northumberland | Milton Edgar Maybee | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Ontario | Thomas Erlin Kaiser | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Ottawa (City of)* | John Léo Chabot | Conservative | 1911, 1925 | 3rd term* | |
| Stewart McClenaghan | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | ||
| Oxford North | Donald Matheson Sutherland | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Oxford South | Donald Sutherland | Conservative | 1911 | 4th term | |
| Parkdale | David Spence | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Parry Sound | James Arthurs | Conservative | 1908 | 5th term | |
| Peel | Samuel Charters | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Perth North | David McKenzie Wright | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Perth South | Frederick George Sanderson | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Peterborough West | Edward Armour Peck | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Port Arthur—Thunder Bay | William Fitzgerald Langworthy | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Prescott | Gustave Evanturel | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Prince Edward—Lennox | John Hubbs | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Renfrew North | Ira Delbert Cotnam | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Renfrew South | Martin James Maloney | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Russell | Alfred Goulet | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Simcoe East | Alfred Burke Thompson | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Simcoe North | William Alves Boys | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Stormont | Charles James Hamilton | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Timiskaming North | John Raymond O'Neill | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Timiskaming South | Ernest Frederick Armstrong | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Toronto East | Edmond Baird Ryckman | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Toronto East Centre | Edmund James Bristol | Conservative | 1905 | 6th term | |
| Toronto—High Park | Alexander James Anderson | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Toronto Northeast | Richard Langton Baker | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Toronto Northwest | Thomas Langton Church | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Toronto—Scarborough | Joseph Henry Harris | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Toronto South | George Reginald Geary | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Toronto West Centre | Horatio Clarence Hocken | Conservative | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Victoria | Thomas Hubert Stinson | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Waterloo North | William Daum Euler | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Waterloo South | Alexander McKay Edwards | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Welland | George Hamilton Pettit | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Wellington North | Duncan Sinclair | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Wellington South | Hugh Guthrie | Conservative | 1900 | 7th term | |
| Wentworth | Gordon Crooks Wilson | Conservative | 1911 | 4th term | |
| York North | Thomas Herbert Lennox | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| York South | William Findlay Maclean | Independent Conservative | 1892 | 9th term | |
| York West | Henry Lumley Drayton | Conservative | 1919 | 3rd term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| King's | John Alexander Macdonald | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Prince | Alfred Edgar MacLean | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Queen's* | Robert Harold Jenkins | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| John Albert Messervy | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argenteuil | George Halsey Perley | Conservative | 1904, 1925 | 4th term* | |
| Bagot | Joseph Edmond Marcile (died in office) | Liberal | 1898 | 8th term | |
| Georges Dorèze Morin (by-election of 1925-12-07) | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | ||
| Beauce | Édouard Lacroix | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Beauharnois | Maxime Raymond | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Bellechasse | Charles Alphonse Fournier | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Berthier—Maskinongé | Joseph-Charles-Théodore Gervais | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Bonaventure | Charles Marcil | Liberal | 1900 | 7th term | |
| Brome—Missisquoi | William Frederic Kay | Liberal | 1911 | 4th term | |
| Cartier | Samuel William Jacobs | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Chambly—Verchères | Aimé Langlois | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Champlain | Arthur Lesieur Desaulniers | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Charlevoix—Saguenay | Pierre-François Casgrain | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Châteauguay—Huntingdon | James Alexander Robb | Liberal | 1908 | 5th term | |
| Chicoutimi | Julien-Édouard-Alfred Dubuc | Independent Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Compton | Joseph Étienne Letellier de Saint-Just | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Dorchester | Lucien Cannon | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Drummond—Arthabaska | Wilfrid Girouard | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Gaspé | Rodolphe Lemieux (†) | Liberal | 1896 | 8th term | |
| Hochelaga | Édouard-Charles St-Père | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Hull | Joseph-Éloi Fontaine | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Jacques Cartier | Joseph-Théodule Rhéaume | Liberal | 1922 | 2nd term | |
| Joliette | Jean-Joseph Denis | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Kamouraska | Joseph Georges Bouchard | Liberal | 1922 | 2nd term | |
| Labelle | Joseph Henri Napoléon Bourassa | Independent | 1896,[d] 1925 | 4th term* | |
| Lake St. John | Armand Sylvestre | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Laprairie—Napierville | Roch Lanctôt | Liberal | 1904 | 6th term | |
| L'Assomption—Montcalm | Paul-Arthur Séguin | Liberal | 1908 | 5th term | |
| Laurier—Outremont | Joseph-Alexandre Mercier | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Laval—Two Mountains | Liguori Lacombe | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Lévis | Joseph-Étienne Dussault | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| L'Islet | Joseph-Fernand Fafard | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Lotbinière | Joseph-Achille Verville | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Maisonneuve | Clément Robitaille | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Matane | Georges-Léonidas Dionne | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Mégantic | Eusèbe Roberge | Liberal | 1922 | 2nd term | |
| Montmagny | Léo Kemner Laflamme | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Mount Royal | Robert Smeaton White | Conservative | 1888,[e] 1925 | 3rd term* | |
| Nicolet | Joseph-Félix Descoteaux | Liberal | 1923 | 2nd term | |
| Pontiac | Frank S. Cahill | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Portneuf | Michel-Siméon Delisle | Liberal | 1900 | 7th term | |
| Québec—Montmorency | Henri-Edgar Lavigueur | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Quebec East | Ernest Lapointe | Liberal | 1904 | 7th term | |
| Quebec South | Charles Gavan Power | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Quebec West | Georges Parent | Liberal | 1904,[f] 1917 | 5th term* | |
| Richelieu | Arthur Cardin | Liberal | 1911 | 4th term | |
| Richmond—Wolfe | Edmund William Tobin | Liberal | 1900 | 7th term | |
| Rimouski | Eugène Fiset | Liberal | 1924 | 2nd term | |
| St. Ann | James John Edmund Guérin | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| St. Antoine | Leslie Gordon Bell | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| St. Denis | Joseph-Arthur Denis | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| St. Henri | Paul Mercier | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| St. Hyacinthe—Rouville | René Morin | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| St. James | Fernand Rinfret | Liberal | 1920 | 3rd term | |
| St. Johns—Iberville | Aldéric-Joseph Benoit | Liberal | 1922 | 2nd term | |
| St. Lawrence—St. George | Charles Cahan | Conservative | 1925 | 1st term | |
| St. Mary | Hermas Deslauriers | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Shefford | Georges Henri Boivin | Liberal | 1911 | 4th term | |
| Sherbrooke | Charles Benjamin Howard | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Stanstead | Willis Keith Baldwin | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Témiscouata | Jean-François Pouliot | Liberal | 1924 | 2nd term | |
| Terrebonne | Jules-Édouard Prévost | Liberal | 1917 | 3rd term | |
| Three Rivers—St. Maurice | Arthur Bettez | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Vaudreuil—Soulanges | Lawrence Alexander Wilson | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Wright | Fizalam-William Perras | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Yamaska | Aimé Boucher | Liberal | 1921 | 3rd term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assiniboia | Robert McKenzie | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Humboldt | Albert Frederick Totzke | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Kindersley | Archibald M. Carmichael | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Last Mountain | William Russell Fansher | Progressive | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Long Lake | John Frederick Johnston | Progressive | 1917[g] | 3rd term | |
| Liberal | |||||
| Mackenzie | Milton Neil Campbell | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Maple Creek | George Spence | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Melfort | Malcolm McLean | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Melville | William Richard Motherwell | Liberal | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Moose Jaw | John Gordon Ross | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| North Battleford | Cameron Ross McIntosh | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Prince Albert | Charles McDonald (until 15 January 1926 resignation to allow seat for Mackenzie King) | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| William Lyon Mackenzie King (by-election of 1926-02-15) | Liberal | 1908,[h] 1919,[i] 1926 | 4th term* | ||
| Qu'Appelle | John Millar | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Regina | Francis Nicholson Darke (resigned 20 February 1926 to allow seat for Dunning) | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Charles Avery Dunning (by-election of 1926-03-16) | Liberal | 1926 | 1st term | ||
| Rosetown | John Evans | Progressive | 1921 | 2nd term | |
| Saskatoon | Alexander MacGillivray Young | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| South Battleford | John Vallance | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Swift Current | Charles Edward Bothwell | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Weyburn | Edward James Young | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Willow Bunch | Thomas F. Donnelly | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term | |
| Yorkton | George Washington McPhee | Liberal | 1925 | 1st term |
| Riding | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | No. of terms | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yukon | George Black | Conservative | 1921 | 2nd term |
By-elections
| By-election | Date | Incumbent | Party | Winner | Party | Cause | Retained | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Middlesex West | March 29, 1926 | John Campbell Elliott | Liberal | John Campbell Elliott | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Labour | Yes | ||
| Regina | March 16, 1926 | Francis Nicholson Darke | Liberal | Charles Avery Dunning | Liberal | Resignation to provide a seat for Dunning | Yes | ||
| Prince Albert | February 15, 1926 | Charles McDonald | Liberal | William Lyon Mackenzie King | Liberal | Resignation to provide a seat for Mackenzie King | Yes | ||
| Bagot | December 7, 1925 | Joseph Edmond Marcile | Liberal | Georges Dorèze Morin | Liberal | Death | Yes | ||
Notes
- ^ The Conservative Party replaced the Liberal Party without an election on 29 June 1926 as a result of the King-Byng Affair.
- ^ Selkirk
- ^ Pictou
- ^ First elected as a Liberal
- ^ Cardwell (Ontario)
- ^ Montmorency
- ^ First elected as a Unionist
- ^ Waterloo North (Ontario)
- ^ Prince (PEI)/York North (Ontario)
References
- Government of Canada. "12th Ministry". Guide to Canadian Ministries since Confederation. Privy Council Office. Archived from the original on 31 October 2004. Retrieved 9 November 2006.
- Government of Canada. "13th Ministry". Guide to Canadian Ministries since Confederation. Privy Council Office. Archived from the original on 19 August 2004. Retrieved 9 November 2006.
- Government of Canada. "15th Parliament". Members of the House of Commons: 1867 to Date: By Parliament. Library of Parliament. Archived from the original on 20 December 2006. Retrieved 30 November 2006.
- Government of Canada. "Duration of Sessions". Library of Parliament. Archived from the original on 14 November 2007. Retrieved 12 May 2006.
- Government of Canada. "General Elections". Library of Parliament. Archived from the original on 4 May 2006. Retrieved 12 May 2006.
- Government of Canada. "Key Dates for each Parliament". Library of Parliament. Archived from the original on 14 September 2005. Retrieved 12 May 2006.
- Government of Canada. "Leaders of the Opposition in the House of Commons". Library of Parliament. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 12 May 2006.
- Government of Canada. "Prime Ministers of Canada". Library of Parliament. Archived from the original on 27 April 2006. Retrieved 12 May 2006.
- Government of Canada. "Speakers". Library of Parliament. Archived from the original on 17 September 2006. Retrieved 12 May 2006.
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