14th Canadian Parliament
The 14th Canadian Parliament was in session from 8 March 1922 until 5 September 1925. The membership was set by the 1921 federal election on 6 December 1921, and it changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections until, due to momentary confusion among the MPs, it lost a money vote and was dissolved, causing the 1925 election.
14th Parliament of Canada | |||
---|---|---|---|
Majority parliament | |||
8 March 1922 – 5 September 1925 | |||
![]() | |||
Parliament leaders | |||
Prime Minister | William Lyon Mackenzie King 29 December 1921 – 28 June 1926 | ||
Cabinet | 12th Canadian Ministry | ||
Leader of the Opposition | Arthur Meighen 29 December 1921 – 28 June 1926 | ||
Party caucuses | |||
Government | Liberal Party | ||
Opposition | Conservative Party* | ||
Crossbench | Progressive Party* | ||
Labour | |||
United Farmers | |||
* Arthur Meighen's Conservatives formed the Official Opposition although the Progressive Party had more seats. | |||
House of Commons | |||
![]() Seating arrangements of the House of Commons | |||
Speaker of the Commons | Rodolphe Lemieux 8 March 1922 – 2 June 1930 | ||
Senate | |||
Speaker of the Senate | Hewitt Bostock 7 February 1922 – 12 May 1930 | ||
Government Senate Leader | Raoul Dandurand 29 December 1921 – 28 June 1926 | ||
Opposition Senate Leader | James Alexander Lougheed 28 December 1921 – 2 November 1925 | ||
Sovereign | |||
Monarch | George V 6 May 1910 – 20 January 1936 | ||
Governor General | Julian Byng 11 August 1921 – 2 October 1926 | ||
Sessions | |||
1st session 8 March 1922 – 28 June 1922 | |||
2nd session 31 January 1923 – 30 June 1923 | |||
3rd session 28 February 1924 – 19 July 1924 | |||
4th session 5 February 1925 – 27 June 1925 | |||
|

It was controlled by a Liberal Party government under Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King and the 12th Canadian Ministry. The Official Opposition was the Conservative Party, led by Arthur Meighen, although the new Progressive Party led by Thomas Crerar had more seats. The appearance of the Progressive Party created a three-party system in the House for the first time since the 1867 Anti-Confederation Party.
The Speaker was Rodolphe Lemieux. See also List of Canadian electoral districts 1914-1924 for a list of the ridings in this parliament.
There were four sessions of the 14th Parliament:
Session | Start | End |
---|---|---|
1st | 8 March 1922 | 28 June 1922 |
2nd | 31 January 1923 | 30 June 1923 |
3rd | 28 February 1924 | 19 July 1924 |
4th | 5 February 1925 | 27 June 1925 |
List of members
Following is a full list of members of the fourteenth Parliament listed first by province, then by electoral district. Party leaders are italicized. Parliamentary secretaries is indicated by "‡". 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.
Alberta
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Battle River | Henry Elvins Spencer | Progressive | 1921 | |
Bow River | Edward Joseph Garland | Progressive | 1921 | |
Calgary West | Joseph Tweed Shaw | Labour | 1921 | |
East Calgary | William Irvine | Labour | 1921 | |
Edmonton East | Donald Ferdinand Kellner | Progressive | 1921 | |
Edmonton West | Donald MacBeth Kennedy | Progressive | 1921 | |
Lethbridge | Lincoln Henry Jelliff | Progressive | 1921 | |
Macleod | George Gibson Coote | Progressive | 1921 | |
Medicine Hat | Robert Gardiner | Progressive | 1921 | |
Red Deer | Alfred Speakman | United Farmers of Alberta | 1921 | |
Strathcona | Daniel Webster Warner | Progressive | 1921 | |
Victoria | William Thomas Lucas | United Farmers of Alberta | 1921 |
British Columbia
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Burrard | John Arthur Clark | Conservative | 1921 | |
Cariboo | Thomas George McBride | Progressive | 1921 | |
Comox—Alberni | Alan Webster Neill | Progressive | 1921 | |
Fraser Valley | Elgin Albert Munro | Liberal | 1921 | |
Kootenay East | Robert Ethelbert Beattie (until 8 February 1922 appointment) | Liberal | 1921 | |
James Horace King (by-election of 14 March 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Kootenay West | Levi William Humphrey | Progressive | 1921 | |
Nanaimo | Charles Herbert Dickie | Conservative | 1921 | |
New Westminster | William Garland McQuarrie | Conservative | 1917 | |
Skeena | Alfred Stork | Liberal | 1921 | |
Vancouver Centre | Henry Herbert Stevens | Conservative | 1911 | |
Vancouver South | Leon Johnson Ladner | Conservative | 1921 | |
Victoria City | Simon Fraser Tolmie | Conservative | 1917 | |
Yale | John Armstrong Mackelvie (died 6 April 1924) | Conservative | 1920 | |
Grote Stirling (by-election of 6 November 1924) | Conservative | 1924 |
Manitoba
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Brandon | Robert Forke | Progressive | 1921 | |
Dauphin | William John Ward | Progressive | 1921 | |
Lisgar | John Livingstone Brown | Progressive | 1921 | |
Macdonald | William James Lovie | Progressive | 1921 | |
Marquette | Thomas Crerar | Progressive | 1917[lower-alpha 1] | |
Neepawa | Robert Milne | Progressive | 1921 | |
Nelson | Thomas William Bird | Progressive | 1921 | |
Portage la Prairie | Harry Leader | Progressive | 1921 | |
Provencher | Arthur-Lucien Beaubien | Liberal | 1921 | |
Selkirk | Leland Payson Bancroft | Progressive | 1921 | |
Souris | James Steedsman | Progressive | 1921 | |
Springfield | Robert Alexander Hoey | Progressive | 1921 | |
Winnipeg Centre | James Shaver Woodsworth | Labour | 1921 | |
Winnipeg North | Edward James McMurray (until emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1921 | |
Edward James McMurray (by-election of 24 October 1923) | Liberal | |||
Winnipeg South | Albert Hudson | Liberal | 1921 |
New Brunswick
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Charlotte | Robert Watson Grimmer | Conservative | 1921 | |
Gloucester | Onésiphore Turgeon (until 26 October 1922 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1900 | |
Jean George Robichaud (by-election of 20 November 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Kent | Auguste Théophile Léger | Liberal | 1917 | |
Alexandre-Joseph Doucet (by-election of 20 December 1923) | Conservative | 1923 | ||
Northumberland | John Morrissy (died 31 July 1924) | Liberal | 1921 | |
William Bunting Snowball (by-election of 7 October 1924) | Liberal | 1924 | ||
Restigouche—Madawaska | Pius Michaud | Liberal | 1907 | |
Royal | George Burpee Jones | Conservative | 1921 | |
St. John—Albert* | John Babington Macaulay Baxter | Conservative | 1921 | |
Murray Maclaren | Conservative | 1921 | ||
Victoria—Carleton | Thomas Wakem Caldwell | Progressive | 1919[lower-alpha 2] | |
Westmorland | Arthur Bliss Copp (until appointed Secretary of State) | Liberal | 1915 | |
Arthur Bliss Copp (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
York—Sunbury | Richard Hanson | Conservative | 1921 |
Nova Scotia
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Antigonish—Guysborough | Colin Francis McIsaac | Liberal | 1895, 1921 | |
Cape Breton South and Richmond* | William F. Carroll | Liberal | 1911, 1921 | |
George William Kyte | Liberal | 1908, 1921 | ||
Colchester | Harold Putnam | Liberal | 1921 | |
Cumberland | Hance James Logan | Liberal | 1896, 1921 | |
Digby and Annapolis | Lewis Johnstone Lovett | Liberal | 1921 | |
Halifax* | Edward Blackadder (died 22 October 1922) | Liberal | 1921 | |
Alexander Kenneth Maclean (until 2 November 1923 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1904 | ||
Robert Emmett Finn (by-election of 4 December 1922, replaces Blackadder) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
William Anderson Black (by-election of 5 December 1923, replaces Maclean) | Conservative | 1923 | ||
Hants | Lewis Herbert Martell | Liberal | 1921 | |
Inverness | Alexander William Chisholm | Liberal | 1904 | |
Kings | Ernest William Robinson | Liberal | 1921 | |
Lunenburg | William Duff | Liberal | 1917 | |
North Cape Breton and Victoria | Daniel Duncan McKenzie (until 29 December 1921 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1904, 1908 | |
Daniel Duncan McKenzie (by-election of 19 January 1922, until 11 April 1923 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | |||
Fenwick Lionel Kelly (by-election of 31 January 1923) | Liberal | 1923 | ||
Pictou | Edward Mortimer Macdonald (until 15 August 1923 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1904, 1921 | |
Edward Mortimer Macdonald (by-election of 6 September 1923) | Liberal | |||
Shelburne and Queen's | William Stevens Fielding (until 29 December 1921 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1896, 1917 | |
William Stevens Fielding (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Yarmouth and Clare | Paul Lacombe Hatfield | Liberal | 1921 |
Ontario
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Algoma East | John Carruthers | Liberal | 1921 | |
Algoma West | Thomas Edward Simpson | Conservative | 1917 | |
Brantford | William Gawtress Raymond | Liberal | 1921 | |
Brant | William Charles Good | Independent Progressive | 1921 | |
Bruce North | James Malcolm | Liberal | 1921 | |
Bruce South | John Walter Findlay | Progressive | 1921 | |
Carleton | William Foster Garland | Conservative | 1912, 1921 | |
Dufferin | Robert John Woods | Progressive | 1921 | |
Dundas | Preston Elliott | Progressive | 1921 | |
Durham | Fred Wellington Bowen | Conservative | 1921 | |
Elgin East | John Lawrence Stansell | Conservative | 1921 | |
Elgin West | Hugh Cummings McKillop | Conservative | 1921 | |
Essex North | William Costello Kennedy (until 29 December 1921 ministerial appointment) | Liberal | 1917 | |
William Costello Kennedy (by-election of 19 January 1922, died 17 January 1923) | Liberal | |||
Albert Frederick Healy (by-election of 1 March 1923) | Liberal | 1921 | ||
Essex South | George Perry Graham (until 29 December 1921 ministerial appointment) | Liberal | 1907,[lower-alpha 3] 1912,[lower-alpha 4] 1921 | |
George Perry Graham (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Fort William and Rainy River | Robert James Manion | Conservative | 1917 | |
Frontenac | William Samuel Reed | Progressive | 1921 | |
Glengarry and Stormont | John Wilfred Kennedy | Progressive | 1919 | |
Grenville | Arza Clair Casselman (until 27 December 1921 emoulment appointment) | Conservative | 1921 | |
Arthur Meighen (by-election of 26 January 1922) | Conservative | 1908[lower-alpha 5], 1922 | ||
Grey North | Matthew Robert Duncan | Conservative | 1921 | |
Grey Southeast | Agnes Macphail | Progressive | 1921 | |
Haldimand | Mark Cecil Senn | Conservative | 1921 | |
Halton | Robert King Anderson | Conservative | 1917 | |
Hamilton East | Sydney Chilton Mewburn | Conservative | 1917 | |
Hamilton West | Thomas Joseph Stewart | Conservative | 1900 | |
Hastings East | Thomas Henry Thompson | Conservative | 1917 | |
Hastings West | Edward Guss Porter (resigned 27 June 1924) | Conservative | 1902 | |
Charles Edward Hanna (by-election of 25 November 1924) | Liberal | 1924 | ||
Huron North | John Warwick King | Progressive | 1921 | |
Huron South | William Black | Progressive | 1921 | |
Kent | Archibald Blake McCoig (until 4 January 1922 Senate appointment) | Liberal | 1908 | |
James Murdock (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Kingston | Arthur Edward Ross | Conservative | 1921 | |
Lambton East | Burt Wendell Fansher | Progressive | 1904 | |
Lambton West | Richard Vryling Lesueur | Conservative | 1921 | |
Lanark | John Alexander Stewart (died 7 October 1922) | Conservative | 1918 | |
Richard Franklin Preston (by-election of 4 December 1922) | Conservative | 1922 | ||
Leeds | Hugh Alexander Stewart | Conservative | 1921 | |
Lennox and Addington | Edward James Sexsmith | Progressive | 1921 | |
Lincoln | James Dew Chaplin | Conservative | 1917 | |
London | John Franklin White | Conservative | 1921 | |
Middlesex East | Archie Latimer Hodgins | Progressive | 1921 | |
Middlesex West | John Douglas Fraser Drummond | Progressive | 1921 | |
Muskoka | William James Hammell | Progressive | 1921 | |
Nipissing | Edmond Lapierre | Liberal | 1921 | |
Norfolk | John Alexander Wallace | Progressive | 1921 | |
Northumberland | Milton Edgar Maybee | Conservative | 1921 | |
Ontario North | Robert Henry Halbert | United Farmers of Ontario | 1919 | |
Ontario South | Lawson Omar Clifford | Liberal | 1891, 1892, 1911 | |
Ottawa (City of)* | Edgar-Rodolphe-Eugène Chevrier | Liberal | 1921 | |
Harold Buchanan McGiverin | Liberal | 1908, 1921 | ||
Oxford North | Duncan James Sinclair | Liberal | 1921 | |
Oxford South | Donald Sutherland | Conservative | 1911 | |
Parkdale | David Spence | Conservative | 1921 | |
Parry Sound | James Arthurs | Conservative | 1908 | |
Peel | Samuel Charters | Conservative | 1917 | |
Perth North | James Palmer Rankin | Liberal | 1921 | |
Perth South | William Forrester | Liberal | 1921 | |
Peterborough East | George Arthur Brethen | Progressive | 1921 | |
Peterborough West | George Newcombe Gordon | Liberal | 1921 | |
Port Arthur and Kenora | Dougald Kennedy | Progressive | 1921 | |
Prescott | Joseph Binette | Progressive | 1921 | |
Liberal | ||||
Prince Edward | John Hubbs | Conservative | 1921 | |
Renfrew North | Matthew McKay | Liberal | 1921 | |
Renfrew South | Thomas Andrew Low (until emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1908, 1921 | |
Thomas Andrew Low (by-election of 6 September 1923) | Liberal | |||
Russell | Charles Murphy (until postmaster appointment) | Liberal | 1904 | |
Charles Murphy (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Simcoe East | Thomas Edward Manley Chew | Liberal | 1908, 1921 | |
Simcoe North | Thomas Edwin Ross | Progressive | 1921 | |
Simcoe South | William Alves Boys | Conservative | 1912 | |
Timiskaming | Angus McDonald | Independent | 1920 | |
Toronto Centre | Edmund James Bristol | Conservative | 1905 | |
Toronto East | Edmond Baird Ryckman | Conservative | 1921 | |
Toronto North | Thomas Langton Church | Conservative | 1921 | |
Toronto South | Charles Sheard | Conservative | 1917 | |
Toronto West | Horatio Clarence Hocken | Conservative | 1917 | |
Victoria | John Jabez Thurston | Independent | 1921 | |
Waterloo North | William Daum Euler | Liberal | 1917 | |
Waterloo South | William Elliott | Progressive | 1921 | |
Welland | William Manly German | Liberal | 1921 | |
Wellington North | John Pritchard | Progressive | 1921 | |
Wellington South | Hugh Guthrie | Conservative | 1900 | |
Wentworth | Gordon Crooks Wilson | Conservative | 1911 | |
York East | Joseph Henry Harris | Conservative | 1921 | |
York North | William Lyon Mackenzie King (until appointed Prime Minister) | Liberal | 1908,[lower-alpha 6] 1919,[lower-alpha 7] 1921 | |
William Lyon Mackenzie King (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
York South | William Findlay Maclean | Independent Conservative | 1892 | |
York West | Henry Lumley Drayton | Conservative | 1919 |
Prince Edward Island
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
King's | James Joseph Hughes | Liberal | 1900, 1921 | |
Prince | Alfred Edgar MacLean | Liberal | 1921 | |
Queen's* | Donald Alexander Mackinnon | Liberal | 1900, 1921 | |
John Ewen Sinclair | Liberal | 1917 |
Quebec
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Argenteuil | Peter Robert McGibbon (died in office) | Liberal | 1917 | |
Charles Stewart (by-election of 28 February 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Bagot | Joseph Edmond Marcile | Liberal | 1898 | |
Beauce | Henri Sévérin Béland (until government appointment) | Liberal | 1902 | |
Henri Sévérin Béland (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Beauharnois | Louis Joseph Papineau | Liberal | 1908 | |
Bellechasse | Charles Alphonse Fournier | Liberal | 1917 | |
Berthier | Joseph-Charles-Théodore Gervais | Liberal | 1917 | |
Bonaventure | Charles Marcil | Liberal | 1900 | |
Brome | Andrew Ross McMaster | Liberal | 1917 | |
Chambly—Verchères | Joseph Archambault | Liberal | 1917 | |
Champlain | Arthur Lesieur Desaulniers | Liberal | 1917 | |
Charlevoix—Montmorency | Pierre-François Casgrain | Liberal | 1917 | |
Chicoutimi—Saguenay | Edmond Savard | Liberal | 1917 | |
Châteauguay—Huntingdon | James Alexander Robb (until 29 December 1921 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1908 | |
James Alexander Robb (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Compton | Aylmer Byron Hunt | Liberal | 1904, 1917 | |
Dorchester | Lucien Cannon | Liberal | 1917 | |
Drummond—Arthabaska | Napoléon Kemner Laflamme | Liberal | 1921 | |
Gaspé | Rodolphe Lemieux (†) | Liberal | 1896 | |
George-Étienne Cartier | Samuel William Jacobs | Liberal | 1917 | |
Hochelaga | Édouard-Charles St-Père | Liberal | 1921 | |
Hull | Joseph-Éloi Fontaine | Liberal | 1917 | |
Jacques Cartier | David Arthur Lafortune (died 19 October 1922) | Liberal | 1896 | |
Joseph-Théodule Rhéaume (by-election of 20 November 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Joliette | Jean-Joseph Denis | Liberal | 1917 | |
Kamouraska | Charles Adolphe Stein (until 5 May 1922 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1920 | |
Joseph Georges Bouchard (by-election of 15 May 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Labelle | Hyacinthe-Adélard Fortier | Liberal | 1917 | |
Laprairie—Napierville | Roch Lanctôt | Liberal | 1904 | |
L'Assomption—Montcalm | Paul-Arthur Séguin | Liberal | 1908 | |
Laurier—Outremont | Lomer Gouin (until 29 December 1921 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1921 | |
Lomer Gouin (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Laval—Two Mountains | Joseph Arthur Calixte Éthier | Liberal | 1896 | |
Lévis | Joseph Boutin Bourassa | Liberal | 1911 | |
L'Islet | Joseph-Fernand Fafard | Liberal | 1917 | |
Lotbinière | Thomas Vien | Liberal | 1917 | |
Maisonneuve | Clément Robitaille | Liberal | 1921 | |
Maskinongé | Eugène Desrochers | Liberal | 1921 | |
Matane | François Jean Pelletier | Liberal | 1917 | |
Mégantic | Lucien Turcotte Pacaud ‡ (until 26 October 1922 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1911 | |
Eusèbe Roberge (by-election of 20 November 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Missisquoi | William Frederic Kay | Liberal | 1911 | |
Montmagny | Joseph Bruno Aimé Miville Déchêne | Liberal | 1917 | |
Nicolet | Arthur Trahan (until 25 April 1923 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1917 | |
Joseph-Félix Descoteaux (by-election of 14 May 1923) | Liberal | 1923 | ||
Pontiac | Frank S. Cahill | Liberal | 1917 | |
Portneuf | Michel-Siméon Delisle | Liberal | 1900 | |
Quebec County | Henri-Edgar Lavigueur | Liberal | 1917 | |
Quebec East | Ernest Lapointe (until 3 January 1922 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1904 | |
Ernest Lapointe (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Quebec South | Charles Gavan Power | Liberal | 1917 | |
Quebec West | Georges Parent | Liberal | 1904,[lower-alpha 8] 1917 | |
Richelieu | Arthur Cardin (until 30 January 1924 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1911 | |
Arthur Cardin (by-election of 27 February 1924) | Liberal | |||
Richmond—Wolfe | Edmund William Tobin | Liberal | 1900 | |
Rimouski | Joseph-Émile-Stanislas-Émmanuel D'Anjou (until 19 July 1924 registrar appointment) | Liberal | 1917 | |
Eugène Fiset (by-election of 2 September 1924) | Liberal | 1924 | ||
St. Ann | Joseph Charles Walsh | Liberal | 1906, 1921 | |
St. Antoine | Walter George Mitchell (resigned 14 May 1924) | Liberal | 1921 | |
William James Hushion (by-election of 2 September 1924) | Liberal | 1924 | ||
St. Denis | Joseph-Arthur Denis | Liberal | 1921 | |
St. Hyacinthe—Rouville | René Morin | Liberal | 1921 | |
St. James | Fernand Rinfret | Liberal | 1920 | |
St. Johns—Iberville | Marie Joseph Demers (until 22 July 1922 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1906 | |
Aldéric-Joseph Benoit (by-election of 31 August 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
St. Lawrence—St. George | Herbert Meredith Marler | Liberal | 1921 | |
St. Mary | Hermas Deslauriers | Liberal | 1917 | |
Shefford | Georges Henri Boivin | Liberal | 1911 | |
Town of Sherbrooke | Francis N. McCrea | Liberal | 1911 | |
Stanstead | Willis Keith Baldwin | Liberal | 1917 | |
Terrebonne | Jules-Édouard Prévost | Liberal | 1917 | |
Three Rivers and St. Maurice | Jacques Bureau (until 3 January 1922 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1900 | |
Jacques Bureau (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Témiscouata | Charles Arthur Gauvreau (died 9 October 1924) | Liberal | 1897 | |
Jean-François Pouliot (by-election of 1 December 1924) | Liberal | 1924 | ||
Vaudreuil—Soulanges | Gustave Benjamin Boyer (until 11 March 1922 Senate appointment) | Liberal | 1904 | |
Joseph-Rodolphe Ouimet (by-election of 21 March 1922) | Liberal | 1922 | ||
Westmount—St. Henri | Paul Mercier | Liberal | 1921 | |
Wright | Romuald Montézuma Gendron | Liberal | 1921 | |
Yamaska | Aimé Boucher | Liberal | 1921 |
Saskatchewan
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Assiniboia | Oliver Robert Gould | Progressive | 1921 | |
Battleford | Thomas Henry McConica | Progressive | 1921 | |
Humboldt | Charles Wallace Stewart | Progressive | 1921 | |
Kindersley | Archibald M. Carmichael | Progressive | 1921 | |
Last Mountain | John Frederick Johnston | Progressive | 1917[lower-alpha 9] | |
Mackenzie | Milton Neil Campbell | Progressive | 1921 | |
Maple Creek | Neil Haman McTaggart | Progressive | 1921 | |
Moose Jaw | Robert Milton Johnson (until election voided 22 February 1923) | Progressive | 1921 | |
Edward Nicholas Hopkins (by-election of 10 April 1923) | Progressive | 1923 | ||
North Battleford | Claudius Charles Davies | Progressive | 1921 | |
Prince Albert | Andrew Knox | Progressive | 1917[lower-alpha 10] | |
Qu'Appelle | John Millar | Progressive | 1921 | |
Regina | William Richard Motherwell (until 3 January 1922 emoulment appointment) | Liberal | 1921 | |
William Richard Motherwell (by-election of 19 January 1922) | Liberal | |||
Saltcoats | Thomas Sales | Progressive | 1921 | |
Saskatoon | John Evans | Progressive | 1921 | |
Swift Current | Arthur John Lewis | Progressive | 1921 | |
Weyburn | John Morrison | Progressive | 1921 |
Yukon
Electoral district | Name | Party | First elected/previously elected | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Yukon | George Black | Conservative | 1921 |
By-elections
By-election | Date | Incumbent | Party | Winner | Party | Cause | Retained | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Témiscouata | December 1, 1924 | Charles Arthur Gauvreau | Liberal | Jean-François Pouliot | Liberal | Death | Yes | ||
Hastings West | November 25, 1924 | Edward Guss Porter | Conservative | Charles Edward Hanna | Liberal | Resignation in protest at the James Murdock-Home Bank incident.,[1][2] | No | ||
Yale | November 6, 1924 | John Armstrong MacKelvie | Conservative | Grote Stirling | Conservative | Death | Yes | ||
Northumberland | October 7, 1924 | John Morrissy | Liberal | William Bunting Snowball | Liberal | Death | Yes | ||
Rimouski | September 2, 1924 | Joseph-Émile-Stanislas-Émmanuel D'Anjou | Liberal | Eugène Fiset | Liberal | Appointed Registrar of Deeds for the County of Rimouski. | Yes | ||
St. Antoine | September 2, 1924 | Walter George Mitchell | Liberal | William James Hushion | Liberal | Resigned | Yes | ||
Richelieu | February 27, 1924 | Arthur Cardin | Liberal | Arthur Cardin | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Marine and Fisheries. | Yes | ||
Kent | December 20, 1923 | Auguste Théophile Léger | Liberal | Alexandre-Joseph Doucet | Conservative | Death | No | ||
Halifax | December 5, 1923 | Alexander Kenneth Maclean | Liberal | William Anderson Black | Conservative | Resignation. | No | ||
Winnipeg North | October 24, 1923 | Edward James McMurray | Liberal | Edward James McMurray | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Solicitor General of Canada. | Yes | ||
Renfrew South | September 6, 1923 | Thomas Andrew Low | Liberal | Thomas Andrew Low | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Trade and Commerce. | Yes | ||
Pictou | September 6, 1923 | Edward Mortimer Macdonald | Liberal | Edward Mortimer Macdonald | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of National Defence. | Yes | ||
North Cape Breton and Victoria | July 31, 1923 | Daniel Duncan McKenzie | Liberal | Fenwick Lionel Kelly | Liberal | Appointed a judge of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia | Yes | ||
Nicolet | May 14, 1923 | Arthur Trahan | Liberal | Joseph-Félix Descôteaux | Liberal | Appointed a judge of the Superior Court of Quebec | Yes | ||
Moose Jaw | April 10, 1923 | Robert Milton Johnson | Progressive | Edward Nicholas Hopkins | Progressive | Election declared void. | Yes | ||
Essex North | March 1, 1923 | William Costello Kennedy | Liberal | Albert Frederick Healy | Liberal | Death | Yes | ||
Halifax | December 4, 1922 | Edward Blackadder | Liberal | Robert Emmett Finn | Liberal | Death | Yes | ||
Lanark | December 4, 1922 | John Alexander Stewart | Conservative | Richard Franklin Preston | Conservative | Death | Yes | ||
Jacques Cartier | November 20, 1922 | David Arthur Lafortune | Liberal | Joseph-Théodule Rhéaume | Liberal | Death | Yes | ||
Mégantic | November 20, 1922 | Lucien Turcotte Pacaud | Liberal | Eusèbe Roberge | Liberal | Appointed Secretary to the Canadian High Commissioner to London. | Yes | ||
Gloucester | November 20, 1922 | Onésiphore Turgeon | Liberal | Jean George Robichaud | Liberal | Called to the Senate. | Yes | ||
St. Johns—Iberville | August 31, 1922 | Marie-Joseph Demers | Liberal | Aldéric-Joseph Benoit | Liberal | Resignation. | Yes | ||
Kamouraska | May 15, 1922 | Charles Adolphe Stein | Liberal | Joseph Georges Bouchard | Liberal | Appointed a judge of the Superior Court of Quebec. | Yes | ||
Vaudreuil-Soulanges | March 21, 1922 | Gustave Benjamin Boyer | Liberal | Joseph-Rodolphe Ouimet | Liberal | Called to the Senate. | Yes | ||
Kootenay East | March 14, 1922 | Robert Ethelbert Beattie | Liberal | James Horace King | Liberal | Resignation. | Yes | ||
Argenteuil | February 28, 1922 | Peter Robert McGibbon | Liberal | Charles Stewart | Liberal | Death | Yes | ||
Grenville | January 26, 1922 | Arza Clair Casselman | Conservative | Arthur Meighen | Conservative | Resignation to provide a seat for Meighen. | Yes | ||
Regina | January 19, 1922 | William Richard Motherwell | Liberal | William Richard Motherwell | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Agriculture . | Yes | ||
Beauce | January 19, 1922 | Henri Sévérin Béland | Liberal | Henri Sévérin Béland | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Soldiers' Civil Re-establishment. | Yes | ||
Three Rivers and St. Maurice | January 19, 1922 | Jacques Bureau | Liberal | Jacques Bureau | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Customs and Excise. | Yes | ||
Westmorland | January 19, 1922 | Arthur Bliss Copp | Liberal | Arthur Bliss Copp | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Secretary of State for Canada. | Yes | ||
Shelburne and Queen's | January 19, 1922 | William Stevens Fielding | Liberal | William Stevens Fielding | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Finance. | Yes | ||
Laurier—Outremont | January 19, 1922 | Lomer Gouin | Liberal | Lomer Gouin | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Justice. | Yes | ||
Essex South | January 19, 1922 | George Perry Graham | Liberal | George Perry Graham | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Militia and Defence and Minister of Naval Service. | Yes | ||
Essex North | January 19, 1922 | William Costello Kennedy | Liberal | William Costello Kennedy | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Railways and Canals. | Yes | ||
York North | January 19, 1922 | William Lyon Mackenzie King | Liberal | William Lyon Mackenzie King | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Prime Minister. | Yes | ||
Quebec East | January 19, 1922 | Ernest Lapointe | Liberal | Ernest Lapointe | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Marine and Fisheries . | Yes | ||
North Cape Breton and Victoria | January 19, 1922 | Daniel Duncan McKenzie | Liberal | Daniel Duncan McKenzie | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Solicitor General. | Yes | ||
Kent | January 19, 1922 | Archibald McCoig | Liberal | James Murdock | Liberal | Called to the Senate to provide a seat for Murdock | Yes | ||
Russell | January 19, 1922 | Charles Murphy | Liberal | Charles Murphy | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Postmaster General. | Yes | ||
Châteauguay—Huntingdon | January 19, 1922 | James Robb | Liberal | James Robb | Liberal | Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Trade and Commerce . | Yes |
Notes
- elected as a Unionist
- elected as a United Farmers
- Brockville
- Renfrew South
- Portage la Prairie (Manitoba)
- Waterloo North
- Prince (Prince Edward Island)
- Montmorency
- elected as a Unionist
- elected as a Unionist
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. "14th 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.
Succession
- "The Vanquished". The Toronto Daily Star. 26 November 1924. p. 3. ProQuest 1436781942.
- "West Hasting Will Vote November 25". The Border Cities Star. Windsor, Ontario. 10 October 1924. p. 5. Retrieved 21 June 2020.