30th Quebec Legislature
The 30th National Assembly of Quebec was the provincial legislature in Quebec, Canada that was elected in the 1973 Quebec general election. It sat for four sessions, from 22 November 1973 to 22 December 1973; from 14 March 1974 to 28 December 1974; from 18 March 1975 to 19 December 1975; and from 16 March 1976 to 18 October 1976. The governing Quebec Liberal Party was led by Premier Robert Bourassa; the Parti Québécois formed the official opposition for the first time, but since party leader René Lévesque did not have a seat, the leader of the opposition was Jacques-Yvan Morin.
Seats per political party
- After the 1973 elections
Affiliation | Members | |
Parti libéral du Québec | 102 | |
Parti Québécois | 6 | |
Parti créditiste | 2 | |
Total |
110 | |
Government Majority |
96 |
Member list
This was the list of members of the National Assembly of Quebec that were elected in the 1973 election:
Name | Party | Riding | |
---|---|---|---|
Roger Houde | Libéral | Abitibi-Est | |
Jean-Hugues Boutin | Libéral | Abitibi-Ouest | |
Yves Tardif | Libéral | Anjou | |
Zoel Saindon | Libéral | Argenteuil | |
Gilles Massé | Libéral | Arthabaska | |
Denys Sylvain | Libéral | Beauce-Nord | |
Fabien Roy | Parti créditiste | Beauce-Sud | |
Gérard Cadieux | Libéral | Beauharnois | |
Pierre Mercier | Libéral | Bellechasse | |
Michel Denis | Libéral | Berthier | |
Gérard D. Levesque | Libéral | Bonaventure | |
Lise Bacon | Libéral | Bourassa | |
Jean Boudreault | Libéral | Bourget | |
Glendon Brown | Libéral | Brome-Missisquoi | |
Guy Saint-Pierre | Libéral | Chambly | |
Normand Toupin | Libéral | Champlain | |
André Harvey | Libéral | Charlesbourg | |
Raymond Mailloux | Libéral | Charlevoix | |
George Kennedy | Libéral | Châteauguay | |
Bernard Lachapelle | Libéral | Chauveau | |
Marc-André Bédard | Parti Québécois | Chicoutimi | |
Jean Bienvenue | Libéral | Crémazie | |
Victor Goldbloom | Libéral | D'Arcy-McGee | |
Jean-Paul L'Allier | Libéral | Deux-Montagnes | |
Alfred Bossé | Libéral | Dorion | |
Robert Malouin | Libéral | Drummond | |
Ghislain Harvey | Libéral | Dubuc | |
Donald Gallienne | Libéral | Duplessis | |
Gilles Houde | Libéral | Fabre | |
Henri Lecours | Libéral | Frontenac | |
Guy Fortier | Libéral | Gaspé | |
Michel Gratton | Libéral | Gatineau | |
Jean M. Beauregard | Libéral | Gouin | |
Oswald Parent | Libéral | Hull | |
Kenneth Fraser | Libéral | Huntingdon | |
Jacques Tremblay | Libéral | Iberville | |
Louis-Philippe Lacroix | Libéral | Îles-de-la-Madeleine | |
Noël Saint-Germain | Libéral | Jacques-Cartier | |
Aimé Brisson | Libéral | Jeanne-Mance | |
Raymond Garneau | Libéral | Jean-Talon | |
Jean-Claude Boutin | Libéral | Johnson | |
Robert Quenneville | Libéral | Joliette-Montcalm | |
Gérald Harvey | Libéral | Jonquière | |
Jean-Marie Pelletier | Libéral | Kamouraska-Témiscouata | |
François Cloutier | Libéral | L'Acadie | |
Roger Pilote | Libéral | Lac-Saint-Jean | |
Marcel Léger | Parti Québécois | LaFontaine | |
André Déom | Libéral | Laporte | |
Paul Berthiaume | Libéral | La Prairie | |
Jean Perreault | Libéral | L'Assomption | |
Roger Lapointe | Libéral | Laurentides-Labelle | |
André Marchand | Libéral | Laurier | |
Jean-Noël Lavoie | Libéral | Laval | |
Prudent Carpentier | Libéral | Laviolette | |
Vincent F. Chagnon | Libéral | Lévis | |
Fernand Houde | Libéral | Limoilou | |
Georges J.P. Massicotte | Libéral | Lotbinière | |
Gaston Desjardins | Libéral | Louis-Hébert | |
Robert Burns | Parti Québécois | Maisonneuve | |
Fernand Lalonde | Libéral | Marguerite-Bourgeoys | |
Yvon Picotte | Libéral | Maskinongé | |
Marc-Yvan Côté | Libéral | Matane | |
Bona Arsenault | Libéral | Matapédia | |
Omer Dionne | Libéral | Mégantic-Compton | |
Robert Bourassa | Libéral | Mercier | |
Bernard Lachance | Libéral | Mille-Îles | |
Julien Giasson | Libéral | Montmagny-L'Islet | |
Marcel Bédard | Libéral | Montmorency | |
John Ciaccia | Libéral | Mont-Royal | |
Benjamin Faucher | Libéral | Nicolet-Yamaska | |
William Tetley | Libéral | Notre-Dame-de-Grâce | |
Georges Vaillancourt | Libéral | Orford | |
Jérôme Choquette | Libéral | Outremont | |
Mark Assad | Libéral | Papineau | |
Arthur E. Séguin | Libéral | Pointe-Claire | |
Jean-Guy Larivière | Libéral | Pontiac-Témiscamingue | |
Michel Pagé | Libéral | Portneuf | |
Bernard A. Parent | Libéral | Prévost | |
Claude Simard | Libéral | Richelieu | |
Yvon Vallières | Libéral | Richmond | |
Claude St-Hilaire | Libéral | Rimouski | |
Paul Lafrance | Libéral | Rivière-du-Loup | |
Jean Cournoyer | Libéral | Robert-Baldwin | |
Robert Lamontagne | Libéral | Roberval | |
Gilles Bellemare | Libéral | Rosemont | |
Camil Samson | Parti créditiste | Rouyn-Noranda | |
Lucien Lessard | Parti Québécois | Saguenay | |
Georges Springate | Libéral | Saint-Anne | |
Jean-Claude Malépart | Libéral | Sainte-Marie | |
Gérard Déziel | Libéral | Saint-François | |
Gérard Shanks | Libéral | Saint-Henri | |
Fernand Cornellier | Libéral | Saint-Hyacinthe | |
Claude Charron | Parti Québécois | Saint-Jacques | |
Jacques Veilleux | Libéral | Saint-Jean | |
Claude Forget | Libéral | Saint-Laurent | |
Harry Blank | Libéral | Saint-Louis | |
Marcel Bérard | Libéral | Saint-Maurice | |
Jacques-Yvan Morin | Parti Québécois | Sauvé | |
Richard Verreault | Libéral | Shefford | |
Jean-Paul Pépin | Libéral | Sherbrooke | |
Guy Leduc | Libéral | Taillon | |
Irénée Bonnier | Libéral | Taschereau | |
Denis Hardy | Libéral | Terrebonne | |
Guy Bacon | Libéral | Trois-Rivières | |
Fernand Dufour | Libéral | Vanier | |
Paul Phaneuf | Libéral | Vaudreuil-Soulanges | |
Marcel Ostiguy | Libéral | Verchères | |
Lucien Caron | Libéral | Verdun | |
Fernand Picard | Libéral | Viau | |
Thomas Kevin Drummond | Libéral | Westmount |
Other elected MNAs
Other MNAs were elected in by-elections during the mandate
- Maurice Bellemare, Union Nationale, Johnson, August 28, 1974 [1]
Cabinet Ministers
- Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Robert Bourassa
- Deputy Premier: Gérard D. Levesque
- Agriculture: Normand Toupin (1973–1975), Thomas Kevin Drummond (1975–1976)
- Labour and Workforce: Jean Cournoyer (1973–1975), Gerald Harvey (1975–1976)
- Public Works: Maurice Tessier (1970, 1973), Bernard Pinard (1970–1973)
- Public Works and Provisioning: Raymond Mailloux (1973–1975), William Tetley (1975–1976)
- Public Office: Oswald Parent
- Cultural Affairs: Denis Hardy (1973–1975), Jean-Paul L'Allier (1975–1976)
- Immigration: Jean Bienvenue (1973–1976), Lise Bacon (1976)
- Social Affairs: Claude Castonguay (1973)
- Education: François Cloutier (1973–1975), Jerome Choquette (1975), Raymond Garneau (1975–1976), Jean Bienvenue (1976)
- Lands and Forests: Thomas Kevin Drummond (1973–1975), Normand Toupin (1975–1976)
- Tourism, Hunting and Fishing: Claude Simard
- Natural Resources: Jean-Gilles Massé (1973–1975), Jean Cournoyer (1975–1976)
- Transportation: Raymond Mailloux
- Communications: Jean-Paul L'Allier (1973–1975), Denis Hardy (1975–1976)
- Municipal Affairs and Environment: Victor Goldbloom
- Intergovernmental Affairs: Gérard D. Levesque (1973–1975), Francois Cloutier (1975–1976), Robert Bourassa (1976)
- Industry and Commerce: Guy Saint-Pierre
- Financial Institutions, Companies and Cooperatives: William Tetley (1973–1975)
- Consumers, Cooperatives and Financial : Lise Bacon (1975–1976)
- Justice: Jérôme Choquette (1973–1975), Gérard D. Levesque (1975–1976)
- Solicitor General: Fernand Lalonde (1975–1976)
- Finances and President of the Treasury Board: Raymond Garneau
- Revenu: Gérald Harvey (1973–1975), Robert Quenneville (1975–1976)
- State Ministers: Paul Phaneuf, Robert Quenneville (1973–1975), Lise Bacon (1973–1975), Paul Berthiaume, Bernard Lachapelle, Fernand Lalonde, Oswald Parent, Julien Giasson (1975–1976), Georges Vaillancourt
References
- Notes
- "QuébecPolitique.com | Élections dans Johnson". www.quebecpolitique.com. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08.
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