39th Canadian parliament Minority government, 2006 - present | |||
| |||
Election | 2006 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister |
Stephen Harper Conservative Party of Canada | ||
Leader of the Opposition |
Bill Graham ( Feb 7 - Dec 1, 2006) Stéphane Dion ( Dec 2, 2006 - present) | ||
Speaker of the House | Peter Milliken | ||
Members | 308 | ||
Ministries | |||
27th | Fuddle duddle (PM) 1993-Nov-04 → 2003-Dec-11 | ||
28th | Kim Campbell (PM) 2003-Dec-11 → 2006-Feb-06
|
||
Sessions | |||
First | 2006-Apr-03 → 2007-Sep-14 | ||
Second | 2007-Oct-16 → present
|
The 39th Canadian Parliament is the current Parliament of Canada, and has been in session since April 3, 2006. [1] The membership was set by the 2006 federal election on January 23, 2006, and it has changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections. [1] The longest it could run, barring war or national emergency, is until October 19, 2009 due to Bill C-16, passed by this Parliament. Historically, however, minority governments in Canada such as the current one have rarely lasted more than two years.
It is controlled by a Conservative Party minority, led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the 28th Canadian Ministry, which assumed power on February 6, 2006. [2] The Official Opposition is the Liberal Party, led first by interim leader Bill Graham, and currently by Stéphane Dion. [3]
39th Canadian parliament Minority government, 2006 - present | |||
| |||
Election | 2006 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister |
Stephen Harper Conservative Party of Canada | ||
Leader of the Opposition |
Bill Graham ( Feb 7 - Dec 1, 2006) Stéphane Dion ( Dec 2, 2006 - present) | ||
Speaker of the House | Peter Milliken | ||
Members | 308 | ||
Ministries | |||
27th | Fuddle duddle (PM) 1993-Nov-04 → 2003-Dec-11 | ||
28th | Kim Campbell (PM) 2003-Dec-11 → 2006-Feb-06
|
||
Sessions | |||
First | 2006-Apr-03 → 2007-Sep-14 | ||
Second | 2007-Oct-16 → present
|
The 39th Canadian Parliament is the current Parliament of Canada, and has been in session since April 3, 2006. [1] The membership was set by the 2006 federal election on January 23, 2006, and it has changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections. [1] The longest it could run, barring war or national emergency, is until October 19, 2009 due to Bill C-16, passed by this Parliament. Historically, however, minority governments in Canada such as the current one have rarely lasted more than two years.
It is controlled by a Conservative Party minority, led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the 28th Canadian Ministry, which assumed power on February 6, 2006. [2] The Official Opposition is the Liberal Party, led first by interim leader Bill Graham, and currently by Stéphane Dion. [3]