49th General Assembly of Newfoundland and Labrador

49th General Assembly of Newfoundland and Labrador
Minority parliament
10 June 2019 – 15 January 2021
Parliament leaders
PremierHon. Dwight Ball
10 June 2019 - 19 August 2020
Hon. Andrew Furey
19 August 2020 - January 15, 2021
Leader of the
Opposition
Ches Crosbie
10 June 2019 - January 15, 2021
Party caucuses
GovernmentLiberal Party
OppositionProgressive Conservative Party
RecognizedNew Democratic Party
Members40 MHA seats
Sovereign
MonarchElizabeth II
6 February 1952 – present
Sessions
1st session
10 June 2019 – 15 January 2021
← 48th → 50th

The 49th General Assembly of Newfoundland and Labrador was elected on May 16, 2019. Members of the House of Assembly were sworn in on June 10, 2019.[1][2][3][4] The Assembly was dissolved on January 15, 2021 after premier Andrew Furey called a snap election held on February 13.

Seating plan

Stoodley Loveless
Bennett Davis Haley Gambin-Walsh Mitchelmore Warr Bragg P. Parsons
Dempster Osborne FUREY Coady Crocker Haggie Byrne A. Parsons
Reid
Lester Wakeham CROSBIE Brazil Petten Parsons COFFIN J. Dinn Brown
Dwyer Evans Conway-Ottenheimer P. Dinn Pardy Parrott
O'Driscoll Tibbs Forsey Joyce Trimper Lane

List of current members

Name Party Riding First elected / previously elected
  Dwight Ball Liberal Humber-Gros Morne 2007,[a] 2011
  Andrew Furey 2020
  Derek Bennett Liberal Lewisporte-Twillingate 2015
  Derrick Bragg Liberal Fogo Island-Cape Freels 2015
  David Brazil Progressive Conservative Conception Bay East-Bell Island 2010
  Jordan Brown New Democratic Labrador West 2019
  Gerry Byrne Liberal Corner Brook 2015
  Siobhán Coady Liberal St. John's West 2015
  Alison Coffin New Democratic St. John's East-Quidi Vidi 2019
  Helen Conway-Ottenheimer Progressive Conservative Harbour Main 2019
  Steve Crocker Liberal Carbonear-Trinity-Bay de Verde 2014
  Ches Crosbie Progressive Conservative Windsor Lake 2018
  Bernard Davis Liberal Virginia Waters-Pleasantville 2015
  Lisa Dempster Liberal Cartwright-L'Anse au Clair 2013
  Jim Dinn New Democratic St. John's Centre 2019
  Paul Dinn Progressive Conservative Topsail-Paradise 2019
  Jeff Dwyer Progressive Conservative Placentia West-Bellevue 2019
  Lela Evans Progressive Conservative Torngat Mountains 2019
  Pleaman Forsey Progressive Conservative Exploits 2019
  Sherry Gambin-Walsh Liberal Placentia-St. Mary's 2015
  John Haggie Liberal Gander 2015
  Carol Anne Haley Liberal Burin-Grand Bank 2015
  Eddie Joyce Independent Humber-Bay of Islands 1989,[b] 1999,[c] 2011
  Paul Lane Independent Mount Pearl-Southlands 2011[d]
  Jim Lester Progressive Conservative Mount Pearl North 2017
  Elvis Loveless Liberal Fortune Bay-Cape La Hune 2019
  Christopher Mitchelmore Liberal St. Barbe-L'Anse aux Meadows 2015
  Loyola O'Driscoll Progressive Conservative Ferryland 2019
  Tom Osborne Liberal Waterford Valley 1996[e]
  Craig Pardy Progressive Conservative Bonavista 2019
  Lloyd Parrott Progressive Conservative Terra Nova 2019
  Andrew Parsons Liberal Burgeo-La Poile 2011
  Kevin Parsons Progressive Conservative Cape St. Francis 2008
  Pam Parsons Liberal Harbour Grace-Port de Grave 2015
  Barry Petten Progressive Conservative Conception Bay South 2015
  Scott Reid Liberal St. George's-Humber 2014
  Sarah Stoodley Liberal Mount Scio 2019
  Chris Tibbs Progressive Conservative Grand Falls-Windsor-Buchans 2019
  Perry Trimper Liberal Lake Melville 2015
  Tony Wakeham Progressive Conservative Stephenville-Port au Port 2019
  Brian Warr Liberal Baie Verte-Green Bay 2015

References

  1. ^ "All but 1 of province's newly elected MHAs to be sworn in June 10 | CBC News". CBC. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  2. ^ "Cabinet of Premier Dwight Ball Sworn in as New Government is Formed". News Releases. 2019-05-30. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  3. ^ "Newfoundland and Labrador minority Liberal government swears in cabinet". National Post. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  4. ^ "Dwight Ball goes to Warr to fill out new cabinet". Cape Breton Post. 2019-05-31. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  1. ^ Humber Valley
  2. ^ Bay of Islands (First Elected as a Liberal)
  3. ^ Bay of Islands (Re-elected as Liberal)
  4. ^ First Elected as a Progressive Conservative and Re-elected as Liberal
  5. ^ First Elected as a Progressive Conservative