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List of female first ministers in Canada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Map showing the number of female Premiers and Prime Ministers elected across the provinces and federally throughout their histories.
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A total of sixteen women have served as the first minister of a Canadian government. Of these, one was prime minister of the country, eleven were premiers of a province and four were premiers of a territory. There are two current first ministers in Canada who are women: Danielle Smith, 19th premier of Alberta, who assumed office on 11 October 2022, and Susan Holt, 35th premier of New Brunswick, who assumed office on 2 November 2024.

Women have been eligible to become premier since they first gained the right to vote, beginning in 1916 in Manitoba and extending to all jurisdictions when Quebec allowed women to vote in 1940. Women soon began to be appointed to cabinet positions, starting with Mary Ellen Smith in British Columbia in 1921, but it was not until decades later that women began to serve as leaders of a major party. Hilda Watson became the first woman to lead her party to victory in a general election in 1978. However, Watson did not win her riding so her male successor became the first Government Leader of the Yukon. The first female premier was Rita Johnston in 1991 in British Columbia. Today, every Canadian jurisdiction has had at least one female premier except for Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan.

The most women first ministers at any one time was six, for 277 days from 11 February to 15 November 2013. These six included the premiers of Canada's four most populated provinces; during that time, approximately 88% of Canadians had a female premier. The longest-serving female premier is Christy Clark, who served as premier of British Columbia for over six years, from 14 March 2011 to 18 July 2017.

Four of the sixteen women first ministers won the title by defeating an incumbent first minister in a general election, while three were chosen by a consensus of their legislative assembly. The rest won the title through a party leadership race between elections, although several of those went on to win a general election as the incumbent premier. No woman premier in Canadian history has ever been elected to more than one mandate. Christy Clark came closest by winning the most seats in the 2017 election, which would have been her second mandate, but she was not successful in forming government as the BC Liberals were defeated in a confidence vote shortly after.[1][2]

First ministers

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Portrait Name Jurisdiction Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party Leadership history and electoral mandates
Rita Johnston British Columbia 2 April 1991 5 November 1991 217 days British Columbia Social Credit Party Named as interim party leader—and therefore premier—in 1991 upon the resignation of Premier Bill Vander Zalm in the Fantasy Gardens scandal. Confirmed as party leader in the 1991 party leadership election. Her party lost power in the following general election.
Nellie Cournoyea Northwest Territories 14 November 1991 22 November 1995 4 years, 8 days Nonpartisan (consensus government) Chosen as the premier of the nonpartisan government after the 1991 general election for one term.
Catherine Callbeck Prince Edward Island 25 January 1993 9 October 1996 3 years, 258 days Prince Edward Island Liberal Party Chosen as party leader—and therefore premier—by the 1993 party leadership election upon the retirement of Premier Joe Ghiz. She then led her party to win the 1993 general election. She was the first provincial female party leader to lead a party to election or re-election. She resigned after dropping in the polls.
Kim Campbell Canada
(Federal)
25 June 1993 4 November 1993 132 days Progressive Conservative Party of Canada Chosen as party leader—and therefore prime minister—by the 1993 party leadership election upon the retirement of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Her party lost power in the following general election.
Pat Duncan Yukon 5 June 2000 5 November 2002 2 years, 153 days Yukon Liberal Party Named party leader while her party was the third party opposition in 1998. Became leader of the opposition partway through the 29th Yukon Legislature. Led her party to victory and thereby became premier in the 2000 general election. She was the first woman to defeat a sitting premier. Her party lost power in the following general election.
Eva Aariak Nunavut 19 November 2008 19 November 2013 5 years, 0 days Nonpartisan (consensus government) Chosen as the premier of the nonpartisan government after the 2008 general election for one term.
Kathy Dunderdale Newfoundland and Labrador 3 December 2010 24 January 2014 3 years, 52 days Progressive Conservative Party of Newfoundland and Labrador Chosen as interim party leader—and therefore premier—in 2010 upon the retirement of Premier Danny Williams after serving as his deputy premier. Her party leadership was confirmed at the 2011 party leadership election. She then led her party to victory in the 2011 general election. She resigned after dropping in the polls.
Christy Clark British Columbia 14 March 2011 18 July 2017 6 years, 126 days British Columbia Liberal Party Chosen as party leader—and therefore premier— by the 2011 party leadership election upon the retirement of Premier Gordon Campbell. Led her party to victory in the 2013 general election. She won a plurality of seats in the 2017 general election, but immediately lost a confidence vote and resigned. As of 2024, she is the female premier who held office the longest.
Alison Redford Alberta 7 October 2011 23 March 2014 2 years, 167 days Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta Chosen as party leader—and therefore premier— by the 2011 party leadership election upon the retirement of Premier Ed Stelmach. Then led her party to victory in the 2012 general election. She resigned after dropping in the polls due to a number of damaging scandals.[3][4]
Pauline Marois Quebec 19 September 2012 23 April 2014 1 year, 216 days Parti Québécois Chosen as party leader while her party was the third party opposition by the 2007 party leadership election. Led her party to become the official opposition in the 2008 general election and later led her party to victory—and thereby became premier—in the 2012 general election. She was the first female party leader to defeat a sitting premier in a province, and the first to achieve victory without having previously inherited premiership from a previous provincial party leader. Her party lost power in the following general election.
Kathleen Wynne Ontario 11 February 2013 29 June 2018 5 years, 138 days Ontario Liberal Party Chosen as party leader—and therefore premier—by the 2013 party leadership election upon the retirement of Premier Dalton McGuinty. Then led her party to victory in the 2014 general election. Lost re-election in the 2018 general election.
Wynne was also the first lesbian woman to serve as a premier in Canada.
Rachel Notley Alberta 24 May 2015 30 April 2019 3 years, 341 days Alberta New Democratic Party Chosen as party leader while her party was the fourth party in opposition by the 2014 party leadership election. Led her party to victory in the 2015 general election. Defeated in the 2019 general election and became Leader of the Opposition.
Caroline Cochrane Northwest Territories 24 October 2019 8 December 2023 4 years, 45 days Nonpartisan (consensus government) Chosen as the premier of the nonpartisan government after the 2019 general election. Did not run for a second term.
Heather Stefanson Manitoba 2 November 2021 18 October 2023 1 year, 350 days Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba Chosen as party leader—and premier—by the 2021 party leadership election upon the retirement of Premier Brian Pallister. Her party was defeated in the 2023 Manitoba general election.
Danielle Smith Alberta 11 October 2022 incumbent 2 years, 302 days United Conservative Party of Alberta Chosen as party leader—and premier—by the 2022 United Conservative Party leadership election upon the resignation of Jason Kenney. She was re-elected in the 2023 Alberta general election.
Susan Holt New Brunswick 2 November 2024 incumbent 275 days New Brunswick Liberal Association Chosen as party leader while her party was the official opposition by the 2022 party leadership election. Led her party to victory in the 2024 general election.

Timeline of female first ministers

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Susan HoltDanielle SmithHeather StefansonCaroline CochraneRachel NotleyKathleen WynnePauline MaroisAlison RedfordChristy ClarkKathy DunderdaleEva AariakPat DuncanKim CampbellCatherine CallbeckNellie CournoyeaRita Johnston

Opposition leaders

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The following women have served as leaders of political parties represented in the House of Commons or a provincial legislature. Those women who served as both opposition leader and first minister at some point in their careers are listed in the above section.

Federal

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Audrey McLaughlin 5 December 1989 14 October 1995 5 years, 313 days New Democratic Party
Alexa McDonough 14 October 1995 25 January 2003 7 years, 103 days New Democratic Party
Elsie Wayne 2 April 1998 14 November 1998 226 days Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
Deborah Grey 27 March 2000 8 July 2000 103 days Canadian Alliance
Elizabeth May 26 August 2006 incumbent 18 years, 343 days Green Party of Canada
Vivian Barbot 11 May 2011 11 December 2011 214 days Bloc Québécois
Nycole Turmel 22 August 2011 24 March 2012 215 days New Democratic Party
Rona Ambrose 5 November 2015 27 May 2017 1 year, 203 days Conservative Party of Canada
Martine Ouellet 14 March 2017 11 June 2018 1 year, 89 days Bloc Québécois
Jo-Ann Roberts 4 November 2019 3 October 2020 334 days Green Party of Canada
Annamie Paul 3 October 2020 14 November 2021 1 year, 42 days Green Party of Canada
Candice Bergen 2 February 2022 10 September 2022 220 days Conservative Party of Canada

Alberta

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Bettie Hewes 1994 1994 Alberta Liberal Party
Pam Barrett 8 September 1996 2 February 2000 3 years, 178 days Alberta New Democratic Party
Nancy MacBeth 18 April 1998 15 March 2001 2 years, 331 days Alberta Liberal Party
Eleanor Maroes 2005 2005 Alberta Alliance Party
Heather Forsyth 22 December 2014 28 March 2015 96 days Wildrose Party

British Columbia

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Grace McCarthy 6 November 1993 May 1994 176 days British Columbia Social Credit Party
Joy MacPhail 16 May 2001 23 November 2003 2 years, 191 days British Columbia New Democratic Party
Carole James 23 November 2003 20 January 2011 7 years, 58 days British Columbia New Democratic Party
Jane Sterk 2007 2013 Green Party of British Columbia
Dawn Black 20 January 2011 17 April 2011 87 days British Columbia New Democratic Party
Sonia Furstenau 14 September 2020 28 January 2025 4 years, 167 days Green Party of British Columbia
Shirley Bond 23 November 2020 5 February 2022 1 year, 74 days British Columbia Liberal Party

Manitoba

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Sharon Carstairs 4 March 1984 5 June 1993 9 years, 93 days Manitoba Liberal Party
Ginny Hasselfield 19 October 1996 17 October 1998 1 year, 363 days Manitoba Liberal Party
Rana Bokhari 26 October 2013 24 September 2016 2 years, 334 days Manitoba Liberal Party
Flor Marcelino 7 May 2016 16 September 2017 1 year, 132 days New Democratic Party of Manitoba
Judy Klassen 21 October 2016 13 June 2017 235 days Manitoba Liberal Party
Cindy Lamoureux 17 October 2023 incumbent 1 year, 291 days Manitoba Liberal Party

New Brunswick

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Shirley Dysart 1985 4 May 1985 New Brunswick Liberal Association
Elizabeth Weir 1991 2003 New Brunswick New Democratic Party
Susan Holt 2023 2024 New Brunswick Liberal Association

Newfoundland and Labrador

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Lynn Verge 29 April 1995 1996 Progressive Conservative Party of Newfoundland and Labrador
Lorraine Michael 28 May 2006 7 March 2015 283 days Newfoundland and Labrador New Democratic Party
Yvonne Jones 13 November 2007 14 August 2011 3 years, 274 days Liberal Party of Newfoundland and Labrador
Alison Coffin 5 March 2019 19 October 2021 2 years, 228 days Newfoundland and Labrador New Democratic Party

Nova Scotia

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Alexa McDonough 16 November 1980 19 November 1994 14 years, 3 days Nova Scotia New Democratic Party
Helen MacDonald 17 July 2000 24 April 2001 281 days Nova Scotia New Democratic Party
Karen Casey 2009 2010 Progressive Conservative Association of Nova Scotia
Maureen MacDonald 23 November 2013 27 February 2016 2 years, 96 days Nova Scotia New Democratic Party
Karla MacFarlane 24 January 2018 27 October 2018 276 days Progressive Conservative Association of Nova Scotia
Claudia Chender 25 June 2022 incumbent 3 years, 40 days Nova Scotia New Democratic Party

Ontario

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Lyn McLeod 1992 1996 Ontario Liberal Party
Andrea Horwath 7 March 2009 28 June 2022 13 years, 113 days Ontario New Democratic Party
Marit Stiles 4 February 2023 incumbent 2 years, 181 days Ontario New Democratic Party
Bonnie Crombie 2 December 2023 incumbent 1 year, 245 days Ontario Liberal Party

Prince Edward Island

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Sharon Cameron 19 November 2022 6 April 2023 138 days Prince Edward Island Liberal Party
Karla Bernard 21 July 2023 7 June 2025 1 year, 321 days Green Party of Prince Edward Island

Quebec

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Monique Gagnon-Tremblay 2 March 1998 30 April 1998 59 days Quebec Liberal Party
Louise Harel 6 June 2005 15 November 2005 162 days Parti Québécois
Françoise David 4 February 2006 19 January 2017 10 years, 350 days Québec solidaire
Manon Massé 19 January 2017 26 November 2023 6 years, 311 days Québec solidaire
Dominique Anglade 11 May 2020 10 November 2022 2 years, 183 days Quebec Liberal Party
Émilise Lessard-Therrien 26 November 2023 29 April 2024 155 days Québec solidaire
Christine Labrie 2 May 2024 16 November 2024 198 days Québec solidaire
Ruba Ghazal 16 November 2024 incumbent 261 days Québec solidaire

Saskatchewan

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Lynda Haverstock 2 April 1989 12 November 1995 6 years, 224 days Liberal Party of Saskatchewan
Nicole Sarauer 20 June 2017 3 March 2018 256 days New Democratic Party of Saskatchewan
Carla Beck 26 June 2022 incumbent 3 years, 39 days New Democratic Party of Saskatchewan

Yukon

[edit]
Portrait Name Date assumed office Date departed office Duration Political party
Hilda Watson 1978 1979 Yukon Progressive Conservative Party
Elizabeth Hanson 26 September 2009 5 May 2019 9 years, 221 days Yukon New Democratic Party
Stacey Hassard 17 November 2016 23 May 2020 3 years, 188 days Yukon Party
Kate White 4 May 2019 incumbent 6 years, 92 days Yukon New Democratic Party

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Paas-Lang, Christian (17 April 2019). "Rachel Notley the latest female premier who failed to win a second mandate. What's going on?". National Post. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  2. ^ McQuigge, Michelle (17 April 2019). "Notley's loss raises questions about disappearance of female premiers". CTV News. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  3. ^ Commisso, Christina (19 March 2014). "Alison Redford's approval rating plunges to 18 per cent: poll". CTV News. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  4. ^ Mason, Gary (19 March 2014). "Party infighting, low poll numbers led to Alberta Premier's resignation". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 17 February 2021.