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26th Quebec Legislature

From Wikipedia - Reading time: 6 min

The 26th Legislative Assembly of Quebec was the political provincial legislature in Quebec, Canada that was elected in the 1960 Quebec general election. It sat from 20 September 1960 to 22 September 1960, from 10 November 1960 to 10 June 1961, and from 9 January 1962 to 19 September 1962. The Quebec Liberal Party led by Jean Lesage began the Quiet Revolution reforms. The Union Nationale, which had previously governed for more than 15 years, formed the official opposition under successive interim leaders Yves Prévost and Antonio Talbot, and then under Daniel Johnson, Sr. The Legislature lasted only two years as Lesage called the 1962 election as a referendum for the nationalization of hydroelectricity under Hydro-Québec.

Seats per political party

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Affiliation Members
Liberal 51
Union Nationale 43
Independent 1
 Total
95
 Government Majority
8

Member list

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This was the list of members of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec that were elected in the 1960 election:

Name Party Riding
  Lucien Cliche Libéral Abitibi-Est
  Alcide Courcy Libéral Abitibi-Ouest
  William McOuat Cottingham Union Nationale Argenteuil
  Albert Morissette Libéral Arthabaska
  Daniel Johnson Union Nationale Bagot
  Fabien Poulin Libéral Beauce
  Edgar Hébert Union Nationale Beauharnois
  Gustave Plante Libéral Bellechasse
  Azellus Lavallée Union Nationale Berthier
  Gérard D. Levesque Libéral Bonaventure
  Jean Meunier Libéral Bourget
  Glendon Brown Libéral Brome
  Robert Théberge Libéral Chambly
  Maurice Bellemare Union Nationale Champlain
  Arthur Leclerc Union Nationale Charlevoix
  Joseph-Maurice Laberge Union Nationale Châteauguay
  Antonio Talbot Union Nationale Chicoutimi
  Claude-Gilles Gosselin Union Nationale Compton
  Gaston Binette Libéral Deux-Montagnes
  Joseph-Damase Bégin Union Nationale Dorchester
  Bernard Pinard Libéral Drummond
  Henri-Laurier Coiteux Libéral Duplessis
  Éloi Guillemette Union Nationale Frontenac
  Claude Jourdain Libéral Gaspé-Nord
  Camille-Eugène Pouliot Union Nationale Gaspé-Sud
  Gérard Desjardins Union Nationale Gatineau
  Oswald Parent Libéral Hull
  Henry Somerville Union Nationale Huntingdon
  Laurent Hamel Libéral Iberville
  Hormisdas Langlais Union Nationale Îles-de-la-Madeleine
  Charles-Aimé Kirkland Libéral Jacques-Cartier
  Antonio Barrette Union Nationale Joliette
  Gérald Harvey Libéral Jonquière-Kénogami
  Alfred Plourde Union Nationale Kamouraska
  Fernand Lafontaine Union Nationale Labelle
  Lucien Collard Libéral Lac-Saint-Jean
  Victor-Stanislas Chartrand Union Nationale L'Assomption
  Jean-Noël Lavoie Libéral Laval
  Charles Romulus Ducharme Union Nationale Laviolette
  Roger Roy Libéral Lévis
  André Rousseau Libéral L'Islet
  René Bernatchez Union Nationale Lotbinière
  Lucien Tremblay Union Nationale Maisonneuve
  Germain Caron Union Nationale Maskinongé
  Philippe Castonguay Libéral Matane
  Bona Arsenault Libéral Matapédia
  Pierre J. Maheux Libéral Mégantic
  Jean-Jacques Bertrand Union Nationale Missisquoi
  Maurice Tellier Union Nationale Montcalm
  Laurent Lizotte Libéral Montmagny
  Yves Prévost Union Nationale Montmorency
  Maurice-Tréflé Custeau Union Nationale Montréal–Jeanne-Mance
  René Lévesque Libéral Montréal-Laurier
  Gérard Thibeault Union Nationale Montréal-Mercier
  Paul Earl Libéral Montréal–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce
  Georges-Émile Lapalme Libéral Montréal-Outremont
  Francis Hanley Independent Montréal–Sainte-Anne
  Edgar Charbonneau Union Nationale Montréal–Sainte-Marie
  Philippe Lalonde Libéral Montréal–Saint-Henri
  Paul Dozois Union Nationale Montréal–Saint-Jacques
  Harry Blank Libéral Montréal–Saint-Louis
  George O'Reilly Libéral Montréal-Verdun
  Hercule Riendeau Union Nationale Napierville-Laprairie
  Camille Roy Union Nationale Nicolet
  Roméo Lorrain Union Nationale Papineau
  Raymond Thomas Johnston Union Nationale Pontiac
  Marcellin Laroche Libéral Portneuf
  Maurice Cloutier Union Nationale Québec-Centre
  Jean-Jacques Bédard Libéral Québec-Comté
  Armand Maltais Union Nationale Québec-Est
  Jean Lesage Libéral Québec-Ouest
  Gérard Cournoyer Libéral Richelieu
  Émilien Lafrance Liberal Richmond
  Albert Dionne Libéral Rimouski
  Alphonse Couturier Libéral Rivière-du-Loup
  Jean-Claude Plourde Libéral Roberval
  Laurent Barré Union Nationale Rouville
  Edgar Turpin Libéral Rouyn-Noranda
  Lucien Bélanger Libéral Saguenay
  René Saint-Pierre Libéral Saint-Hyacinthe
  Philodor Ouimet Libéral Saint-Jean
  René Hamel Libéral Saint-Maurice
  Francis Boudreau Union Nationale Saint-Sauveur
  Armand Russell Union Nationale Shefford
  Louis-Philippe Brousseau Libéral Sherbrooke
  Georges Vaillancourt Libéral Stanstead
  Joseph-André Larouche Union Nationale Témiscamingue
  Antoine Raymond Union Nationale Témiscouata
  Lionel Bertrand Libéral Terrebonne
  Yves Gabias Union Nationale Trois-Rivières
  Paul Gérin-Lajoie Libéral Vaudreuil-Soulanges
  Guy Lechasseur Libéral Verchères
  John Richard Hyde Libéral Westmount–Saint-Georges
  Gérard Lemieux Libéral Wolfe
  Antonio Élie Union Nationale Yamaska

Other elected MLAs

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Other MLAs were elected during this mandate in by-elections

Cabinet Ministers

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  • Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Jean Lesage
  • Vice-President of the Executive Council: Georges-Émile Lapalme
  • Agriculture: Alcide Courcy (1960–1962)
  • Colonization: Alcide Courcy (1960–1962)
    • Agriculture and Colonization: Alcide Courcy (1962)
  • Labour: René Hamel
  • Public Works: René Lévesque (1960–1961), René Saint-Pierre (1961–1962)
  • Cultural Affairs: Georges-Émile Lapalme (1961–1962)
  • Social Welfare: Émilien Lafrance (1960–1961)
    • Family and Social Welfare: Émilien Lafrance (1961–1962)
  • Youth: Paul Gérin-Lajoie
  • Health: Alphonse Couturier
  • Lands and Forests: Bona Arsenault
  • Fisheries and Hunting: Gérard D. Levesque
  • Mines: Paul Earl (1960–1961)
  • Hydraulic resources: René Lévesque (1960–1961)
    • Natural Ressources: René Lévesque (1961–1962)
  • Roads: Bernard Pinard
  • Transportation and Communications: Gérard Cournoyer
  • Municipal Affairs: René Hamel (1960–1961), Lucien Cliche (1961–1962)
  • Federal-provincial Affairs: Jean Lesage (1961–1962)
  • Industry and Commerce: André Rousseau
  • Attorney General: Georges-Émile Lapalme
  • Provincial Secretary: Lionel Bertrand
  • Finances: Jean Lesage
  • Revenu: Paul Earl (1961–1962)
  • State Ministers: George Carlyle Marler, Charles-Aimé Kirkland

References

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Notes
  1. ^ "QuébecPolitique.com | Élections dans Joliette". www.quebecpolitique.com. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08.
  2. ^ "QuébecPolitique.com | Élections dans Rouville". www.quebecpolitique.com. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08.
  3. ^ "QuébecPolitique.com | Élections dans Chambly". www.quebecpolitique.com. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08.
  4. ^ "QuébecPolitique.com | Élections dans Jacques-Cartier". www.quebecpolitique.com. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08.

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