30th Canadian Parliament

{{Short description|1974-79 seating of the national legislature of the North American country}}

{{Infobox Canadian Parliament

| image = Coat of Arms of Canada (1957).png

| jurisdiction = CA

| # = 30th

| type = Majority

| houseimage = Chambre des Communes 1974.png

| senateimage = Senate of Canada - Seating Plan (30th Parliament).svg

| status = inactive

| term-begin = 1974-09-30

| term-end = 1979-03-26

| sc = Hon. James Jerome

| scterm = {{Start date|1974|09|30}} – {{End date|1980|02|17}}

| sc2 =

| scterm2 =

| pm = Rt. Hon. Pierre Trudeau

| pm-begin = 1968-04-20

| pm-end = 1979-06-04

| lo = Hon. Robert Stanfield

| loterm = {{Start date|1967|11|06}} – {{End date|1976|11|21}}

| lo2 = Hon. Joe Clark

| loterm2 = {{Start date|1976|11|20}} – {{End date|1979|06|03}}

| lo3 =

| loterm3 =

| lo4 =

| loterm4 =

| lo5 =

| loterm5 =

| lo6 =

| loterm6 =

| ghl = Hon. Mitchell Sharp

| ghlterm = {{Start date|1974|08|08}} – {{End date|1976|09|13}}

| ghl2 = Hon. Allan MacEachen

| ghlterm2 = {{Start date|1976|09|14}} – {{End date|1979|03|26}}

| ghl3 =

| ghlterm3 =

| ghl4 =

| ghlterm4 =

| ghl5 =

| ghlterm5 =

| ghl6 =

| ghlterm6 =

| ohl = Hon. Ged Baldwin

| ohlterm = {{Start date|1974|08|14}} – {{End date|1976|02|24}}

| ohl2 = Hon. Walter Baker

| ohlterm2 = {{Start date|1976|02|25}} – {{End date|1979|03|26}}

| ohl3 =

| ohlterm3 =

| ohl4 =

| ohlterm4 =

| ohl5 =

| ohlterm5 =

| ohl6 =

| ohlterm6 =

| ss = Hon. Renaude Lapointe

| ssterm = {{Start date|1974|09|12}} – {{End date|1979|10|04}}

| ss2 =

| ssterm2 =

| ss3 =

| ssterm3 =

| ss4 =

| ssterm4 =

| ss5 =

| ssterm5 =

| ss6 =

| ssterm6 =

| gsl = Hon. Ray Perrault

| gslterm = {{Start date|1974|08|08}} – {{End date|1979|06|03}}

| gsl2 =

| gslterm2 =

| gsl3 =

| gslterm3 =

| gsl4 =

| gslterm4 =

| gsl5 =

| gslterm5 =

| gsl6 =

| gslterm6 =

| osl = Hon. Jacques Flynn

| oslterm = {{Start date|1967|10|31}} – {{End date|1979|05|22}}

| osl2 =

| oslterm2 =

| osl3 =

| oslterm3 =

| osl4 =

| oslterm4 =

| osl5 =

| oslterm5 =

| osl6 =

| oslterm6 =

| party = Liberal Party

| party2 = Progressive Conservative Party

| party3 = New Democratic Party

| unrecparty1 = Social Credit Party

| sessionbegin = {{Start date|1974|09|30}}

| sessionend = {{End date|1976|10|12}}

| sessionbegin2 = {{Start date|1976|10|12}}

| sessionend2 = {{End date|1977|10|17}}

| sessionbegin3 = {{Start date|1977|10|18}}

| sessionend3 = {{End date|1978|10|10}}

| sessionbegin4 = {{Start date|1978|10|11}}

| sessionend4 = {{End date|1979|03|26}}

| monarch = Elizabeth II

| monarchterm = 6 February 1952 – 8 September 2022

| viceroy =

| viceroyterm =

| viceroy2 =

| viceroyterm2 =

| ministry = 20th Canadian Ministry

| ministry2 =

| ministrybegin = {{Start date|1968|04|20}}

| ministryend = {{End date|1979|06|04}}

| ministrybegin2 =

| ministryend2 =

| members = 264

| senators = 102 (until 1975)
104 (from 1975)

| lastparl = 29th

| nextparl = 31st

}}

The 30th Canadian Parliament was in session from September 30, 1974, until March 26, 1979. The membership was set by the 1974 election on July 8, 1974, and was only changed somewhat due to resignations and by-elections before it was dissolved prior to the 1979 election.

It was controlled by a Liberal Party majority led by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and the 20th Canadian Ministry. The Official Opposition was the Progressive Conservative Party, led first by Robert Stanfield, and then by Joe Clark.

The sessions were prorogued (reason unknown currently).

The Speaker was James Jerome. See also the List of Canadian electoral districts 1966-1976 for a list of the ridings in this parliament.

There were four sessions of the 30th Parliament. Queen Elizabeth II opened the 3rd session during her Silver Jubilee visit to Canada.

class="wikitable"
Session

!Start

!End

1st

| September 30, 1974

| October 12, 1976

2nd

| October 12, 1976

| October 17, 1977

3rd

| October 18, 1977

| October 10, 1978

4th

| October 11, 1978

| March 26, 1979

{{TOC right}}

Party standings

{{Canadian politics}}

The party standings as of the election and as of dissolution were as follows:

class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto;"
colspan=2 rowspan=2|Affiliation

!colspan=2|House members

!colspan=2|Senate members

1974 election
results

!At dissolution

!On election
day 1974Members of the Canadian Senate are appointed by the governor general on the advice of the prime minister and remain as senators until the age of 75, even if the House of Commons has been dissolved or an election has been called.

!At dissolution

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row-name}}

|141

|133

|76

|73

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row-name}}

|95

|98

|18

|18

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row-name}}

|16

|17

|0

|0

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row-name}}

|11

|9

|1

|1

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent|row-name}}

|1

|5

|2

|2

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent|row}}

|Independent Liberal

|0

|0

|1

|1

colspan=2|Total members

|264

|263

|98

|92

{{Canadian party colour|CA|vacant|row-name}}

|0

|2

|4

|9

colspan=2|Total seats

|colspan=2|264

|102

|104

Members of the House of Commons

Members of the House of Commons in the 30th parliament arranged by province.

=Newfoundland=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Bonavista—Trinity—Conception

|Dave Rooney

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Burin—Burgeo

|Donald Jamieson

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Gander—Twillingate

|George Baker

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Grand Falls—White Bay—Labrador

|Bill Rompkey

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|rowspan="2"|Humber—St. George's—St. Barbe

|Jack Marshall

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Fonse Faour (by-election in 1978)

|NDP

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|St. John's East

|James McGrath

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|rowspan="2"|St. John's West

|Walter Carter

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|John Crosbie (by-election in 1976)

|Progressive Conservative

=Prince Edward Island=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Cardigan

|Daniel J. MacDonald

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Egmont

|David MacDonald

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Hillsborough

|Heath MacQuarrie

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|rowspan="2"|Malpeque

|John Angus MacLean

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Donald Wood (by-election in 1977)

|Liberal

=Nova Scotia=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Annapolis Valley

|Pat Nowlan

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Cape Breton Highlands—Canso

|Allan MacEachen

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Cape Breton—East Richmond

|Andrew Hogan

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Cape Breton—The Sydneys

|Robert Muir

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Central Nova

|Elmer MacKay

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Cumberland—Colchester North

|Robert Coates

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Dartmouth—Halifax East

|Michael Forrestall

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Halifax

|Robert Stanfield

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Halifax—East Hants

|Robert McCleave then Howard Crosby*

|Both Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|South Shore

|Lloyd Crouse

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|South Western Nova

|Coline Campbell

|Liberal

:* Robert McCleave resigned to become a judge and was replaced by Howard Crosby in a 1978 by-election

=New Brunswick=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Carleton—Charlotte

|Fred McCain

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Fundy—Royal

|Robert Fairweather the Robert Corbett*

|Both Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Gloucester

|Herb Breau

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Madawaska—Victoria

|Eymard Corbin

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent|row}}

|Moncton

|Leonard C. Jones

|Independent

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Northumberland—Miramichi

|Maurice Dionne

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Restigouche

|Jean-Eudes Dubé then Maurice Harquail**

|Both Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saint John—Lancaster

|Mike Landers

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Westmorland—Kent

|Roméo LeBlanc

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|York—Sunbury

|J. Robert Howie

|Progressive Conservative

:* Robert Fairweather resigned to become Canada's first Human Rights Commissioner and was replaced by Robert Corbett in a 1978 by-election

:** Jean-Eudes Dubé resigned and was replaced by Maurice Harquail in a 1975 by-election

=Quebec=

class="wikitable"
colspan=2|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Abitibi

|Gérard Laprise

|Social Credit

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Ahuntsic

|Jeanne Sauvé

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Argenteuil—Deux Montagnes

|Francis Fox

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Beauce

|Yves Caron

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Beauharnois—Salaberry

|Gérald Laniel

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Bellechasse

|Adrien Lambert

|Social Credit

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Berthier

|Antonio Yanakis

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Brome—Missisquoi

|Heward Grafftey

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Bonaventure—Îles-de-la-Madeleine

|Albert Béchard

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Montreal—Bourassa

|Jacques Trudel

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Chambly

|Bernard Loiselle

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|rowspan=2|Champlain

|rowspan=2|René Matte

|rowspan=2|Social Credit then Independent

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Charlevoix

|Charles Lapointe

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Chicoutimi

|Paul Langlois

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Compton

|Claude Tessier

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Dollard

|Jean-Pierre Goyer

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Drummond

|Yvon Pinard

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Duvernay

|Yves Demers

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Frontenac

|Léopold Corriveau

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Gamelin

|Arthur Portelance

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Gaspé

|Alexander Cyr

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Gatineau

|Gaston Clermont

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=3|Hochelaga

|rowspan=3|Gérard Pelletier then Jacques Lavoie*

|rowspan=3|Liberal then Progressive Conservative then Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Hull

|Joseph Isabelle

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Joliette

|Roch La Salle

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Kamouraska

|Charles-Eugène Dionne

|Social Credit

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Labelle

|Maurice Dupras

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Lac-Saint-Jean

|Marcel Lessard

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Lachine—Lakeshore

|Roderick Blaker

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Lafontaine

|Claude-André Lachance

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Langelier

|Jean Marchand then J. Gilles Lamontagne**

|Both Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Lapointe

|Gilles Marceau

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|La Prairie

|Ian Watson

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Lasalle—Émard—Côte Saint-Paul

|John Campbell

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Laurier

|Fernand Leblanc

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Laval

|Marcel-Claude Roy

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Lévis

|Raynald Guay

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Longueuil

|Joseph Mario Jacques Olivier

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Lotbiniere

|André-Gilles Fortin then Richard Janelle***

|Both Ralliement Créditiste

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Louis-Hébert

|Albanie Morin then Dennis Dawson

|Both Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Maissonneuve—Rosemont

|Serge Joyal

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Manicouagan

|Gustave Blouin

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Matane

|Pierre de Bané

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Mercier

|Prosper Boulanger

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Montmorency

|Louis Duclos

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Mount Royal

|Pierre Trudeau

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Notre-Dame-de-Grâce

|Warren Allmand

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Outremont

|Marc Lalonde

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Papineau

|André Ouellet

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Pontiac

|Thomas Lefebvre

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Portneuf

|Pierre Bussières

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Québec-Est

|Gérard Duquet

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Richelieu

|Florian Côté

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Richmond

|Léonel Beaudoin

|Social Credit

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Rivière-du-Loup—Témiscouata

|Rosaire Gendron

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Rimouski

|Eudore Allard

|Social Credit

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Roberval

|Charles-Arthur Gauthier

|Social Credit

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saint-Denis

|Marcel Prud'homme

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saint-Henri

|Gérard Loiselle

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|rowspan=2|Saint-Hyacinthe

|rowspan=2|Claude Wagner then Marcel Ostiguy††

|rowspan=2|Progressive Conservative then Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saint-Jacques

|Jacques Guilbault

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saint-Jean

|Walter Smith

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saint-Maurice

|Jean Chrétien

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saint-Michel

|Monique Bégin

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Sainte-Marie

|Raymond Dupont

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|rowspan=2|Shefford

|rowspan=2|Gilbert Rondeau

|rowspan=2|Social Credit then Independent

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Sherbrooke

|Irénée Pelletier

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Témiscamingue

|Réal Caouette then Gilles Caouette†††

|Both Ralliement Créditiste

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Terrebonne

|Joseph-Roland Comtois

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Trois-Rivières Métropolitain

|Claude G. Lajoie

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Vaudreuil

|Harold Herbert

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Verdun

|Bryce Mackasey then Pierre Savard

|Both Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Social Credit|row}}

|Villeneuve

|Armand Caouette

|Social Credit

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Westmount

|Bud Drury then Donald Johnston‡‡

|Both Liberal

:* Gérard Pelletier left parliament to become ambassador to France he was replaced by Jacques Lavoie on October 14, 1975, after a by-election. On June 14, 1977 Lavoie quite the PC party and crossed the floor to join the Liberals.

:** Jean Marchand left parliament and was replaced by J. Gilles Lamontagne in a May 25, 1977, by-election

:*** André-Gilles Fortin was killed in a car accident and was replaced by Richard Janelle in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

:† Albanie Morin died in office and was replaced by Dennis Dawson in a May 25, 1977, by-election.

:†† Claude Wagner left parliament to accept a seat in the Senate and was replaced by Marcel Ostiguy in an October 16, 1978, by-election

:††† Réal Caouette died in office and was replaced by his son Gilles Caouette in a May 24, 1977, by-election

:‡ Bryce Mackasey resigned from parliament and was replaced by Pierre Savard in a May 24, 1977, by-election

:‡‡ Bud Drury resigned and was replaced by Donald Johnston in an October 16, 1977, by-election.

=Ontario=

class="wikitable"
colspan=2|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Algoma

|Maurice Foster

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Brant

|Derek Blackburn

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Broadview

|John Gilbert then Bob Rae*

|Both New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Bruce

|Crawford Douglas

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|Cochrane

|rowspan=2|Ralph Stewart

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Davenport

|Charles Caccia

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Don Valley

|James Gillies

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|Eglinton

|rowspan=2|Mitchell Sharp then Rob Parker**

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Elgin

|John Wise

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Essex—Windsor

|Eugene Whelan

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Etobicoke

|Alastair Gillespie

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Fort William

|Paul McRae

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Frontenac—Lennox and Addington

|Douglas Alkenbrack

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Glengarry—Prescott—Russell

|Denis Éthier

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Greenwood

|Andrew Brewin

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Grenville—Carleton

|Walter Baker

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Grey—Simcoe

|Gus Mitges

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Halton

|Frank Philbrook

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Halton—Wentworth

|Bill Kempling

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Hamilton East

|John Munro

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Hamilton Mountain

|Gus MacFarlane

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Hamilton—Wentworth

|Sean O'Sullivan then Geoffrey Scott***

|Both Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Hamilton West

|Lincoln Alexander

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Hastings

|Jack Ellis

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|High Park—Humber Valley

|Otto Jelinek

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Huron—Middlesex

|Robert McKinley

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Kenora—Rainy River

|John Mercer Reid

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Kent—Essex

|Robert Daudlin

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Kingston and the Islands

|Flora MacDonald

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Kitchener

|Patrick Flynn

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Lambton—Kent

|John Holmes

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Lanark—Renfrew—Carleton

|Paul Dick

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Leeds

|Thomas Cossitt

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Lincoln

|William Andres

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|London East

|Charles Turner

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|London West

|Judd Buchanan

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Middlesex—London—Lambton

|Larry Condon

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Mississauga

|Anthony Abbott

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Niagara Falls

|Roger Young

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Nickel Belt

|John Rodriguez

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Nipissing

|Jean-Jacques Blais

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Norfolk—Haldimand

|William David Knowles

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Northumberland—Durham

|Allan Lawrence

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Ontario

|Norman Cafik

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Oshawa—Whitby

|Ed Broadbent

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|Ottawa—Carleton

|rowspan=2|John Turner then Jean Pigott

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|Ottawa Centre

|rowspan=2|Hugh Poulin then Robert de Cotret††

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Ottawa East

|Jean-Robert Gauthier

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Ottawa West

|Cyril Lloyd Francis

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Oxford

|Bruce Halliday

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|Parkdale

|rowspan=2|Stanley Haidasz then Yuri Shymko†††

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Parry Sound—Muskoka

|Stan Darling

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Peel—Dufferin—Simcoe

|William Ross Milne

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Perth—Wilmot

|William Jarvis

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Peterborough

|Hugh Faulkner

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Port Arthur

|Robert Andras

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Prince Edward—Hastings

|George Hees

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Renfrew North—Nipissing East

|Len Hopkins

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|Rosedale

|rowspan=2|Donald Stovel Macdonald then David Crombie

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Sarnia—Lambton

|Bud Cullen

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Sault Ste. Marie

|Cyril Symes

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Scarborough East

|Martin O'Connell

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Scarborough West

|Alan Gray Martin

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Simcoe North

|Philip Rynard

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Spadina

|Peter Stollery

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|St. Catharines

|Gilbert Parent

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|St. Paul's

|John Roberts

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Stormont—Dundas

|Ed Lumley

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Sudbury

|James Jerome

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Thunder Bay

|B. Keith Penner

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Timiskaming

|Arnold Peters

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Timmins

|Jean Roy

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Toronto-Lakeshore

|Ken Robinson

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Trinity

|Aideen Nicholson

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Victoria—Haliburton

|William Scott

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Waterloo—Cambridge

|Max Saltsman

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Welland

|Victor Railton

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Wellington

|Frank Maine

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Wellington—Grey—Dufferin—Waterloo

|Perrin Beatty

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Windsor West

|Herb Gray

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Windsor—Walkerville

|Mark MacGuigan

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|York Centre

|Bob Kaplan

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|York East

|David Collenette

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|York North

|Barney Danson

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|York—Scarborough

|rowspan=2|Robert Stanbury then Paul McCrossan‡‡

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|York—Simcoe

|Sinclair Stevens

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|York South

|Ursula Appolloni

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|York West

|James Fleming

|Liberal

:* John Gilbert resigned from parliament in April 1978 to become a judge and was replaced by Bob Rae in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

:** Mitchell Sharp retired from politics and was replaced by Rob Parker in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

:*** Sean O'Sullivan left parliament to become a priest and was replaced by Geoffrey Scott in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

:† John Turner quit parliament in protest of the government's decision to implement wage and price controls he was replaced by Jean Pigott in an October 18, 1976, by-election.

:†† Hugh Poulin left parliament in April 1978 to become a judge and was replaced by Robert de Cotret in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

:††† Stanley Haidasz left parliament to be appointed to the Senate he was replaced by Yuri Shymko in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

:‡ Donald Stovel Macdonald left parliament and was replaced by David Crombie in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

:‡‡ Robert Stanbury left parliament and was replaced by William Paul McCrossan in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

=Manitoba=

class="wikitable"
colspan=2|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Brandon—Souris

|Walter Dinsdale

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Churchill

|Cecil Smith

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Dauphin

|William Gordon Ritchie

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Lisgar

|Jack Murta

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Marquette

|Craig Stewart

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Portage

|Peter Masniuk

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Provencher

|Jake Epp

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Selkirk

|Dean Whiteway

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|St. Boniface

|rowspan=2|Joseph-Phillippe Guay then Jack Hare*

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Winnipeg North

|David Orlikow

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Winnipeg North Centre

|Stanley Knowles

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|rowspan=2|Winnipeg South

|rowspan=2|James Richardson

|rowspan=2|Liberal then Independent

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Winnipeg South Centre

|Dan McKenzie

|Progressive Conservative

:* Joseph-Phillippe Guay left parliament and was replaced by Jack Hare in an October 16, 1978, by-election.

=Saskatchewan=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Assiniboia

|Ralph Goodale

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Battleford—Kindersley

|Joseph McIsaac

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Mackenzie

|Stanley Korchinski

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Meadow Lake

|Bert Cadieu

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Moose Jaw

|Douglas Neil

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Prince Albert

|John Diefenbaker

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Qu'Appelle—Moose Mountain

|Alvin Hamilton

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Regina East

|James Balfour

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Regina—Lake Centre

|Leslie Benjamin

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Saskatoon—Biggar

|Ray Hnatyshyn

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Saskatoon—Humboldt

|Otto Lang

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Swift Current—Maple Creek

|Frank Hamilton

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Yorkton—Melville

|Lorne Nystrom

|New Democrat

=Alberta=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Athabasca

|Paul Yewchuk

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Battle River

|Arnold Malone

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Calgary Centre

|Harvie Andre

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Calgary North

|Eldon Woolliams

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Calgary South

|Peter Bawden

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|rowspan=2|Crowfoot

|rowspan=2|Jack Horner

|rowspan=2|Progressive Conservative then Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Edmonton Centre

|Steve Paproski

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Edmonton East

|William Skoreyko

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Edmonton West

|Marcel Lambert

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Edmonton—Strathcona

|Douglas Roche

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Lethbridge

|Kenneth Earl Hurlburt

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Medicine Hat

|Bert Hargrave

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|rowspan=2|Palliser

|rowspan=2|Stanley Schumacher

|rowspan=2|Progressive Conservative then Independent

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent|row}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Peace River

|Ged Baldwin

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Pembina

|Peter Elzinga

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Red Deer

|Gordon Towers

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Rocky Mountain

|Joe Clark

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Vegreville

|Don Mazankowski

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Wetaskiwin

|Kenneth Schellenberger

|Progressive Conservative

=British Columbia=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|rowspan="2"|Burnaby—Richmond—Delta

|John Reynolds

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Tom Siddon (by-election on October 16, 1978)

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Burnaby—Seymour

|Marke Raines

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Capilano

|Ron Huntington

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Coast Chilcotin

|Jack Pearsall

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Comox—Alberni

|Hugh Anderson

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Esquimalt—Saanich

|Donald Munro

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Fraser Valley East

|Alexander Patterson

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Fraser Valley West

|Robert Wenman

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Kamloops—Cariboo

|Leonard Marchand

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Kootenay West

|Robert Brisco

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Nanaimo—Cowichan—The Islands

|Tommy Douglas

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|New Westminster

|Stuart Leggatt

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Okanagan Boundary

|George Whittaker

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Okanagan—Kootenay

|Howard Johnston

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Prince George—Peace River

|Frank Oberle

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Skeena

|Iona Campagnolo

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Surrey—White Rock

|Benno Friesen

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Vancouver Centre

|Ron Basford

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Vancouver East

|Art Lee

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal|row}}

|Vancouver Kingsway

|Simma Holt

|Liberal

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Vancouver Quadra

|Bill Clarke

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Vancouver South

|John Fraser

|Progressive Conservative

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Victoria

|Allan McKinnon

|Progressive Conservative

=Territories=

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"|Riding

!Member

!Political party

{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP|row}}

|Northwest Territories

|Wally Firth

|New Democrat

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|row}}

|Yukon

|Erik Nielsen

|Progressive Conservative

{{CanHOC}}

By-elections

{{Main|By-elections to the 30th Canadian Parliament}}

{{:By-elections to the 30th Canadian Parliament}}

References

{{reflist}}

  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada|publisher=Privy Council Office|title=20th Ministry|work=Guide to Canadian Ministries since Confederation|url=http://www.pco-bcp.gc.ca/default.asp?Language=E&Page=Publications&doc=min/min_20_e.htm|access-date=2006-11-09}}
  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada|publisher=Library of Parliament|work=Members of the House of Commons: 1867 to Date: By Parliament|title=30th Parliament|url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/house/mpsparl.asp?Language=E&parl=30|access-date=2006-11-30|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061220074115/http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/house/mpsparl.asp?Language=E|archive-date=2006-12-20|url-status=dead}}
  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada|publisher=Library of Parliament|title=Duration of Sessions|url=http://www2.parl.gc.ca/Parlinfo/compilations/parliament/Sessions.aspx|access-date=2006-05-12|archive-date=2007-11-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071114112755/http://www2.parl.gc.ca/parlinfo/compilations/parliament/Sessions.aspx|url-status=dead}}
  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada |publisher=Library of Parliament |title=General Elections |url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/process/House/asp/Elections.asp?Language=E&gen=Y&Hist=Y |access-date=2006-05-12 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060504214348/http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/process/House/asp/Elections.asp?Language=E&Hist=Y&gen=Y |archive-date=2006-05-04 }}
  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada |publisher=Library of Parliament |title=Key Dates for each Parliament |url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/process/info/parl-dates.asp?lang=E&Hist=Y |access-date=2006-05-12 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050914163314/http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/process/info/parl-dates.asp?lang=E&Hist=Y |archive-date=2005-09-14 }}
  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada |publisher=Library of Parliament |title=Leaders of the Opposition in the House of Commons |url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/house/OppLeader.asp?lang=E&Hist=Y |access-date=2006-05-12 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070311060420/http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/house/OppLeader.asp?lang=E&Hist=Y |archive-date=2007-03-11 }}
  • {{cite web |author=Government of Canada |publisher=Library of Parliament |access-date=2007-04-24 |url=http://www2.parl.gc.ca/Parlinfo/lists/PartyStandingsHistoric.aspx?Menu=SEN-Politic&Section=b571082f-7b2d-4d6a-b30a-b6025a9cbb98 |title=Party Standings (1974 to date): At the Senate}}
  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada |publisher=Library of Parliament |title=Prime Ministers of Canada |url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/key/pm/index.asp?Language=E¶m=pi¶m2=gen |access-date=2006-05-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060427095217/http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/key/pm/index.asp?Language=E¶m=pi¶m2=gen |archive-date=27 April 2006 |url-status=dead }}
  • {{cite web|author=Government of Canada |publisher=Library of Parliament |title=Speakers |url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/key/hf-parl-off/index.asp?Language=E¶m=24&id=13&id2=29 |access-date=2006-05-12 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060917033025/http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/key/hf-parl-off/index.asp?Language=E |archive-date=2006-09-17 }}

Succession