List of Quebec senators#Shawinegan

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This is a list of past and present members of the Senate of Canada representing the province of Quebec.

Quebec has 24 permanent Senate divisions that are fixed under section 22 of the Constitution Act, 1867, which provides that "In the Case of Quebec each of the Twenty-four Senators representing that Province shall be appointed for One of the Twenty-four Electoral Divisions of Lower Canada..." Lower Canada (later the eastern portion of the Province of Canada) was Quebec's predecessor colony.

In addition to the other qualifications for appointment to the Senate, a Quebec senator must, in accordance with subsection 23(5) of the Constitution Act, 1867, "have his Real Property Qualification in the Electoral Division for which he is appointed, or shall be resident in that Division". In other words, the senator must either live in his or her division or own an immovable in the division worth at least $4,000 on a net basis. The Quebec senator must continue to meet this qualification to remain in office under subsection 31(5) of the Constitution Act, 1867.

In other provinces, although senators can designate their own divisions within the province they represent, those designations do not have legal significance.

Current Quebec senators

class="wikitable sortable"

!align=left colspan=2|Name

!Current affiliation

!Division

!Date appointed

!Appointed by1

!On the advice of

!Mandatory retirement

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

|Michèle Audette

|Progressive Senate Group

|De Salaberry

|{{dts|2021|7|29}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2046|7|20}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Non-affiliated|row}}

|Patrick Brazeau

|Non-affiliated

|Repentigny

|{{dts|2009|1|8}}

|Jean

|Harper

|{{dts|2049|11|11}}

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

|Claude Carignan

|Conservative

|Mille Isles

|{{dts|2009|8|27}}

|Jean

|Harper

|{{dts|2039|12|4}}

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

|Pierre Dalphond

|Progressive Senate Group

|De Lorimier

|{{dts|2018|6|6}}

|Payette

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2029|5|1}}

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

|Éric Forest

|Independent Senators Group

|Gulf

|{{dts|2016|11|21}}

|Johnston

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2027|4|6}}

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

|Rosa Galvez

|Independent Senators Group

|Bedford

|{{dts|2016|12|6}}

|Johnston

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2036|6|21}}

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

|Amina Gerba

|Progressive Senate Group

|Rigaud

|{{dts|2021|7|29}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2036|3|14}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Canadian Senators Group|row}}

|Clément Gignac

|Canadian Senators Group

|Kennebec

|{{dts|2021|7|29}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2030|5|7}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Non-affiliated|row}}

|Marc Gold

|Non-affiliated

|Stadacona

|{{dts|2016|11|25}}

|Johnston

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2025|6|30}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Non-affiliated|row}}

|Martine Hébert

|Non-affiliated

|Victoria

|{{dts|2025|2|7}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2040|10|7}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Non-affiliated|row}}

|{{sortname|Danièle|Henkel}}

|Non-affiliated

|Alma

|{{dts|2025|2|14}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2031|01|16}}

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

|Leo Housakos

|Conservative

|Wellington

|{{dts|2009|1|8}}

|Jean

|Harper

|{{dts|2043|1|10}}

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

|Tony Loffreda

|Independent Senators Group

|Shawinegan

|{{dts|2019|7|23}}

|Payette

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2037|8|14}}

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

|Paul Massicotte

|Independent Senators Group

|De Lanaudière

|{{dts|2003|6|26}}

|Clarkson

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2026|9|10}}

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

|Marie-Françoise Mégie

|Independent Senators Group

|Rougemont

|{{dts|2016|11|25}}

|Johnston

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2025|9|21}}

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

|Julie Miville-Dechêne

|Independent Senators Group

|Inkerman

|{{dts|2018|6|20}}

|Payette

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2034|7|10}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Progressive Senate Group|row}}

|Pierre Moreau

|Progressive Senate Group

|The Laurentides

|{{dts|2024|9|10}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2032|12|12}}

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

|Manuelle Oudar

|Independent Senators Group

|La Salle

|{{dts|2024|2|13}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2038|7|5}}

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

|{{sortname|Chantal|Petitclerc}}

|Independent Senators Group

|Grandville

|{{dts|2016|4|1}}

|Johnston

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2044|12|15}}

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

|{{sortname|Raymonde|Saint-Germain}}

|Independent Senators Group

| De la Vallière

|{{dts|2016|11|25}}

|Johnston

|J. Trudeau

{{dts|2026|10|7}}

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

|Judith Seidman

|Conservative

|De la Durantaye

|{{dts|2009|8|27}}

|Jean

|Harper

|{{dts|2025|9|1}}

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

|Larry Smith

|Canadian Senators Group

|Saurel

|{{dts|2011|5|25}}

|Johnston

|Harper

|{{dts|2026|4|28}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Canadian Senators Group|row}}

|Josée Verner

|Canadian Senators Group

|Montarville

|{{dts|2011|6|13}}

|Johnston

|Harper

|{{dts|2034|12|30}}

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

|Suze Youance

|Independent Senators Group

|Lauzon

|{{dts|2024|9|25}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|{{dts|2045|8|11}}

1 Senators are appointed by the governor general on the recommendation of the prime minister listed.

Members by Senate division

The boundaries for all Quebec districts are mandated in the Constitution Act 1867 and cannot change without a constitutional amendment. The boundaries are described in the 1859 Consolidated Statutes of Canada.[https://books.google.com/books?id=vKovAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA5 Consolidated Statutes of Canada 1859, c. 1 An Act respecting the Legislative Council, schedule A]

Self-designated Senate divisions can be used by senators appointed under the Regional Expansion Clause Section 26 of the Constitution Act 1867. This clause can be used to increase the Senate seats by one or two senators for each region (Ontario, Quebec, the Maritimes and the Western Provinces). Prime Minister Brian Mulroney is the only one to use this clause, on September 27, 1990.

=Self-designated=

These senators were appointed under a constitutional provision that allowed the number of Quebec senators to temporarily increase by one or two. As such, these senators belonged to no constitutionally-mandated division, and could designate one of their choosing.

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Division

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Normand Grimard

|Progressive Conservative

|Quebec

|{{dts|1990|9|27}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Mulroney

|{{dts|2000|6|16}}

|Retirement

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

|Thérèse Lavoie-Roux

|Progressive Conservative

|Acadie

|{{dts|1990|9|27}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Mulroney

|{{dts|2001|3|12}}

|Resignation

=Alma=

The Alma Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Parishes of Long Point, Pointe-aux-Trembles, Rivière des Prairies, Sault aux Récollets, in the county of Hochelaga, and that part of the Parish of Montreal which lies to the East of the prolongation of St. Denis Street; the County of Laval, that part of the City of Montreal which lies to the East of Bonsécours and St. Denis Streets, and their prolongation."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|James Leslie

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1873|12|6}}

|Death

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

|Edward Goff Penny

|Liberal

|{{dts|1874|3|13}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1881|10|11}}

|Death

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

|Alexander Walker Ogilvie

|Conservative

|{{dts|1881|12|24}}

|Lorne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1901|1|18}}

|Resignation

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

|Robert Mackay

|Liberal

|{{dts|1901|1|21}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1916|12|25}}

|Death

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

|George Green Foster

|Conservative

|{{dts|1917|7|27}}

|Devonshire

|Borden

|{{dts|1931|5|1}}

|Death

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

|align=left rowspan=2|Charles Ballantyne

|Conservative

|{{dts|1932|2|3}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Bessborough

|align=left rowspan=2|Bennett

|align=left rowspan=2|{{dts|1950|10|19}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Death

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

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1942|12|11}}

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

|Hartland Molson

|Independent

|{{dts|1955|7|28}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1993|5|31}}

|Resignation

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

|align=left rowspan=2|David Angus

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1993|6|10}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Hnatyshyn

|align=left rowspan=2|Mulroney

|align=left rowspan=2|{{dts|2012|7|21}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Retirement

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

|Conservative

|{{dts|2004|2|2}}

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

|rowspan=4|{{sortname|Diane|Bellemare}}

|Conservative

|{{dts|2012|9|6}}

|rowspan=4|Johnston

|rowspan=4|Harper

|rowspan=4|{{dts|2024|10|11}}

|rowspan=4|Retirement

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

|Non-affiliated

|{{dts|2016|3|8}}

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

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2019|11|14}}

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

|Progressive Senate Group

|{{dts|2021|09|17}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Non-affiliated|row}}

|Danièle Henkel

|Non-affiliated

|{{dts|2025|2|14}}

|Simon

|J. Trudeau

|Incumbent

|

=Bedford=

The Bedford Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Missisquoi, Brome, and Shefford."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Asa Belknap Foster

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1874|1|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Gardner Green Stevens

|Liberal

|{{dts|1876|2|12}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1892|4|15}}

|Death

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

|George Barnard Baker

|Liberal-Conservative

|{{dts|1896|1|7}}

|Aberdeen

|Bowell

|{{dts|1910|2|9}}

|Death

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

|Rufus Henry Pope

|Conservative

|{{dts|1911|11|14}}

|Connaught

|Borden

|{{dts|1944|5|16}}

|Death

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

|Jacob Nicol

|Liberal

|{{dts|1944|7|14}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1958|9|23}}

|Death

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

|Louis-Philippe Beaubien

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1960|11|16}}

|Vanier

|Diefenbaker

|{{dts|1985|3|28}}

|Death

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

|Paul David

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1985|4|16}}

|Sauvé

|Mulroney

|{{dts|1994|12|25}}

|Retirement

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

|Céline Hervieux-Payette

|Liberal

|{{dts|1995|3|21}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2016|4|22}}

|Retirement

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

|Rosa Galvez

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2016|12|06}}

|Johnston

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

=De la Durantaye=

The De la Durantaye Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the County of L'Islet, the countie[s] of Montmagny and Bellechasse and the Parishes of St. Joseph, St. Henri and Notre Dame de la Victoire, in the County of Lévi." The demarcation of the Grandville Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the County of L'Islet".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Joseph-Noël Bossé

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1868|1|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Jean-Charles Chapais

|Conservative

|{{dts|1868|1|30}}

|Monck

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1885|7|17}}

|Death

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

|John Jones Ross

|Conservative

|{{dts|1887|4|12}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1901|5|4}}

|Death

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

|Alphonse Déchêne

|Liberal

|{{dts|1901|5|13}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1902|5|1}}

|Death

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

|Jules Tessier

|Liberal

|{{dts|1903|3|12}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1934|1|6}}

|Death

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

|Émile Fortin

|Conservative

|{{dts|1935|8|14}}

|Bessborough

|Bennett

|{{dts|1936|5|18}}

|Death

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

|Fernand Fafard

|Liberal

|{{dts|1940|1|29}}

|Tweedsmuir

|King

|{{dts|1955|5|14}}

|Death

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

|Jean-François Pouliot

|Liberal

|{{dts|1955|7|28}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1968|6|28}}

|Resignation

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

|Louis Giguère

|Liberal

|{{dts|1968|9|10}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1986|12|18}}

|Retirement

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

|Jean Bazin

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1986|12|29}}

|Sauvé

|Mulroney

|{{dts|1989|12|8}}

|Resignation

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

|Mario Beaulieu

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1990|8|30}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Mulroney

|{{dts|1994|6|22}}

|Resignation

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

|Lise Bacon

|Liberal

|{{dts|1994|9|15}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2009|8|25}}

|Retirement

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

|Judith Seidman

|Conservative

|{{dts|2009|8|27}}

|Jean

|Harper

|Incumbent

|

=De la Vallière=

The De la Vallière Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Nicolet and Yamaska, the Townships of Wendover, Grantham, and the part of Upton which lies in the County of Drummond."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Charles-Christophe Malhiot

|Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1874|11|9}}

|Death

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

|Anselme-Homère Pâquet

|Liberal

|{{dts|1875|2|9}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1891|12|22}}

|Death

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

|Auguste-Réal Angers

|Conservative

|{{dts|1892|12|16}}

|Stanley

|Thompson

|{{dts|1896|6|10}}

|Resignation

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

|Alfred Thibaudeau

|Liberal

|{{dts|1896|8|22}}

|Aberdeen

|Laurier

|{{dts|1926|8|15}}

|Death

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

|Donat Raymond

|Liberal

|{{dts|1926|12|20}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1963|6|5}}

|Death

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

|Romuald Bourque

|Liberal

|{{dts|1963|7|6}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1974|8|14}}

|Death

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

|Jean Marchand

|Liberal

|{{dts|1976|12|9}}

|Léger

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1983|12|15}}

|Resignation

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

|Pierre de Bané

|Liberal

|{{dts|1984|6|29}}

|Sauvé

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|2013|08|02}}

|Retirement

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

|Raymonde Saint-Germain

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2016|11|25}}

|Johnston

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

|

=De Lanaudière=

The De Lanaudière Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the County of Maskinongé, the Counties of Berthier and Joliette, with the exception of the Parish of St. Paul, the Township of Kidldare and its augmentation, and the Township of Cathcart". The demarcation of the Shawinigan Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the County of Maskinongé".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Louis Auguste Olivier

|Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1873|9|8}}

|Resignation

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

|Joseph-Hyacinthe Bellerose

|Conservative

|{{dts|1873|10|7}}

|Dufferin

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1899|8|13}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Philippe Baby Casgrain

|Liberal

|{{dts|1900|1|29}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1939|1|6}}

|Death

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

|Édouard-Charles St-Père

|Liberal

|{{dts|1940|2|9}}

|Tweedsmuir

|King

|{{dts|1950|1|31}}

|Death

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

|Sarto Fournier

|Liberal

|{{dts|1953|6|12}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1980|7|23}}

|Death

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

|Thomas Lefebvre

|Liberal

|{{dts|1984|7|9}}

|Sauvé

|Turner

|{{dts|1992|11|20}}

|Death

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

|colspan=7|In abeyance - the appointment of Thérèse Lavoie-Roux to the temporary division of Acadie under section 26 of the Constitution Act, 1867 required this division be left vacant between Lefebvre's death and Lavoie-Roux's retirement on {{dts|2001|03|12}}

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

|rowspan="3"|Paul Massicotte

|Liberal

|{{dts|2003|6|26}}

|rowspan="3"|Clarkson

|rowspan="3"|Chrétien

|rowspan="3"|Incumbent

|rowspan="3"|

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

|Senate Liberal Caucus

|{{dts|2014|1|29}}

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

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2017|10|30}}

=De Lorimier=

The De Lorimier Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of St. John and Napierville; St. Jean Chrysostôme and Russeltown in the County of Chateauguay; Hemmingford in the County of Huntingdon."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Jacques-Olivier Bureau

|Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1883|2|7}}

|Death

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

|Alexandre Lacoste

|Conservative

|{{dts|1884|1|11}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1891|9|13}}

|Resignation

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

|Alphonse Desjardins

|Conservative

|{{dts|1892|10|1}}

|Stanley

|Abbott

|{{dts|1896|6|16}}

|Resignation

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

|François Béchard

|Liberal

|{{dts|1896|7|17}}

|Aberdeen

|Laurier

|{{dts|1897|4|13}}

|Death

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

|Raoul Dandurand

|Liberal

|{{dts|1898|1|22}}

|Aberdeen

|Laurier

|{{dts|1942|3|11}}

|Death

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

|Thomas Vien

|Liberal

|{{dts|1942|10|5}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1968|4|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Raymond Eudes

|Liberal

|{{dts|1968|4|8}}

|Michener

|Pearson

|{{dts|1980|10|25}}

|Death

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

|Philippe Gigantès

|Liberal

|{{dts|1984|1|13}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1998|8|16}}

|Retirement

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

|Joan Fraser

|Liberal

|{{dts|1998|9|17}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2018|2|2}}

|Resignation

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

|rowspan="2"|Pierre Dalphond

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2018|6|6}}

|rowspan="2"|Payette

|rowspan="2"|Trudeau, J.

|rowspan="2"|Incumbent

|rowspan="2"|

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

|Progressive Senate Group

|{{dts|2020|5|21}}

=De Salaberry=

The De Salaberry Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the County of Chateauguay, the remainder of the County of Huntingdon, and the County of Beauharnois." The demarcation of the De Lorimier Senate division provides an explanation of which parishes are excluded from the De Salaberry Senate division.

class="wikitable"

!Name

!align=left |Affiliation

!align=left |Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Louis Renaud

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1873|10|1}}

|Resignation

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

|François-Xavier-Anselme Trudel

|Conservative

|{{dts|1873|10|31}}

|Dufferin

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1890|1|17}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Tassé

|Conservative

|{{dts|1891|2|9}}

|Stanley

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1895|1|17}}

|Death

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

|Joseph-Octave Villeneuve

|Conservative

|{{dts|1896|1|2}}

|Aberdeen

|Bowell

|{{dts|1901|6|27}}

|Death

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

|Frédéric Liguori Béique

|Liberal

|{{dts|1902|2|7}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1933|9|12}}

|Death

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

|Guillaume-André Fauteux

|Conservative

|{{dts|1933|12|30}}

|Bessborough

|Bennett

|{{dts|1940|9|10}}

|Death

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

|Léon Mercier Gouin

|Liberal

|{{dts|1940|11|7}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1976|3|18}}

|Resignation

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

|Yvette Boucher Rousseau

|Liberal

|{{dts|1979|3|27}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1988|3|17}}

|Death

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

|Jean-Marie Poitras

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1988|9|26}}

|Sauvé

|Mulroney

|{{dts|1993|5|25}}

|Resignation

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

|align=left rowspan=2|Pierre Claude Nolin

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1993|6|18}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Hnatyshyn

|align=left rowspan=2|Mulroney

|align=left rowspan=2|{{dts|2015|4|23}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Death

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

|Conservative

|February 2, 2004

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

|align=left rowspan=2|André Pratte

|Independent / Non-affiliated

|{{dts|2016|4|1}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Johnston

|align=left rowspan=2|Trudeau, J.

|align=left rowspan=2|{{dts|2019|10|21}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Resignation

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

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2017|6|1}}

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

|rowspan="3"| Michèle Audette

| Non-affiliated

| {{dts|2021|7|29}}

|rowspan="3"| Simon

|rowspan="3"| Trudeau, J.

|rowspan="3"| Incumbent

|rowspan="3"|

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

| Independent Senators Group

| {{dts|2021|9|27}}

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

| Progressive Senate Group

| {{dts|2022|6|27}}

=Grandville=

The Grandville Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Temiscouata and Kamouraska, the Parishes of St. Roch des Aulnets and St. Jean Port Joli, and the prolongation thereof in a straight line to the Province Line in the County of L'Islet."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Luc Letellier de St-Just

|Nationalist Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1876|12|15}}

|Resignation

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

|Charles Pelletier

|Liberal

|{{dts|1877|2|2}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1904|9|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Philippe-Auguste Choquette

|Liberal

|{{dts|1904|9|30}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1919|12|29}}

|Resignation

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

|Thomas Chapais

|Conservative

|{{dts|1919|12|31}}

|Devonshire

|Borden

|{{dts|1946|7|15}}

|Death

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

|Paul Henri Bouffard

|Liberal

|{{dts|1946|12|27}}

|Alexander

|King

|{{dts|1966|2|16}}

|Death

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

|Léopold Langlois

|Liberal

|{{dts|1966|7|8}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1988|10|2}}

|Retirement

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

|align=left rowspan=2|John Lynch-Staunton

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1990|9|23}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Hnatyshyn

|align=left rowspan=2|Mulroney

|align=left rowspan=2|{{dts|2005|6|19}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Retirement

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

|Conservative

|{{dts|2004|2|2}}

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

|Andrée Champagne

|Conservative

|{{dts|2005|8|2}}

|Clarkson

|Martin

|{{dts|2014|7|17}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan="2"|Chantal Petitclerc

|Independent

|{{dts|2016|4|1}}

|rowspan="2"|Johnston

|rowspan="2"|Trudeau, J.

|rowspan="2"|Incumbent

|rowspan="2"|

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

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2016|12|02}}

=Gulf=

The Gulf Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as

"The Counties of Gaspé, Bonaventure and Rimouski."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Ulric-Joseph Tessier

|Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1873|2|11}}

|Resignation

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

|Eugène Chinic

|Conservative

|{{dts|1873|4|10}}

|Dufferin

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1882|11|3}}

|Resignation

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

|Louis Robitaille

|Conservative

|{{dts|1883|2|8}}

|Lorne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1884|12|28}}

|Resignation

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

|Théodore Robitaille

|Conservative

|{{dts|1885|1|29}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1897|8|17}}

|Death

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

|Jean-Baptiste Romuald Fiset

|Liberal

|{{dts|1897|10|20}}

|Aberdeen

|Laurier

|{{dts|1917|1|5}}

|Death

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

|David Ovide L'Espérance

|Conservative

|{{dts|1917|7|26}}

|Devonshire

|Borden

|{{dts|1941|8|31}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Arthur Lesage

|Liberal

|{{dts|1944|3|3}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1950|3|9}}

|Death

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

|Charles Gavan Power

|Liberal

|{{dts|1955|7|28}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1968|5|30}}

|Death

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

|Paul C. Lafond

|Liberal

|{{dts|1970|10|7}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1988|5|27}}

|Death

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

|Roch Bolduc

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1988|9|26}}

|Sauvé

|Mulroney

|{{dts|2003|9|10}}

|Retirement

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

|Roméo Dallaire

|Liberal

|{{dts|2005|3|24}}

|Clarkson

|Martin

|{{dts|2014|6|17}}

|Resignation

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

|Éric Forest

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2016|11|21}}

|Johnston

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

|

=Inkerman=

The Inkerman Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Argenteuil, Ottawa and Pontiac."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|John Hamilton

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1887|5|1}}

|Resignation

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

|John Abbott

|Liberal-Conservative

|{{dts|1887|5|12}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1893|10|30}}

|Death

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

|William Owens

|Conservative

|{{dts|1896|1|2}}

|Aberdeen

|Bowell

|{{dts|1917|6|8}}

|Death

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

|Richard Smeaton White

|Conservative

|{{dts|1917|7|30}}

|Devonshire

|Borden

|{{dts|1936|12|17}}

|Death

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

|Adrian Knatchbull-Hugessen

|Liberal

|{{dts|1937|1|12}}

|Tweedsmuir

|King

|{{dts|1967|1|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Maurice Lamontagne

|Liberal

|{{dts|1967|4|6}}

|Léger

|Pearson

|{{dts|1983|6|12}}

|Death

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

|Charlie Watt

|Liberal

|{{dts|1984|1|16}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|2018|3|16}}

|Resignation

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

|Julie Miville-Dechêne

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2018|6|20}}

|Payette

|Trudeau, J

|Incumbent

|

=Kennebec=

The Kennebec Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Lotbinière, Mégantic and Arthabaska."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Charles Cormier

|Nationalist Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1887|5|7}}

|Death

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

|Pierre-Étienne Fortin

|Conservative

|{{dts|1887|5|13}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1888|6|15}}

|Death

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

|George Alexander Drummond

|Conservative

|{{dts|1888|12|1}}

|Stanley

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1910|2|2}}

|Death

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

|Louis Lavergne

|Liberal

|{{dts|1910|10|13}}

|Grey

|Laurier

|{{dts|1930|1|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Georges Parent

|Liberal

|{{dts|1930|6|3}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1942|12|14}}

|Death

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

|Cyrille Vaillancourt

|Liberal

|{{dts|1944|3|3}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1969|1|3}}

|Resignation

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

|Jean-Pierre Côté

|Liberal

|{{dts|1972|9|1}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1978|4|20}}

|Resignation

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

|Claude Wagner

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1978|4|21}}

|Léger

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1979|7|11}}

|Death

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

|Guy Charbonneau

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1979|9|27}}

|Schreyer

|Clark

|{{dts|1997|6|21}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan=3|{{sortname|Serge|Joyal}}

|Liberal

|{{dts|1997|11|26}}

|rowspan=3|LeBlanc

|rowspan=3|Chrétien

|rowspan=3| {{dts|2020|2|1}}

|rowspan=3| Retirement

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

|Senate Liberal Caucus

|{{dts|2014|1|29}}

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

|Progressive Senate Group

|{{dts|2019|11|14}}

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

|rowspan=2|Clément Gignac

|Progressive Senate Group

|{{dts|2021|7|29}}

|rowspan=2|Simon

|rowspan=2|Trudeau, J.

|rowspan=2|Incumbent

|rowspan=2|

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

|Canadian Senators Group

|{{dts|2024|10|25}}

=La Salle=

The La Salle Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the County of Quebec, the County of Portneuf, and all that part of the Banlieue of Quebec which likes within the Parish of Notre Dame de Quebec." The demarcation of the Laurentides Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the County of Quebec".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Antoine Juchereau Duchesnay

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1871|1|7}}

|Resignation

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

|Louis Panet

|Conservative

|{{dts|1871|2|10}}

|Lisgar

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1874|3|26}}

|Resignation

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

|Charles-Eugène Panet

|Liberal

|{{dts|1874|3|27}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1875|2|4}}

|Resignation

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

|Hector Fabre

|Nationalist

|{{dts|1875|2|5}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1882|7|12}}

|Resignation

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

|Pierre Antoine Deblois

|Conservative

|{{dts|1883|2|13}}

|Lorne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1898|6|21}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Arthur Paquet

|Liberal

|{{dts|1898|6|27}}

|Aberdeen

|Laurier

|{{dts|1901|3|29}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Godbout

|Liberal

|{{dts|1901|4|4}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1923|4|1}}

|Death

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

|Jacques Bureau

|Liberal

|{{dts|1925|9|5}}

|Byng

|King

|{{dts|1933|1|23}}

|Death

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

|align=left rowspan=2|Lucien Moraud

|Conservative

|{{dts|1933|12|30}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Bessborough

|align=left rowspan=2|Bennett

|align=left rowspan=2|{{dts|1951|5|29}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Death

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

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1942|12|11}}

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

|Mark Robert Drouin

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1957|10|4}}

|Massey

|Diefenbaker

|{{dts|1963|10|12}}

|Death

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

|Azellus Denis

|Liberal

|{{dts|1964|2|3}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1991|9|4}}

|Death

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

|Marcel Prud'homme

|Independent

|{{dts|1993|5|26}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Mulroney

|{{dts|2009|11|30}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan=3|Pierre-Hugues Boisvenu

|Conservative

|{{dts|2010|1|29}}

|rowspan=3|Jean

|rowspan=3|Harper

|rowspan=3|{{dts|2024|2|12}}

|rowspan=3|Retirement

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

|Independent

|{{dts|2015|6|4}}

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

|Conservative

|{{dts|2016|11|22}}

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

|Manuelle Oudar

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2024|2|13}}

|Simon

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

|

=Lauzon=

The Lauzon Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the County of Lévi, the Counties of Dorchester and Beauce." The demarcation of the De la Durantaye Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the County of L'Islet".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Elzéar-Henri Juchereau Duchesnay

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1871|5|12}}

|Death

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

|Alexandre-René Chaussegros de Léry

|Conservative

|{{dts|1871|12|13}}

|Lisgar

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1876|4|11}}

|Resignation

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

|Christian Pozer

|Nationalist

|{{dts|1876|9|20}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1884|7|18}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Bolduc

|Nationalist Conservative

|{{dts|1884|10|3}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1924|8|13}}

|Death

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

|Henri Sévérin Béland

|Liberal

|{{dts|1925|9|5}}

|Byng

|King

|{{dts|1935|4|22}}

|Death

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

|Eugène Paquet

|Conservative

|{{dts|1935|8|14}}

|Bessborough

|Bennett

|{{dts|1951|5|8}}

|Death

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

|Léonard Tremblay

|Liberal

|{{dts|1953|6|12}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1965|9|2}}

|Resignation

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

|Jean-Paul Deschatelets

|Liberal

|{{dts|1966|2|24}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1986|1|10}}

|Resignation

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

|Michel Cogger

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1986|5|2}}

|Sauvé

|Mulroney

|{{dts|2000|9|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Yves Morin

|Liberal

|{{dts|2001|3|8}}

|Clarkson

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2004|11|28}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan=3|{{sortname|Dennis|Dawson}}

|Liberal

|{{dts|2005|8|2}}

|rowspan=3|Clarkson

|rowspan=3|Martin

|rowspan=3|September 28, 2024

|rowspan=3|Retirement

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

|Senate Liberal Caucus

|{{dts|2014|1|29}}

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

|Progressive Senate Group

|{{dts|2019|11|14}}

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

|Suze Youance

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2024|9|25}}

|Simon

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

|

=Mille Isles=

The Mille Isles Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Terrebonne and Two Mountains."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Léandre Dumouchel

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1882|9|23}}

|Death

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|background}}|1.

|Louis-Rodrigue Masson

|Conservative

|{{dts|1882|9|29}}

|Lorne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1884|11|6}}

|Resignation

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

|Louis-Adélard Senécal

|Conservative

|{{dts|1887|1|25}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1887|10|11}}

|Death

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

|Jean-Baptiste Rolland

|Conservative

|{{dts|1887|10|22}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1888|3|22}}

|Death

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

|Charles-Séraphin Rodier

|Conservative

|{{dts|1888|12|12}}

|Stanley

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1890|1|26}}

|Death

{{Canadian party colour|CA|PC|background}}|2.

|Louis-Rodrigue Masson

|Conservative

|{{dts|1890|2|3}}

|Stanley

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1903|6|11}}

|Resignation

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

|Laurent-Olivier David

|Liberal

|{{dts|1903|6|19}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1926|8|24}}

|Death

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

|Napoléon Kemner Laflamme

|Liberal

|{{dts|1927|12|21}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1929|8|10}}

|Death

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

|Jules-Édouard Prévost

|Liberal

|{{dts|1930|6|3}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1943|10|13}}

|Death

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

|Armand Daigle

|Liberal

|{{dts|1944|3|3}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1957|3|8}}

|Death

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

|Gustave Monette

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1957|10|12}}

|Massey

|Diefenbaker

|{{dts|1969|12|23}}

|Death

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

|Thérèse Casgrain

|Independent

|{{dts|1970|10|7}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1971|7|10}}

|Retirement

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

|Renaude Lapointe

|Liberal

|{{dts|1971|11|10}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1987|1|3}}

|Retirement

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

|Solange Chaput-Rolland

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1988|9|26}}

|Sauvé

|Mulroney

|{{dts|1994|5|14}}

|Retirement

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

|Jean-Louis Roux

|Liberal

|{{dts|1994|8|31}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Chrétien

|{{dts|1996|8|8}}

|Resignation

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

|Léonce Mercier

|Liberal

|{{dts|1996|8|9}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2001|8|11}}

|Retirement

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

|Michel Biron

|Liberal

|{{dts|2001|10|4}}

|Clarkson

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2009|3|16}}

|Retirement

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

|Claude Carignan

|Conservative

|{{dts|2009|8|27}}

|Jean

|Harper

|Incumbent

|

=Montarville=

The Montarville Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Verchères, Chambly and Laprairie."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!align=left |Affiliation

!align=left |Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Louis Lacoste

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1878|11|26}}

|Death

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

|Charles Boucher de Boucherville

|Conservative

|{{dts|1879|2|12}}

|Lorne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1915|9|11}}

|Death

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

|Charles-Philippe Beaubien

|Conservative

|{{dts|1915|12|3}}

|Connaught

|Borden

|{{dts|1949|1|17}}

|Death

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

|Adélard Godbout

|Liberal

|{{dts|1949|6|25}}

|Alexander

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1956|9|18}}

|Death

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

|Henri Charles Bois

|Liberal

|{{dts|1957|1|3}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1962|7|18}}

|Death

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

|Louis-Philippe Gélinas

|Liberal

|{{dts|1963|6|11}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1965|12|10}}

|Resignation

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

|John Ewasew

|Liberal

|{{dts|1976|12|17}}

|Léger

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1978|3|26}}

|Death

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

|Dalia Wood

|Liberal

|{{dts|1979|3|26}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1999|1|31}}

|Resignation

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

|Sheila Finestone

|Liberal

|{{dts|1999|8|11}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2002|1|28}}

|Retirement

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

|align=left rowspan=2|Raymond Lavigne

|Liberal

|{{dts|2002|3|26}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Clarkson

|align=left rowspan=2|Chrétien

|align=left rowspan=2|{{dts|2011|3|21}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Resignation

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

|Liberal without caucus

|{{dts|2006|6|8}}

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

|align=left rowspan=3|Josée Verner

|Conservative

|{{dts|2011|6|13}}

|align=left rowspan=3|Johnston

|align=left rowspan=3|Harper

|align=left rowspan=3|Incumbent

|align=left rowspan=3|

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

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2017|10|17}}

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

|Canadian Senators Group

|{{dts|2019|11|04}}

=Repentigny=

The Repentigny Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Parish of St. Paul, the Township of Kildare and its augmentation, and the Township of Cathcart, in the County of Joliette, the Counties of L'Assomption and Montcalm."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Joseph-François Armand

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1903|1|1}}

|Death

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

|Joseph-Hormisdas Legris

|Liberal

|{{dts|1903|2|10}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1932|3|6}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Hormisdas Rainville

|Conservative

|{{dts|1932|10|6}}

|Bessborough

|Bennett

|{{dts|1942|4|14}}

|Death

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

|Pamphile Réal Du Tremblay

|Liberal

|{{dts|1942|11|19}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1955|10|6}}

|Death

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

|J.-Eugène Lefrançois

|Liberal

|{{dts|1957|4|25}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1976|11|5}}

|Resignation

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

|Pietro Rizzuto

|Liberal

|{{dts|1976|12|23}}

|Léger

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1997|8|3}}

|Death

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

|Marisa Ferretti Barth

|Liberal

|{{dts|1997|9|22}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2006|4|28}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan=2|Patrick Brazeau

|Conservative

|{{dts|2009|1|8}}

|rowspan=2|Jean

|rowspan=2|Harper

|rowspan=2|Incumbent

|rowspan=2|

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

|Independent

|{{dts|2013|2|7}}

=Rigaud=

The Rigaud Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the Parish of Montreal, and the Counties of Jacques Cartier, Vaudreuil and Solanges." The demarcation of the Alma Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the Parish of Montreal".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Charles Wilson

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1877|5|4}}

|Death

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

|Joseph-Rosaire Thibaudeau

|Liberal

|{{dts|1878|1|4}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1909|6|16}}

|Death

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

|Arthur Boyer

|Liberal

|{{dts|1909|6|28}}

|Grey

|Laurier

|{{dts|1922|1|24}}

|Death

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

|Gustave Benjamin Boyer

|Liberal

|{{dts|1922|3|11}}

|Byng

|King

|{{dts|1927|12|2}}

|Death

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

|Lawrence Alexander Wilson

|Liberal

|{{dts|1930|6|3}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1934|3|3}}

|Death

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

|Arthur Sauvé

|Conservative

|{{dts|1935|7|20}}

|Bessborough

|Bennett

|{{dts|1944|2|6}}

|Death

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

|Vincent Dupuis

|Liberal

|{{dts|1945|4|18}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1967|5|11}}

|Death

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

|Lazarus Phillips

|Liberal

|{{dts|1968|2|9}}

|Michener

|Pearson

|{{dts|1970|10|10}}

|Retirement

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

|Carl Goldenberg

|Liberal

|{{dts|1971|11|4}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1982|10|20}}

|Retirement

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

|Jean Le Moyne

|Liberal

|{{dts|1982|12|23}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1988|2|17}}

|Retirement

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

|align=left rowspan=2|Gérald Beaudoin

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1988|9|26}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Sauvé

|align=left rowspan=2|Mulroney

|{{dts|2004|2|1}}

|align=left rowspan=2|Retirement

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

|Conservative

|{{dts|2004|2|2}}

|{{dts|2004|4|15}}

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

|Yoine Goldstein

|Liberal

|{{dts|2005|8|29}}

|Clarkson

|Martin

|{{dts|2009|5|11}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan=2|Jacques Demers

|Conservative

|{{dts|2009|8|27}}

|rowspan=2|Jean

|rowspan=2|Harper

|rowspan=2|{{dts|2019|8|25}}

|rowspan=2| Retirement

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

|Independent

|{{dts|2015|12|3}}

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

|Amina Gerba

|Progressive Senate Group

|{{dts|2021|7|29}}

|Simon

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

|

=Rougemont=

The Rougemont Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the County of St. Hyacinth, the Counties of Rouville and Iberville." The demarcation of the Saurel Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes "the remainder of the County of St. Hyacinth".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|William Henry Chaffers

|Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1894|7|19}}

|Death

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

|William Hales Hingston

|Conservative

|{{dts|1896|1|2}}

|Aberdeen

|Bowell

|{{dts|1907|2|19}}

|Death

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

|Georges-Casimir Dessaulles

|Liberal

|{{dts|1907|3|12}}

|Grey

|Laurier

|{{dts|1930|4|19}}

|Death

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

|Rodolphe Lemieux

|Liberal

|{{dts|1930|6|3}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1937|9|28}}

|Death

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

|Élie Beauregard

|Liberal

|{{dts|1940|2|9}}

|Tweedsmuir

|King

|{{dts|1954|8|27}}

|Death

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

|Henri Courtemanche

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1960|1|20}}

|Vanier

|Diefenbaker

|{{dts|1961|12|22}}

|Resignation

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

|Jacques Flynn

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1962|11|9}}

|Vanier

|Diefenbaker

|{{dts|1990|8|22}}

|Resignation

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

|John Sylvain

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1990|9|7}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Mulroney

|{{dts|1996|2|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Shirley Maheu

|Liberal

|{{dts|1996|2|1}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2006|2|2}}

|Death

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

|Michael Fortier

|Conservative

|{{dts|2006|2|27}}

|Jean

|Harper

|{{dts|2008|9|7}}

|Resignation

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

|Suzanne Duplessis

|Conservative

|{{dts|2009|1|14}}

|Jean

|Harper

|{{dts|2015|6|30}}

|Retirement

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

|Marie-Françoise Mégie

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2016|11|25}}

|Johnston

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

|

=Saurel=

The Saurel Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Richelieu and Bagot, the Parishes of St. Denis, La Présentation, St. Barnabé, and St. Jude, in the County of St. Hyacinth."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Jean-Baptiste Guevremont

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1896|6|14}}

|Resignation

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

|Louis-Joseph Forget

|Conservative

|{{dts|1896|6|15}}

|Aberdeen

|Tupper

|{{dts|1911|4|7}}

|Death

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

|Joseph-Marcellin Wilson

|Liberal

|{{dts|1911|5|3}}

|Grey

|Laurier

|{{dts|1939|1|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Athanase David

|Liberal

|{{dts|1940|2|9}}

|Tweedsmuir

|King

|{{dts|1953|1|26}}

|Death

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

|Mariana Beauchamp Jodoin

|Liberal

|{{dts|1953|5|19}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1966|6|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Alan Macnaughton

|Liberal

|{{dts|1966|7|8}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1978|7|30}}

|Retirement

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

|Fernand Leblanc

|Liberal

|{{dts|1979|3|27}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1992|7|1}}

|Retirement

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

|Fernand Roberge

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1993|5|26}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Mulroney

|{{dts|2000|7|19}}

|Resignation

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

|Jean Lapointe

|Liberal

|{{dts|2001|6|13}}

|Clarkson

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2010|12|6}}

|Retirement

rowspan=2 {{Canadian party colour|CA|Conservative|background}}|

| rowspan="3" align="left" |Larry Smith

|align=left rowspan=2|Conservative

|{{dts|2010|12|20}}

|Johnston

|Harper

|{{dts|2011|3|25}}

|Resignation

{{dts|2011|5|25}}

| rowspan="2" |Johnston

| rowspan="2" |Harper

| rowspan="2" |Incumbent

| rowspan="2" |

{{Canadian party colour|CA|CSG|background}}|

|Canadian Senators Group

|August 4, 2022

=Shawinegan=

The Shawinegan Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Champlain and St. Maurice, the Town of Three Rivers, the Parishes of River du Loup, St. Léon, St. Paulin, and the Township of Hunterstown and its augmentation, in the County of Maskinongé."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|James Ferrier

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1888|5|30}}

|Death

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

|Hippolyte Montplaisir

|Liberal-Conservative

|{{dts|1891|2|9}}

|Stanley

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1927|6|20}}

|Death

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

|Philippe-Jacques Paradis

|Liberal

|{{dts|1927|12|14}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1933|6|20}}

|Death

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

|Charles Bourgeois

|Conservative

|{{dts|1935|8|15}}

|Bessborough

|Bennett

|{{dts|1940|5|15}}

|Death

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

|Charles-Édouard Ferland

|Liberal

|{{dts|1945|4|18}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1951|4|18}}

|Resignation

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

|Léon Méthot

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1957|10|12}}

|Massey

|Diefenbaker

|{{dts|1972|8|6}}

|Death

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

|Maurice Riel

|Liberal

|{{dts|1973|10|5}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1997|4|3}}

|Retirement

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

|Lucie Pépin

|Liberal

|{{dts|1997|4|8}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2011|9|7}}

|Retirement

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

|Ghislain Maltais

|Conservative

|{{dts|2012|1|6}}

|Johnston

|Harper

|{{dts|2019|4|22}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan=2|Tony Loffreda

|Independent

|{{dts|2019|7|23}}

|rowspan=2|Johnston

|rowspan=2|J. Trudeau

|rowspan=2|Incumbent

|rowspan=2|

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

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2019|11|7}}

=Stadacona=

The Stadacona Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the City and Banlieue of Quebec." The demarcation of the La Salle Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the City...of Quebec".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!align=left |Affiliation

!align=left |Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Narcisse-Fortunat Belleau

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Appointment declined

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

|Joseph-Édouard Cauchon

|Independent Conservative

|{{dts|1867|11|2}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1872|6|30}}

|Resignation

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

|Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau

|Conservative

|{{dts|1873|2|20}}

|Dufferin

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1874|1|8}}

|Resignation

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

|Pierre Baillargeon

|Liberal

|{{dts|1874|3|27}}

|Dufferin

|Mackenzie

|{{dts|1891|12|15}}

|Death

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

|Auguste Landry

|Conservative

|{{dts|1892|2|23}}

|Stanley

|Abbott

|{{dts|1919|12|20}}

|Death

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

|Lorne Campbell Webster

|Conservative

|{{dts|1920|1|10}}

|Devonshire

|Borden

|{{dts|1941|9|27}}

|Death

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

|Jean-Marie Dessureault

|Liberal

|{{dts|1945|6|9}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1970|8|16}}

|Resignation

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

|Martial Asselin

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1972|9|1}}

|Michener

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1990|8|7}}

|Resignation

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

|Claude Castonguay

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1990|9|23}}

|Hnatyshyn

|Mulroney

|{{dts|1992|12|9}}

|Resignation

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

|align=left rowspan=3|Jean-Claude Rivest

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1993|3|11}}

|align=left rowspan=3|Hnatyshyn

|align=left rowspan=3|Mulroney

|align=left rowspan=3|{{dts|2015|1|31}}

|align=left rowspan=3|Resignation

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

|Conservative

|{{dts|2004|2|2}}

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

|Independent

|{{dts|2004|8|31}}

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

|rowspan=2|Marc Gold

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2016|11|25}}

|rowspan=2|Johnston

|rowspan=2|Trudeau, J.

|rowspan=2|Incumbent

|rowspan=2|

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

|Non-affiliated

|{{dts|2020|01|24}}

=The Laurentides=

The Senate division of The Laurentides is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The Counties of Chicoutimi, Charlevoix, Saguenay and Montmorency, the Seigniory of Beauport, the Parish of Charlebourg, the Townships of Stoneham and Tewkesbury, in the County of Quebec."

class="wikitable"

!Name

!align=left |Affiliation

!align=left |Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|David Edward Price

|Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1883|8|22}}

|Death

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

|James Gibb Ross

|Conservative

|{{dts|1884|1|11}}

|Lansdowne

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1888|10|1}}

|Death

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

|Evans John Price

|Conservative

|{{dts|1888|12|1}}

|Stanley

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1899|8|30}}

|Death

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

|Joseph Shehyn

|Liberal

|{{dts|1900|2|5}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1918|7|14}}

|Death

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

|Pierre Édouard Blondin

|Conservative

|{{dts|1918|7|20}}

|Devonshire

|Borden

|{{dts|1943|10|29}}

|Death

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

|Télesphore-Damien Bouchard

|Liberal

|{{dts|1944|3|3}}

|Athlone

|King

|{{dts|1962|11|13}}

|Death

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

|Maurice Bourget

|Liberal

|{{dts|1963|4|27}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1979|3|29}}

|Death

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

|Arthur Tremblay

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1979|9|27}}

|Schreyer

|Clark

|{{dts|1992|6|18}}

|Retirement

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

|colspan=7|In abeyance - the appointment of Normand Grimard to the temporary division of Quebec under section 26 of the Constitution Act, 1867 required this division be left vacant between Tremblay's retirement and Grimard's retirement on {{dts|2000|06|16}}

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

|Raymond Setlakwe

|Liberal

|{{dts|2000|6|20}}

|Clarkson

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2003|7|3}}

|Retirement

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

|Madeleine Plamondon

|Independent

|{{dts|2003|9|9}}

|Clarkson

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2006|9|21}}

|Retirement

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

|rowspan=2|Michel Rivard

|Conservative

|{{dts|2009|1|2}}

|rowspan=2|Jean

|rowspan=2|Harper

|rowspan=2|{{dts|2016|8|7}}

|rowspan=2|Retirement

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

|Independent

|{{dts|2016|3|8}}

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

|Renée Dupuis

|Independent Senators Group

|{{dts|2016|11|10}}

|Johnston

|Trudeau, J.

|{{dts|2024|1|17}}

|Retirement

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

|Pierre Moreau

|Progressive Senate Group

|{{dts|2024|9|10}}

|Simon

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

=Victoria=

The Victoria Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the City of Montreal exclusive of the Parish." The demarcation of the Alma Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the city of Montreal".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Affiliation

!Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|Thomas Ryan

|Liberal-Conservative

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1889|5|25}}

|Death

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

|Edward Murphy

|Liberal-Conservative

|{{dts|1889|5|30}}

|Stanley

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1895|12|5}}

|Death

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

|James O'Brien

|Liberal-Conservative

|{{dts|1896|1|2}}

|Aberdeen

|Bowell

|{{dts|1903|5|28}}

|Death

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

|Henry Joseph Cloran

|Liberal

|{{dts|1903|6|30}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1928|2|8}}

|Death

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

|Edmund William Tobin

|Liberal

|{{dts|1930|6|3}}

|Willingdon

|King

|{{dts|1938|6|24}}

|Death

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

|William James Hushion

|Liberal

|{{dts|1940|2|15}}

|Duff1

|King

|{{dts|1954|1|29}}

|Death

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

|John Thomas Hackett

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1955|7|28}}

|Massey

|St. Laurent

|{{dts|1956|9|15}}

|Death

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

|Josie Alice Quart

|Progressive Conservative

|{{dts|1960|11|16}}

|Vanier

|Diefenbaker

|{{dts|1980|4|17}}

|Death

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

|Leo Kolber

|Liberal

|{{dts|1983|12|23}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|2004|1|18}}

|Retirement

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

|Francis Fox

|Liberal

|{{dts|2005|8|29}}

|Clarkson

|Martin

|{{dts|2011|12|2}}

|Resignation

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

| rowspan="2" |Jean-Guy Dagenais

|Conservative

|{{dts|2012|1|17}}

| rowspan="2" |Johnston

| rowspan="2" |Harper

| rowspan="2" |{{dts|2025|2|2}}

| rowspan="2" |Retirement

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

|Canadian Senators Group

|{{dts|2019|11|18}}

{{Canadian party colour|CA|Non-affiliated|row}}

|Martine Hébert

|Non-affiliated

|{{dts|2025|2|7}}

|Simon

|Trudeau, J.

|Incumbent

Notes:

1 Lyman Duff served as acting Governor General from {{dts|1940|2|11}} to {{dts|1940|6|21}} in his capacity as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada

=Wellington=

The Wellington Senate division is defined in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada (1859) as "The remainder of the County of Drummond, the County of Richmond, the Town of Sherbrooke, the Counties of Wolfe, Compton, and Stanstead." The demarcation of the De la Vallière Senate division provides an explanation of what constitutes the "remainder of the County of Drummond".

class="wikitable"

!Name

!align=left |Affiliation

!align=left |Date appointed/
affiliation change

!Appointed by

!On the advice of

!End of term

!Reason

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

|John Sewell Sanborn

|Liberal

|{{dts|1867|10|23}}

|Monck

|Royal Proclamation

|{{dts|1872|10|1}}

|Resignation

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

|Matthew Henry Cochrane

|Conservative

|{{dts|1872|10|17}}

|Dufferin

|Macdonald

|{{dts|1903|8|12}}

|Death

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

|William Mitchell

|Liberal

|{{dts|1904|3|5}}

|Minto

|Laurier

|{{dts|1926|5|10}}

|Death

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

|Wilfrid Laurier McDougald

|Liberal

|{{dts|1926|6|25}}

|Byng

|King

|{{dts|1932|5|3}}

|Resignation

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

|Albert Joseph Brown

|Conservative

|{{dts|1932|10|6}}

|Bessborough

|Bennett

|{{dts|1938|11|16}}

|Death

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

|Charles Benjamin Howard

|Liberal

|{{dts|1940|2|9}}

|Tweedsmuir

|King

|{{dts|1964|3|25}}

|Death

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

|Paul Desruisseaux

|Liberal

|{{dts|1966|7|8}}

|Vanier

|Pearson

|{{dts|1980|5|1}}

|Retirement

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

|Jacques Hébert

|Liberal

|{{dts|1983|4|20}}

|Schreyer

|Trudeau, P. E.

|{{dts|1998|6|21}}

|Retirement

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

|Aurélien Gill

|Liberal

|{{dts|1998|9|17}}

|LeBlanc

|Chrétien

|{{dts|2008|8|26}}

|Retirement

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

|Leo Housakos

|Conservative

|{{dts|2009|1|8}}

|Jean

|Harper

|Incumbent

|

See also

References