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Harcourt ministry

The Harcourt ministry was the combined Cabinet (formally the Executive Council of British Columbia) that governed British Columbia from November 5, 1991, to February 22, 1996. It was led by Mike Harcourt, the 30th premier of British Columbia, and consisted of members of the New Democratic Party (NDP).

Harcourt ministry

30th ministry of British Columbia
Date formedNovember 5, 1991 (1991-11-05)
Date dissolvedFebruary 22, 1996 (1996-02-22)
People and organisations
MonarchElizabeth II
Lieutenant Governor
PremierMike Harcourt
Deputy Premier
Member partyNew Democratic Party
Status in legislatureMajority
Opposition partyLiberal Party
Opposition leader
History
Election(s)1991
Legislature term(s)35th Parliament of British Columbia
PredecessorJohnston ministry
SuccessorGlen Clark ministry

The Harcourt ministry was established following the 1991 British Columbia general election, in which the NDP won a majority government. It governed for the majority of the 35th Parliament of British Columbia, until Harcourt announced his resignation in November 1995, pending a leadership election.[1] The Harcourt ministry was disestablished on February 22, 1996, and succeeded by the Glen Clark ministry.[2]

List of ministers Edit

Harcourt ministry by portfolio
Portfolio Minister Tenure
Start End
Premier of British Columbia Mike Harcourt November 5, 1991 February 22, 1996
Deputy Premier of British Columbia Anita Hagen November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Elizabeth Cull September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Aboriginal Affairs Andrew Petter November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
John Cashore September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Advanced Education, Training and Technology Tom Perry November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Bill Barlee November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
David Zirnhelt September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Attorney General Colin Gabelmann November 5, 1991 August 16, 1995
Ujjal Dosanjh August 16, 1995 February 22, 1996
Minister responsible for Constitutional Affairs Moe Sihota November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Minister responsible for Culture Darlene Marzari November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Minister of Economic Development, Small Business and Trade David Zirnhelt November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Minister of Education Anita Hagen November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Arthur Charbonneau September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Employment and Investment Glen Clark September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources Anne Edwards November 5, 1991 February 22, 1996
Minister of Environment, Lands and Parks John Cashore November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Moe Sihota September 15, 1993 May 10, 1995
Elizabeth Cull May 10, 1995 August 16, 1995
Moe Sihota August 16, 1995 February 22, 1996
Minister of Finance and Corporate Relations Glen Clark November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Elizabeth Cull September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Forests Dan Miller November 5, 1991 September 17, 1992
Arthur Charbonneau September 17, 1992 December 16, 1992
Dan Miller December 16, 1992 September 15, 1993
Andrew Petter September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Government Services Lois Boone November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Robin Blencoe September 15, 1993 March 9, 1995
Arthur Charbonneau March 9, 1995 April 10, 1995
Ujjal Dosanjh April 10, 1995 August 16, 1995
Colin Gabelmann August 16, 1995 February 22, 1996
Minister of Health Elizabeth Cull November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Paul Ramsey September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Housing, Recreation and Consumer Services Joan Smallwood September 15, 1993 October 26, 1995
Sue Hammell October 26, 1995 February 22, 1996
Minister of Labour and Consumer Services Moe Sihota November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Minister responsible for Multiculturalism, Human Rights and Immigration[a] Anita Hagen November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Moe Sihota September 15, 1993 May 10, 1995
Ujjal Dosanjh May 10, 1995 February 22, 1996
Minister of Municipal Affairs, Recreation and Housing Robin Blencoe November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Minister of Municipal Affairs Darlene Marzari September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister responsible for Seniors Elizabeth Cull November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Paul Ramsey September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Skills, Training and Labour Dan Miller September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Small Business, Tourism and Culture Bill Barlee September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Social Services Joan Smallwood November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Joy MacPhail September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister responsible for Sports[b] Robin Blencoe September 15, 1993 March 9, 1995
Arthur Charbonneau March 9, 1995 April 10, 1995
Ujjal Dosanjh April 19, 1995 August 16, 1995
Colin Gabelmann August 16, 1995 February 22, 1996
Minister of Tourism Darlene Marzari November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Minister of Transportation and Highways Arthur Charbonneau November 5, 1991 September 15, 1993
Jackie Pement September 15, 1993 February 22, 1996
Minister of Women's Equality Penny Priddy November 5, 1991 February 22, 1996

Cabinet composition and shuffles Edit

Harcourt's initial cabinet consisted of 18 ministers.[3] Several ministries saw their responsibilities adjusted: attorney general gained responsibility for Elections BC and the liquor distribution system, and took over all the duties of solicitor general (except for ICBC); crown lands and parks was merged into the environmental ministry; and responsibility for BC Ferries and BC Transit was moved from transportation to finance. Harcourt himself took the responsibility for the Trade Corporation.[4]

A then-record of seven women were appointed to cabinet, in roles that Harcourt said "will be in charge of 80 per cent of the budget of B.C."[4] A separate ministry of women's equality was also established, following a promise that the NDP had made in 1988.[5] In reference to this, Denise Helm of the Times Colonist remarked that "B.C. women gained unprecedented political clout" in the Harcourt ministry.[5] Additionally, Harcourt appointed the first Indo-Canadian cabinet minister in Canada, Moe Sihota.[4]

On September 17, 1992, forests minister Dan Miller was "suspended" from cabinet for 90 days after he was found to have been in a conflict of interest regarding forestry licences. Art Charbonneau served as forests minister during Miller's suspension.[6]

As part of an overall change in strategy, Harcourt initiated a major cabinet shuffle on September 15, 1993. Almost every portfolio changed hands, though Harcourt stressed that "these cabinet changes are more about me changing my attitude than the performance of individuals." Three members — Lois Boone, Anita Hagen and Tom Perry — were dropped from cabinet, and three backbenchers joined: Joy MacPhail, Jackie Pement and Paul Ramsey.[7] The most notable change was Elizabeth Cull's promotion to deputy premier and finance minister, becoming the first woman finance minister in BC.[8]

On March 9, 1995, Robin Blencoe resigned as government services minister, while under investigation for sexual harassment; however, Blencoe remained a member of the cabinet as minister without portfolio. Charbonneau was appointed to the ministry in the interim.[9] After two more allegations emerged, Blencoe was removed from cabinet entirely, as well as party caucus, on April 4.[10] Six days later, on April 10, caucus chairman Ujjal Dosanjh was named the new minister of government services, joining the cabinet.[11]

On May 5, 1995, Sihota resigned from cabinet after being sanctioned by the BC Law Society; John Cashore stepped in as acting environment minister.[12] A week later, Sihota's responsibilities were formally divided up among existing cabinet ministers: Cull took over as environment minister, Dosanjh took responsibility for multiculturalism and human rights, and Clark took responsibility for immigration policy. Regarding the division, Cull said she didn't "expect to carry two portfolios for an indefinite period of time."[13] Three months later, on August 16, Sihota returned to cabinet as environment minister, though Dosanjh remained responsible for multiculturalism. Sihota's return was part of a small shuffle that also saw Colin Gabelmann and Dosanjh swap roles, with Gabelmann becoming minister of government services and Dosanjh becoming attorney general.[14]

On October 26, 1995, Harcourt fired Joan Smallwood over her criticisms of his handling of the Bingogate scandal; she was succeeded as minister of consumer affairs by Sue Hammell.[15]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "Multiculturalism and Human Rights" from November 5, 1991, to August 16, 1995
  2. ^ "Sports and Commonwealth Games" from September 15, 1993, to April 10, 1995

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ "Mike Harcourt | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved August 16, 2022.
  2. ^ "Glen Clark | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved August 6, 2022.
  3. ^ "New premier's 18 cabinet colleagues". Times Colonist. November 6, 1991. pp. A6.
  4. ^ a b c Leyne, Les (November 6, 1991). "Roaring start for new cabinet". Times Colonist. pp. A1–A2.
  5. ^ a b Helm, Denise (November 6, 1991). "Women gain political clout". Times Colonist. pp. A1–A2.
  6. ^ Leyne, Les (September 18, 1992). "Forests minister suspended". Times Colonist. pp. A1–A2.
  7. ^ Leyne, Les (September 16, 1993). "Harcourt: New mission to reverse the failures". Times Colonist. pp. A1.
  8. ^ Curtis, Malcolm (September 16, 1993). "Cull will focus on wealth and waste". Times Colonist. pp. A2.
  9. ^ Helm, Denise; Young, Gerard (March 10, 1995). "Job shuffle turns into political football". Times Colonist. pp. A1, A3.
  10. ^ Leyne, Les (April 5, 1995). "Blencoe booted, probe halted". Times Colonist. pp. A1, A10.
  11. ^ Leyne, Les (April 11, 1995). "Caucus chairman replaces Blencoe". Times Colonist. pp. A1.
  12. ^ Leyne, Les (May 6, 1995). "He should have quit two years ago, foes say". Times Colonist. pp. A1, A7.
  13. ^ Leyne, Les (May 11, 1995). "Double duty for three". Times Colonist. pp. A1, A8.
  14. ^ Young, Gerard (August 17, 1995). "Sihota returns to cabinet job after three months in the wilderness". Times Colonist. pp. A1, A3.
  15. ^ Leyne, Les (October 27, 1995). "Smallwood's firing upsets NDP ranks". Times Colonist. pp. A1.

Sources Edit

"Mike Harcourt Cabinet" (PDF). Legislative Library of British Columbia. Retrieved August 16, 2022.

harcourt, ministry, combined, cabinet, formally, executive, council, british, columbia, that, governed, british, columbia, from, november, 1991, february, 1996, mike, harcourt, 30th, premier, british, columbia, consisted, members, democratic, party, 30th, mini. The Harcourt ministry was the combined Cabinet formally the Executive Council of British Columbia that governed British Columbia from November 5 1991 to February 22 1996 It was led by Mike Harcourt the 30th premier of British Columbia and consisted of members of the New Democratic Party NDP Harcourt ministry30th ministry of British ColumbiaDate formedNovember 5 1991 1991 11 05 Date dissolvedFebruary 22 1996 1996 02 22 People and organisationsMonarchElizabeth IILieutenant GovernorDavid Lam 1991 1995 Garde Gardom 1995 1996 PremierMike HarcourtDeputy PremierAnita Hagen 1991 1993 Elizabeth Cull 1993 1996 Member partyNew Democratic PartyStatus in legislatureMajorityOpposition partyLiberal PartyOpposition leaderGordon Wilson 1991 1993 Fred Gingell 1993 1994 Gordon Campbell 1994 1996 HistoryElection s 1991Legislature term s 35th Parliament of British ColumbiaPredecessorJohnston ministrySuccessorGlen Clark ministryThe Harcourt ministry was established following the 1991 British Columbia general election in which the NDP won a majority government It governed for the majority of the 35th Parliament of British Columbia until Harcourt announced his resignation in November 1995 pending a leadership election 1 The Harcourt ministry was disestablished on February 22 1996 and succeeded by the Glen Clark ministry 2 Contents 1 List of ministers 2 Cabinet composition and shuffles 3 Notes 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 SourcesList of ministers EditHarcourt ministry by portfolio Portfolio Minister TenureStart EndPremier of British Columbia Mike Harcourt November 5 1991 February 22 1996Deputy Premier of British Columbia Anita Hagen November 5 1991 September 15 1993Elizabeth Cull September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Aboriginal Affairs Andrew Petter November 5 1991 September 15 1993John Cashore September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Advanced Education Training and Technology Tom Perry November 5 1991 September 15 1993Minister of Agriculture Fisheries and Food Bill Barlee November 5 1991 September 15 1993David Zirnhelt September 15 1993 February 22 1996Attorney General Colin Gabelmann November 5 1991 August 16 1995Ujjal Dosanjh August 16 1995 February 22 1996Minister responsible for Constitutional Affairs Moe Sihota November 5 1991 September 15 1993Minister responsible for Culture Darlene Marzari November 5 1991 September 15 1993Minister of Economic Development Small Business and Trade David Zirnhelt November 5 1991 September 15 1993Minister of Education Anita Hagen November 5 1991 September 15 1993Arthur Charbonneau September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Employment and Investment Glen Clark September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Energy Mines and Petroleum Resources Anne Edwards November 5 1991 February 22 1996Minister of Environment Lands and Parks John Cashore November 5 1991 September 15 1993Moe Sihota September 15 1993 May 10 1995Elizabeth Cull May 10 1995 August 16 1995Moe Sihota August 16 1995 February 22 1996Minister of Finance and Corporate Relations Glen Clark November 5 1991 September 15 1993Elizabeth Cull September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Forests Dan Miller November 5 1991 September 17 1992Arthur Charbonneau September 17 1992 December 16 1992Dan Miller December 16 1992 September 15 1993Andrew Petter September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Government Services Lois Boone November 5 1991 September 15 1993Robin Blencoe September 15 1993 March 9 1995Arthur Charbonneau March 9 1995 April 10 1995Ujjal Dosanjh April 10 1995 August 16 1995Colin Gabelmann August 16 1995 February 22 1996Minister of Health Elizabeth Cull November 5 1991 September 15 1993Paul Ramsey September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Housing Recreation and Consumer Services Joan Smallwood September 15 1993 October 26 1995Sue Hammell October 26 1995 February 22 1996Minister of Labour and Consumer Services Moe Sihota November 5 1991 September 15 1993Minister responsible for Multiculturalism Human Rights and Immigration a Anita Hagen November 5 1991 September 15 1993Moe Sihota September 15 1993 May 10 1995Ujjal Dosanjh May 10 1995 February 22 1996Minister of Municipal Affairs Recreation and Housing Robin Blencoe November 5 1991 September 15 1993Minister of Municipal Affairs Darlene Marzari September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister responsible for Seniors Elizabeth Cull November 5 1991 September 15 1993Paul Ramsey September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Skills Training and Labour Dan Miller September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Small Business Tourism and Culture Bill Barlee September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Social Services Joan Smallwood November 5 1991 September 15 1993Joy MacPhail September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister responsible for Sports b Robin Blencoe September 15 1993 March 9 1995Arthur Charbonneau March 9 1995 April 10 1995Ujjal Dosanjh April 19 1995 August 16 1995Colin Gabelmann August 16 1995 February 22 1996Minister of Tourism Darlene Marzari November 5 1991 September 15 1993Minister of Transportation and Highways Arthur Charbonneau November 5 1991 September 15 1993Jackie Pement September 15 1993 February 22 1996Minister of Women s Equality Penny Priddy November 5 1991 February 22 1996Cabinet composition and shuffles EditHarcourt s initial cabinet consisted of 18 ministers 3 Several ministries saw their responsibilities adjusted attorney general gained responsibility for Elections BC and the liquor distribution system and took over all the duties of solicitor general except for ICBC crown lands and parks was merged into the environmental ministry and responsibility for BC Ferries and BC Transit was moved from transportation to finance Harcourt himself took the responsibility for the Trade Corporation 4 A then record of seven women were appointed to cabinet in roles that Harcourt said will be in charge of 80 per cent of the budget of B C 4 A separate ministry of women s equality was also established following a promise that the NDP had made in 1988 5 In reference to this Denise Helm of the Times Colonist remarked that B C women gained unprecedented political clout in the Harcourt ministry 5 Additionally Harcourt appointed the first Indo Canadian cabinet minister in Canada Moe Sihota 4 On September 17 1992 forests minister Dan Miller was suspended from cabinet for 90 days after he was found to have been in a conflict of interest regarding forestry licences Art Charbonneau served as forests minister during Miller s suspension 6 As part of an overall change in strategy Harcourt initiated a major cabinet shuffle on September 15 1993 Almost every portfolio changed hands though Harcourt stressed that these cabinet changes are more about me changing my attitude than the performance of individuals Three members Lois Boone Anita Hagen and Tom Perry were dropped from cabinet and three backbenchers joined Joy MacPhail Jackie Pement and Paul Ramsey 7 The most notable change was Elizabeth Cull s promotion to deputy premier and finance minister becoming the first woman finance minister in BC 8 On March 9 1995 Robin Blencoe resigned as government services minister while under investigation for sexual harassment however Blencoe remained a member of the cabinet as minister without portfolio Charbonneau was appointed to the ministry in the interim 9 After two more allegations emerged Blencoe was removed from cabinet entirely as well as party caucus on April 4 10 Six days later on April 10 caucus chairman Ujjal Dosanjh was named the new minister of government services joining the cabinet 11 On May 5 1995 Sihota resigned from cabinet after being sanctioned by the BC Law Society John Cashore stepped in as acting environment minister 12 A week later Sihota s responsibilities were formally divided up among existing cabinet ministers Cull took over as environment minister Dosanjh took responsibility for multiculturalism and human rights and Clark took responsibility for immigration policy Regarding the division Cull said she didn t expect to carry two portfolios for an indefinite period of time 13 Three months later on August 16 Sihota returned to cabinet as environment minister though Dosanjh remained responsible for multiculturalism Sihota s return was part of a small shuffle that also saw Colin Gabelmann and Dosanjh swap roles with Gabelmann becoming minister of government services and Dosanjh becoming attorney general 14 On October 26 1995 Harcourt fired Joan Smallwood over her criticisms of his handling of the Bingogate scandal she was succeeded as minister of consumer affairs by Sue Hammell 15 Notes Edit Multiculturalism and Human Rights from November 5 1991 to August 16 1995 Sports and Commonwealth Games from September 15 1993 to April 10 1995References EditCitations Edit Mike Harcourt The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved August 16 2022 Glen Clark The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved August 6 2022 New premier s 18 cabinet colleagues Times Colonist November 6 1991 pp A6 a b c Leyne Les November 6 1991 Roaring start for new cabinet Times Colonist pp A1 A2 a b Helm Denise November 6 1991 Women gain political clout Times Colonist pp A1 A2 Leyne Les September 18 1992 Forests minister suspended Times Colonist pp A1 A2 Leyne Les September 16 1993 Harcourt New mission to reverse the failures Times Colonist pp A1 Curtis Malcolm September 16 1993 Cull will focus on wealth and waste Times Colonist pp A2 Helm Denise Young Gerard March 10 1995 Job shuffle turns into political football Times Colonist pp A1 A3 Leyne Les April 5 1995 Blencoe booted probe halted Times Colonist pp A1 A10 Leyne Les April 11 1995 Caucus chairman replaces Blencoe Times Colonist pp A1 Leyne Les May 6 1995 He should have quit two years ago foes say Times Colonist pp A1 A7 Leyne Les May 11 1995 Double duty for three Times Colonist pp A1 A8 Young Gerard August 17 1995 Sihota returns to cabinet job after three months in the wilderness Times Colonist pp A1 A3 Leyne Les October 27 1995 Smallwood s firing upsets NDP ranks Times Colonist pp A1 Sources Edit Mike Harcourt Cabinet PDF Legislative Library of British Columbia Retrieved August 16 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harcourt ministry amp oldid 1156044060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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