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1996 in Canada
Last updated
January 11, 2026
Contents
Incumbents
Crown
Federal government
Provincial governments
Territorial governments
Events
January to March
March to June
July to September
October to December
Full date unknown
Arts and literature
New books
Awards
New music
Sport
Births
January to June
July to December
Full date unknown 2
Deaths
January to March 2
April to June
July to September 2
October to December 2
Full date unknown 3
See also
References
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1996
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1997
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Decades:
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See also:
History of Canada
Timeline of Canadian history
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Part of
a series
on the
History of Canada
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's
The Death of General Wolfe
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(
list
)
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Prehistory to 1st century BC
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Significant
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Name etymologies
Research
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The Canadian Encyclopedia
Canada
portal
v
t
e
Events from the year
1996 in Canada
.
Incumbents
Main article:
1996 Canadian incumbents
Crown
Monarch
–
Elizabeth II
[
1
]
Federal government
Governor General
–
Roméo LeBlanc
Prime Minister
–
Jean Chrétien
Chief Justice
–
Antonio Lamer
(
Quebec
)
Parliament
–
35th
Provincial governments
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
–
Gordon Towers
(until April 17) then
Bud Olson
Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia
–
Garde Gardom
Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba
–
Yvon Dumont
Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick
–
Margaret McCain
Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland
–
Frederick Russell
Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia
–
James Kinley
Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
–
Hal Jackman
Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island
–
Gilbert Clements
Lieutenant Governor of Quebec
–
Martial Asselin
(until August 8) then
Jean-Louis Roux
Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan
–
Jack Wiebe
Premiers
Premier of Alberta
–
Ralph Klein
Premier of British Columbia
–
Mike Harcourt
(until February 22) then
Glen Clark
Premier of Manitoba
–
Gary Filmon
Premier of New Brunswick
–
Frank McKenna
Premier of Newfoundland
–
Clyde Wells
(until January 26) then
Brian Tobin
Premier of Nova Scotia
–
John Savage
Premier of Ontario
–
Mike Harris
Premier of Prince Edward Island
–
Catherine Callbeck
(until October 9) then
Keith Milligan
(October 9 to November 27) then
Pat Binns
Premier of Quebec
–
Jacques Parizeau
(until January 29) then
Lucien Bouchard
Premier of Saskatchewan
–
Roy Romanow
Territorial governments
Commissioners
Commissioner of Yukon
–
Judy Gingell
Commissioner of Northwest Territories
–
Helen Maksagak
Premiers
Premier of the Northwest Territories
–
Don Morin
Premier of Yukon
–
John Ostashek
(until October 19) then
Piers McDonald
Events
January to March
January 1 – Fort Norman, Northwest Territories, is renamed to
Tulita
.
January 14 – A free trade agreement with
Israel
is announced.
January 15 – The
Corel Centre
opens in
Ottawa
.
January 25 –
Jean Chrétien
launches a major cabinet shuffle.
Pierre Pettigrew
and
Stéphane Dion
are brought in, despite not having seats in Parliament.
January 26 –
Brian Tobin
becomes premier of Newfoundland, replacing
Clyde Wells
.
January 29 –
Lucien Bouchard
becomes
premier of Quebec
, replacing
Jacques Parizeau
.
February 7 –
Bob Rae
, former
premier of Ontario
leaves politics.
February 14 –
Mr. Dressup
does his last show.
February 15 – At a ceremony marking the first
National Flag of Canada Day
, Chrétien throttles a protester in
Hull, Quebec
, launching a small controversy over the "
Shawinigan Handshake
".
February 17 –
Michel Gauthier
is
elected
new leader of the
Bloc Québécois
.
February 22 –
Glen Clark
becomes premier of
British Columbia
, replacing Michael Harcourt.
February 22 –
Brian Tobin
leads the
Newfoundland Liberal Party
to victory in the
1996 Newfoundland election
.
March to June
March 6 – The federal budget continues the assault on the deficit.
March 26 – The
Anik E-1
satellite malfunctions.
March 27 – The Quebec budget proposes sweeping cuts to government funding.
April 3 – All members of the Canadian Forces are ordered to spend the entire day searching for documents that may aid the Somalia inquiry.
April 5 – Gunman Mark Chahal kills nine relatives in Vernon, British Columbia before killing himself.
April 11 – The Ontario government announce a 15 per cent reduction in the civil service.
April 22 –
John Nunziata
is expelled from the Liberal caucus for voting against the budget.
April 23 –
Nova Scotia
,
New Brunswick
, and
Newfoundland
agree to replace their provincial sales taxes and the
Goods and Services Tax
with a
Harmonized Sales Tax
.
May 8 – The Ontario government cuts provincial income taxes by 30 per cent.
May 10 – Member of Parliament
Jan Brown
resigns from the
Reform Party of Canada
.
May 19 –
Marc Garneau
flies on a second space mission.
May 24 –
Conrad Black
's
Hollinger
takes over the
Southam
newspaper chain.
May 28 – The
British Columbia New Democratic Party
wins a surprise re-election.
June 10 – The Quebec government reintroduces the "
Language police
".
June 17 –
Sheila Copps
, who had resigned over the
GST
, wins back her
Hamilton–Wentworth
seat in a
by-election
.
June 20 –
Robert Thirsk
flies aboard the
Space Shuttle
Columbia
.
June 24 – A riot in
Quebec City
causes a million dollars in damage.
July to September
July 7 – July 11 – A major
AIDS
conference is held in
Vancouver
.
July 20 – July 21 – Floods in Quebec kill ten.
July 25 –
Coach House Press
closes.
August 8 – Former
Prime Minister
Kim Campbell
is named
consul general
to
Los Angeles
.
August 8 –
Jean-Louis Roux
appointed
Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec
.
August 29 – Former B.C. Premier
W.R. Bennett
is found guilty of
insider trading
.
September 29 – Fifteen-year-old
Melanie Ethier
vanishes without a trace in
New Liskeard
, Ontario, sparking a decades-long police investigation.
October to December
October 4 – Defence Minister
David Collenette
resigns.
October 10 –
Keith Milligan
becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing
Catherine Callbeck
.
October 19 –
Piers McDonald
becomes government leader of Yukon, replacing
John Ostashek
.
November –
SaskTel
becomes the first Canadian
Internet service provider
to roll out
ADSL
.
November – The last federally run
Indian residential school
(the Gordon Residential School), closed in
Punnichy
, Saskatchewan.
November 5 –
Jean-Louis Roux
forced to resign as
Lieutenant Governor of Quebec
when pictures of him at Nazi rallies in the 1930s are published.
November 27 –
Pat Binns
becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing
Keith Milligan
.
December 1 –
Dalton McGuinty
is
elected
leader of the
Ontario Liberal Party
.
December 16 – Chrétien formally apologizes for lying about the
GST
.
Full date unknown
Karen Kain
becomes the first Canadian to win the Cartier Lifetime Achievement Award.
General
Jean Boyle
resigns over
Somalia Affair
controversy.
Canada sends over a thousand troops to take part in
IFOR
.
James McGill Statue
unveiled.
Arts and literature
New books
John Ralston Saul
:
The Unconscious Civilization
Nancy Huston
:
Slow Emergencies
Pierre Berton
:
Farewell to the Twentieth Century
Elisabeth Harvor
:
Let Me Be the One
Yann Martel
:
Self
Timothy Findley
:
You Went Away
Di Brandt
:
Dancing Naked: Narrative Strategies for Writing Across Centuries
Douglas Coupland
:
Polaroids from the Dead
Guy Vanderhaeghe
:
The Englishman's Boy
Awards
Giller Prize for Canadian Fiction
:
Margaret Atwood
,
Alias Grace
See
1996 Governor General's Awards
for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
Books in Canada First Novel Award
:
Keath Fraser
,
Popular Anatomy
Geoffrey Bilson Award
:
Marianne Brandis
,
Rebellion: A Novel of Upper Canada
Gerald Lampert Award
:
Maureen Hynes
,
Rough Skin
Marian Engel Award
:
Barbara Gowdy
Pat Lowther Award
:
Lorna Crozier
,
Everything Arrives at the Light
Stephen Leacock Award
:
Marsha Boulton
,
Letters from the Country
Trillium Book Award
English:
Anne Michaels
,
Fugitive Pieces
Trillium Book Award
French:
Nancy Vickers
[
fr
]
,
Le Pied de Sappho
and
Alain Bernard Marchand
,
Tintin au pays de la ferveur
Vicky Metcalf Award
:
Margaret Buffie
New music
Barenaked Ladies
:
Born on a Pirate Ship
Bruce Cockburn
:
The Charity of Night
The Tragically Hip
:
Trouble at the Henhouse
Sloan
:
One Chord to Another
Various artists:
20 Years of Stony Plain
Sport
January 15 – The
Corel Centre
opens in
Ottawa
February 1 – With the exception of the
Baltimore Stallions
, all the U.S.-based CFL teams (
San Antonio Texans
,
Las Vegas Posse
,
Shreveport Pirates
,
Birmingham Barracudas
and the
Memphis Mad Dogs
) fold. The Stallions are relocated from
Baltimore
, Maryland, to
Montreal
, Quebec, and become the
Montreal Allouettes
February 27 – The
Los Angeles Kings
trade
Wayne Gretzky
to the
St. Louis Blues
.
March 11 – The
Montreal Canadiens
play their final game at the
Montreal Forum
by defeating the
Dallas Stars
4 to 1.
March 16 – The Montreal Canadiens play their first game at the
Molson Centre
against the
New York Rangers
.
May 19 – The
Granby Prédateurs
win their only
Memorial Cup
by defeating the
Peterborough Petes
4 to 0. The entire tournament was played at
Peterborough Memorial Centre
in
Peterborough, Ontario
.
July 1 – The
Winnipeg Jets
relocate from
Winnipeg, Manitoba
, to
Phoenix, Arizona
, to become the
Phoenix Coyotes
.
July 19 – The
Atlanta Olympics
open. Canadian sprinter
Donovan Bailey
wins the 100-metre dash.
July 26 – Gretzky signs with the
New York Rangers
.
November 24 – The
Toronto Argonauts
win their 13th
Grey Cup
by defeating the
Edmonton Eskimos
in the
84th Grey Cup
played at
Ivor Wynne Stadium
in
Hamilton, Ontario
.
Mike Vanderjagt
is named the game's
Most Valuable Canadian
November 30 –
Saskatchewan Huskies
win their second
Vanier Cup
by defeating the
St. Francis Xavier X-Men
31–12 in the
32nd Vanier Cup
played at
SkyDome
in
Toronto
Births
January to June
January 18 –
Brittany Jones
, pair skater
January 20 –
Roland McKeown
, ice hockey defenceman
January 22 –
Joshua Ho-Sang
, ice hockey player
January 31 –
Ana Golja
, actress and singer
February 5 –
Megan McKinnon
, actress
February 7 –
Aaron Ekblad
, hockey player
March 22 –
Gig Morton
, actor
March 26 –
Alaine Chartrand
, figure skater
April 26 –
Jennifer Gillis
, actress, dancer and singer
May 1 –
William Nylander
, ice hockey player
May 10 –
Pressa
, rapper
May 14 –
Pokimane
, online personality
May 19 –
Sarah Grey
, actress
June 12 –
Mitchell Gordon
, figure skater
June 14 –
Madeline Edwards
, ice dancer
June 20
Sam Bennett
, ice hockey player
Michael Dal Colle
, ice hockey player
June 28 –
Larissa Werbicki
, rower
[
2
]
July to December
July 1 –
KallMeKris
, online personality
July 6 –
Robert Naylor
, actor
July 11 –
Alessia Cara
, singer/songwriter
August 7 –
Liam James
, actor
August 12 –
Torri Webster
, actress
August 29 –
Linden Porco
, actor
September 1 –
Alexandra Kamieniecki
, Polish figure skater
September 5 –
Helaina Cyr
, basketball player
September 26 –
Cesar Corrales
, Mexico-born actor and dancer
October 28
Laine MacNeil
, actress
Hanson Boakai
, Guinea-born soccer player
November 5 –
Victoria Moors
, gymnast
November 7 –
Julianne Séguin
, figure skater
November 18 –
Smoke Dawg
, rapper (d.
2018
)
November 27 –
Amanda Todd
,
cyberbullying
victim (d.
2012
)
December 10 –
Jérémy Gabriel
, singer and actor
Full date unknown
Diego Gomes
Deaths
January to March
January 21 –
René Marc Jalbert
, soldier
February 7 –
Lucien Maynard
, leader of Alberta francophones
February 19 –
Ernest Manning
, politician and 8th
Premier of Alberta
(born
1908
)
February 29 –
Sinclair Ross
, banker and author (born
1908
)
March 28 –
Edith Fowke
, folk song collector, author and radio presenter (born
1913
)
April to June
April 1 –
Jean Le Moyne
, journalist and politician (born
1913
)
April 13 –
Stewart McLean
, politician (born
1913
)
April 23 –
Jean Victor Allard
, general and first
French-Canadian
to become
Chief of the Defence Staff
(born
1913
)
May 5 –
Salli Terri
, singer, arranger, recording artist and songwriter (born
1922
)
May 9 –
Eria Fachin
, pop singer (born 1960)
May 22 –
Robert Christie
, actor and director (born
1913
)
June 11 –
George Hees
, politician and Minister (born
1910
)
July to September
July 1 –
Harold Greenberg
, film producer (born
1930
)
July 3 –
Rebecca Jane Middleton
, murder victim (born
1979
)
July 5 –
Fred Davis
, broadcaster and moderator of
Front Page Challenge
(born
1921
)
July 18 – Robert Needham, journalist
July 22 –
Carl Goldenberg
, lawyer, arbitrator, mediator and Senator (born
1907
)
August 10 –
Walter MacNutt
, organist (born
1910
)
September 22 –
Ludmilla Chiriaeff
, ballet dancer, choreographer and director (born
1924
)
September 23 –
Joe Borowski
, politician and activist (born
1933
)
October to December
October 2 –
Robert Bourassa
, politician and 22nd
Premier of Quebec
(born
1933
)
October 9 –
Colleen Peterson
, singer (born
1950
)
October 11
Joe Morris
, trade unionist and president of the
Canadian Labour Congress
(born
1913
)
William Vickrey
, professor of economics and Nobel Laureate (born
1914
)
October 14 –
Marcel Bourbonnais
, politician (born
1918
)
October 17 –
Laura Sabia
, social activist and feminist (born
1916
)
October 19 –
James Bourque
,
First Nations
activist (born
1935
)
October 23
Kurt Freund
, physician and sexologist (born
1914
)
Thomas Ide
, educator and the founding Chairman of
TVOntario
(born
1919
)
October 27 –
Arthur Tremblay
, politician and Senator (born
1917
)
October 28 –
Reuben Baetz
, politician (born
1923
)
November 9 –
Joe Ghiz
, politician and 29th
Premier of Prince Edward Island
(born
1945
)
November 18 –
John Josiah Robinette
, lawyer (born
1906
)
December 1 –
Peter Bronfman
, businessman (born
1928
)
December 5 –
Wilf Carter
, country music singer, songwriter, guitarist and yodeller (born
1904
)
December 21 –
Clarence Gosse
, physician and Lieutenant Governor of
Nova Scotia
(born
1912
)
December 24 –
Al Adair
, politician, radio broadcaster and author (born
1929
)
December 29 –
Dorothy Livesay
, poet (born
1909
)
Full date unknown
Leo Landreville
, politician and judge implicated in the
Northern Ontario Natural Gas
scandal (born
1910
)
See also
1996 in Canadian television
List of Canadian films of 1996
References
↑
"Queen Elizabeth II | The Canadian Encyclopedia"
.
www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca
. Retrieved
4 December
2022
.
↑
"Larissa WERBICKI - Olympic Rowing | Canada"
.
International Olympic Committee
. 27 June 2016
. Retrieved
28 May
2020
.
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1996 in North America
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