Legislature of Quebec Législature du Québec | |
---|---|
Third Legislature, 1875 - 1878 | |
Type | |
Type | |
Houses | Legislative Council Legislative Assembly |
Term limits | Four years, subject to earlier dissolution. |
History | |
Founded | July 1, 1867 |
Preceded by | Second Legislature of Quebec, 1871-1875 |
Succeeded by | Fourth Legislature of Quebec, 1878-1881 |
Leadership | |
Charles Boucher de Boucherville (1874-1878) (Conservative) Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière (Liberal) (1878-1879) | |
Félix-Hyacinthe Lemaire (1875-1876) (Conservative) John Jones Ross (1876-1878) (Conservative) Henry Starnes (1878) (Liberal) | |
Structure | |
Seats | Legislative Council: 24 Legislative Assembly: 65 |
Legislative Council political groups | Conservatives 21 Liberals 3 |
Legislative Assembly political groups | Conservatives 44 Liberals 19 Independent Conservatives 2 |
Elections | |
Legislative Council voting system | Life appointments |
Legislative Assembly voting system | Single member constituencies First-past-the-post voting Secret ballot Adult male franchise with property qualification |
Constitution | |
British North America Act, 1867 |
The Third Legislature of Quebec was the provincial legislature of Quebec, Canada from 1875 to 1878, following the general election of 1875.
In the 1875 election, Premier Charles Boucher de Boucherville and the Conservative Party of Quebec won a majority in the Legislative Assembly and continued in office with a majority government. However, in 1878, de Boucherville was dismissed from office by the Lieutenant Governor of Quebec Luc Letellier de Saint-Just, who appointed Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière, the leader of the Quebec Liberal Party as premier.
Joly de Lotbinière formed a minority government. It was the first time the Liberals were in office since Quebec had been created in 1867, and the first minority government in Quebec's history. Lotbinière immediately called a general election due to the minority status of his government.
The legislature held three annual sessions, with the first session called on November 4, 1875. The legislature was dissolved on March 22, 1878, leading to the 1878 general election on May 1, 1878.
The Legislature of Quebec was created by the British North America Act, 1867 . It consisted of the Lieutenant Governor of Quebec, the Legislative Assembly and the Legislative Council. [1] The Lieutenant Governor was appointed by the Governor General of Canada for a term of five years. [2] The Legislative Assembly consisted of sixty-five members, elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post elections. [3] The Legislative Assembly was to last for four years, subject to being dissolved earlier by the Lieutenant Governor. [4] The Legislative Council consisted of twenty-four members, appointed for life by the Government of Quebec. [5]
The 1875 election for the Legislative Assembly had been the first time the secret ballot was used in Quebec. [6] Prior to 1875, voting had been by open ballotting, where voters publicly declared their vote to the polling officials. [7] [8]
The right to vote in elections to the Legislative Assembly was not universal. Only male British subjects (by birth or naturalisation), aged 21 or older, were eligible to vote, and only if they met a property qualification. For residents of larger cities, the qualification was to own or occupy real property assessed at three hundred dollars or more. For tenants, the qualification was paying an annual rent of thirty dollars or more. For any other municipality, the qualification was to own or occupy real property assessed at two hundred dollars or more, or twenty dollars in annual value. For tenants in smaller centers, the qualification was paying an annual rent of twenty dollars or more. [9]
Women were completely barred from voting. [9]
Judges and many municipal and provincial officials were also barred from voting, particularly officials with law enforcement duties, or duties relating to public revenue. [10] The Returning Officer in each riding was also barred from voting, except when needed to give a casting vote in the event of a tie vote. [11]
Candidates for election to the Legislative Assembly had to meet stricter qualifications than voters. In addition to being male, twenty-one or older, and a subject of Her Majesty (by birth or naturalisation), a candidate had to be free from all legal incapacity, and be the proprietor in possession of lands or tenements worth at least $2,000, over and above all encumbrances and charges on the property. [12]
Women were completely barred from membership in the Assembly. [12]
The qualifications for the members of the Legislative Council were the same as for the members of the Senate of Canada. [13]
Those requirements were:
The provisions of the British North America Act, 1867 did not explicitly bar women from being called to the Senate of Canada. However, until the Persons Case in 1929, it was assumed that women could not be called to the Senate, and were thus also barred from the Legislative Council. In any event, no woman was ever appointed to the Legislative Council. [15]
Boucher de Boucherville and the Conservatives won a strong majority in the 1875 election, 44 out of the 65 seats in the Legislative Assembly. In the first session of the legislature, the government directed an investigation into the Tanneries scandal, which had brought down the government of former premier Gédéon Ouimet prior to the election.
However, the political situation became unstable when the federal Liberal government appointed a new lieutenant governor, Luc Letellier de St-Just, after the death in office of Lieutenant Governor René-Édouard Caron. Letellier de St-Just was a strongly partisan Liberal, and continued to be so after his appointment to the position of lieutenant governor. He was critical of the measures taken by the Conservative government. [16] At the same time, Boucher de Boucherville appears to have taken for granted that the Lieutenant Governor would automatically give his formal approval to government measures, as required by the principles of responsible government, to the point where Boucher de Boucherville issued some proclamations on behalf of the lieutenant governor, without consulting Letellier de St-Just. [17]
The matter came to a head in 1878, over a series of railway measures. The Quebec government was cash-strapped, and the legislature passed statutes to require municipalities to contribute to the cost of building railways which ran through them. [17] Letellier de St-Just concluded that these bills were unconstitutional and on March 2, 1878 he dismissed Boucher de Boucherville as premier. He called on the Leader of the Opposition, Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière, to form a government, even though the Liberals were in the minority in the Legislative Assembly. One of Joly de Lotbinière's first acts as premier was to advise the Lieutenant Governor to dissolve the Assembly and call a general election, the election of 1878, which returned a minority government for the Liberals. [18]
The dismissal caused a constitutional and political crisis in Quebec, where the dismissal was referred to as a coup d'état. [16] It also had reverberations in Ottawa. The Liberal government of Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie had not been consulted and were caught by surprise. Mackenzie and Wilfrid Laurier privately condemned the dismissal. The government were attacked by the Conservative opposition for the actions of the lieutenant governor, which were alleged to be contrary to the principles of the neutrality of the Crown. [16]
The 1875 election returned a majority in the Legislative Assembly for the Conservative Party, led by Premier Boucher de Boucherville. [19]
Party | Members | |
---|---|---|
Conservatives | 43 | |
Liberals | 19 | |
Independent Conservative | 3 | |
Total | 65 | |
Government Majority | 21 |
The following candidates were elected to the Legislative Assembly in the 1875 election. [20] The Premier of Quebec is indicated by Bold italics. The Speakers of the Legislative Assembly are indicated by small caps. Cabinet Ministers are indicated by Italics.
There were thirteen by-elections during the term of the Third Legislature. [34] [20] Cabinet ministers are indicated by italics.
Name | Party | Riding | Reason for Vacancy | By-election Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
George Barnard Baker | Conservative | Missisquoi | Accepted a Cabinet position, an office of profit, triggering by-election; re-elected. | February 10, 1876 | |
Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau | Conservative | Terrebonne | Accepted a Cabinet position, an office of profit, triggering by-election; re-elected. | February 10, 1876 | |
Charles Champagne | Conservative | Deux-Montagnes | Incumbent resigned to take position as Superintendent of Public Instruction. | March 3, 1876 | |
Andrew Kennedy | Conservative | Mégantic | Incumbent resigned to take position as commissioner of the Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa and Occidental Railway. | April 18, 1876 | |
Henri-René-Arthur Turcotte | Independent Conservative | Trois-Rivières | Incumbent resigned to take position as commissioner of the Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa and Occidental Railway. | April 18, 1876 | |
Alexander Cameron | Liberal | Huntingdon | Election annulled; re-elected in by-election. | April 24, 1876 | |
Flavien Dupont | Conservative | Bagot | Incumbent resigned to take position as prothonotary for the judicial district of Montreal. | July 7, 1876 | |
Charles-Édouard Houde | Conservative | Nicolet | Election of incumbent annulled by Superior Court. | August 18, 1876 | |
Louis-Napoléon Fortin | Liberal | Montmagny | Election of incumbent annulled. | November 30, 1876 | |
Joseph-Israël Tarte | Conservative | Bonaventure | Election of incumbent annulled. | February 22, 1877 | |
Joseph Dumont | Liberal | Kamouraska | Incumbent resigned to stand for election to House of Commons | March 19, 1877 | |
Pierre-Étienne Fortin | Conservative | Gaspé | Election annulled; re-elected in by-election. | July 2, 1877 | |
Richard Alleyn | Conservative | Québec-Ouest | Incumbent resigned on appointment to Legislative Council. | December 17, 1877. |
The Conservatives had a strong majority in the Legislative Council throughout the Third Legislature.
Party | Members | |
---|---|---|
Conservatives | 22 | |
Liberals | 2 | |
Total: | 24 | |
Government Majority: | 20 | |
The Premier of Quebec is indicated by Bold italics. The Speakers of the Legislative Council are indicated by small caps. Cabinet members are indicated by italics.
Legislative Council Divisions | Member | Party | Term Start | Term End | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alma | Beaudry, Jean-Louis | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | June 25, 1886 | |
Bedford | Wood, Thomas | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | November 13, 1898 | |
De la Durantaye | Beaubien, Joseph-Octave | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | November 7, 1877 | |
Vacant | November 8, 1877 | May 27, 1878 | |||
De la Vallière | Proulx, Jean-Baptiste-Georges | Liberal | November 2, 1867 | January 27, 1884 | |
De Lanaudière | Dostaler, Pierre-Eustache | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | January 4, 1884 | |
De Lorimier | Rodier, Charles-Séraphin† | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | February 3, 1876 | |
Vacant | February 4, 1876 | April 30, 1876 | |||
Laviolette, Joseph-Gaspard | Conservative | May 1, 1876 | March 11, 1897 | ||
De Salaberry | Starnes, Henry | Liberal | November 2, 1867 | March 3, 1896 | |
Grandville | Dionne, Élisée | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | August 22, 1892 | |
Gulf | Savage, Thomas | Conservative | November 19, 1873 | February 27, 1887 | |
Inkerman | Bryson, George (Sr.) | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | January 13, 1900 | |
Kennebec | Richard, Louis† | Conservative | February 5, 1874 | November 13, 1876 | |
Vacant | November 14, 1876 | October 29, 1877 | |||
Gaudet, Joseph | Conservative | October 30, 1877 | August 4, 1882 | ||
La Salle | Panet, Louis | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | May 15, 1884 | |
Lauzon | Chaussegros de Léry, Alexandre-René | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | December 19, 1880 | |
Mille-Isles | Lemaire, Félix-Hyacinthe | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | December 17, 1879 | |
Montarville | Boucher de Boucherville, Charles-Eugène | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | September 10, 1915 | |
Repentigny | Archambeault, Louis | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | June 6, 1888 | |
Rigaud | Prud'homme, Eustache | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | April 28, 1888 | |
Rougemont | Fraser de Berry, John† | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | November 15, 1876 | |
Vacant | November 16, 1876 | October 29, 1877 | |||
Boucher de la Bruère, Pierre | Conservative | October 30, 1877 | April 5, 1895 | ||
Saurel | Roy, Pierre-Euclide | Conservative | November 19, 1873 | October 31, 1882 | |
Shawinigan | Ross, John Jones | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | May 4, 1901 | |
Stadacona | Sharples, John (Sr.)† | Conservative | February 27, 1874 | December 19, 1876 | |
Vacant | December 20, 1876 | October 29, 1877 | |||
Hearn, John | Conservative | October 30, 1877 | February 19, 1892 | ||
The Laurentides | Gingras, Jean-Élie | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | December 10, 1887 | |
Victoria | Ferrier, James | Conservative | November 2, 1867 | May 30, 1888 | |
Wellington | Webb, William Hoste | Conservative | October 7, 1875 | March 11, 1887 | |
Vacancies of less than one month are not shown.
† Died in office.
There were two different ministries during the term of the Third Legislature, under Premiers Boucher de Boucherville (1875-1878) and Joly de Lotbinière (1878).
Following the 1875 election, Boucher de Boucherville made some changes to the Cabinet, but largely retained the previous composition. [35]
Position | Minister | Term Start | Term End |
---|---|---|---|
Premier and President of the Executive Council | Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville * | 1875 | 1878 |
Agriculture and Public Works | Pierre Garneau | 1875 | 1876 |
Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville* | 1876 | 1878 | |
Attorney General | Levi Ruggles Church | 1875 | 1876 |
Auguste-Réal Angers | 1876 | 1878 | |
Crown lands | Henri-Gédéon Malhiot | 1875 | 1876 |
Pierre Garneau | 1876 | 1878 | |
Public Instruction | Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville* | 1875 | 1876 |
Secretary and Registrar | Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville* | 1875 | 1876 |
Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau | 1876 | 1878 | |
Solicitor General | Auguste-Réal Angers | 1875 | 1876 |
George Barnard Baker | 1876 | 1878 | |
Speaker of the Legislative Council | Félix-Hyacinthe Lemaire* | 1875 | 1876 |
John Jones Ross* | 1876 | 1878 | |
Treasurer | Joseph Gibb Robertson | 1875 | 1876 |
Levi Ruggles Church | 1876 | 1878 | |
Ministers without portfolio | John Jones Ross* | 1876 | |
George Barnard Baker | 1876 | ||
Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau | 1876 | ||
* Members of the Legislative Council | |||
Following the dismissal of Boucher de Boucherville in 1878, the Lieutenant Governor appointed Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière as Premier. Because of his lack of majority in the Assembly, Joly de Lotbinière found it necessary to appoint two individuals to Cabinet who did not initially have seats in the Assembly: David Alexander Ross as Attorney General and François Langelier as Commissioner of Crown lands. The only Cabinet member from the Legislative Council was Henry Starnes, the Speaker. Joly de Lotbinière then immediately advised the Lieutenant Governor to dissolve the Legislative Assembly and call a general election. Returned to office, Joly de Lotbinière initially retained the ministers in the same positions, but carried out a Cabinet shuffle the next year, in 1879. In 1879, Joly de Lotbinière appointed Honoré Mercier to cabinet, even though Mercier did not initially have a seat in the Legislative Assembly. [36]
Position | Minister | Term Start | Term End |
---|---|---|---|
Premier and President of the Executive Council | Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière | 1878 | 1879 |
Agriculture and Public Works | Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière | 1878 | 1879 |
Attorney General | David Alexander Ross** | 1878 | 1879 |
Crown lands | François Langelier** | 1878 | 1879 |
Félix-Gabriel Marchand | 1879 | ||
Secretary and Registrar | Félix-Gabriel Marchand | 1878 | 1879 |
Alexandre Chauveau | 1879 | ||
Solicitor General | Alexandre Chauveau | 1878 | 1879 |
Honoré Mercier** | 1879 | ||
Speaker of the Legislative Council | Henry Starnes* | 1878 | 1879 |
Treasurer | Pierre Bachand | 1878 | 1879 |
François Langelier | 1879 | ||
* Member of the Legislative Council **Appointed minister without seat in the Legislature | |||
There were two leaders of the Opposition during the Third Legislature. Joly de Lotbinière was leader for most of the term of the legislature, from 1875 to 1878. [37] When Joly de Lotbinière was appointed premier in 1878, Boucher de Boucherville technically became the leader of the Opposition, but he did not sit in that capacity, as the legislature was not in session. Joly de Lotbinière called an election two weeks after being appointed premier, without any sittings of the legislature.
The legislature had three annual sessions:
The legislature was dissolved on March 22, 1878. [38]
Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau was a Canadian lawyer and politician. Chauveau was the first premier of Quebec, following the establishment of Canada in 1867. Appointed to the office in 1867 as the leader of the Conservative Party, he won the provincial elections of 1867 and 1871. He resigned as premier and his seat in the provincial Legislative Assembly in 1873.
Events from the year 1878 in Canada.
This section of the Timeline of Quebec history concerns the events relating to the province of Quebec, Canada between the enactment of the British North America Act of 1867 and the end of the 19th century.
The 1878 Quebec general election was held on May 1, 1878 to elect members of the 4th Legislative Assembly for the Province of Quebec, Canada. The result was a hung parliament, with no party having a clear majority. Only one seat divided the two major parties, the Quebec Conservative Party and the Quebec Liberal Party. The balance of power was held by two Independent Conservatives.
The 1875 Quebec general election was held on July 7, 1875, to elect members of the 3rd Legislative Assembly for the Province of Quebec, Canada. The Quebec Conservative Party, led by Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville, defeated the Quebec Liberal Party, led by Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière.
The 1867 Quebec general election was held in August and September 1867 to elect members of the First Legislature for the Province of Quebec, Canada. The Quebec Conservative Party, led by Premier Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau, defeated the Quebec Liberal Party led by Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière.
Sir Louis-Olivier Taillon was a Canadian lawyer and politician. He was the eighth premier of Quebec, serving two separate terms.
Sir Charles-Eugène-Napoléon Boucher de Boucherville was a Canadian politician and medical doctor. He twice served as the premier of Quebec.
Sir Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière, lawyer, businessman and politician served as the fourth premier of Quebec, a federal Cabinet minister, and the seventh Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia.
Luc Letellier de Saint-Just, was a Canadian politician. He also served as the third Lieutenant Governor of Quebec (1876–1879).
Sir Auguste-Réal Angers was a Canadian judge and parliamentarian, holding seats both as a member of the House of Commons of Canada, and as a Senator. He was born in 1837 probably in Quebec City and died in Westmount, Quebec, in 1919.
Louis Lacoste was a notary and political figure in Lower Canada and then Canada East, Province of Canada. He was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada, supporting Louis-Joseph Papineau and the Parti patriote. During the Lower Canada Rebellion he was imprisoned without trial, for his activities in the lead-up to the Rebellion. Following the creation of the Province of Canada, he was a member of the new Legislative Assembly for several years, and then a member of the Legislative Council. He was one of the original members of the Senate of Canada from 1867 to 1878.
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The Fourth Legislature of Quebec was the provincial legislature of Quebec, Canada that existed from 1878 to 1881, following the general election of 1878.
The Second Legislature of Quebec was the provincial legislature of Quebec, Canada from 1871 to 1875, following the general election of 1871.
The First Legislature of Quebec was summoned in 1867 when the new Canadian province of Quebec was created, as part of the new country of Canada.
Henri-Gédéon Malhiot was a politician from Quebec, Canada.
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Joseph-Gaspard Laviolette was a seigneur, businessman and politician in the province of Quebec, Canada. He served in the Legislative Council of Quebec, the upper house of the Legislature of Quebec.