21st Canadian Ministry
- Minority
The Twenty-First Canadian Ministry was the cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Joe Clark. It governed Canada from 4 June 1979 to 3 March 1980, including all of the 31st Canadian Parliament. The government was formed by the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada.
Ministers
Portfolio | Minister | Term | |
---|---|---|---|
Start | End | ||
Prime Minister | Joe Clark | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Agriculture | John Wise | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for the Canadian Dairy Commission | John Wise | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for Canadian International Development Agency | Flora MacDonald | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation | Elmer MacKay | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister for the Canadian Wheat Board | Don Mazankowski | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Communications | David MacDonald | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs and Registrar General | Allan Lawrence | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for Defence Construction Limited | Allan McKinnon | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of State for Economic Development | Robert de Cotret | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Employment and Immigration | Ron Atkey | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Energy, Mines, and Resources | Ray Hnatyshyn | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of the Environment | John Allen Fraser | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Secretary of State for External Affairs | Flora MacDonald | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Finance | John Crosbie | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Fisheries and Oceans | James McGrath | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development | Jake Epp | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Industry, Trade, and Commerce | Robert de Cotret | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Justice and Attorney General | Jacques Flynn | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Labour | Lincoln Alexander | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Leader of the Government in the House of Commons | Walter Baker | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Leader of the Government in the Senate | Jacques Flynn | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for Metric Commission | Allan Lawrence | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for National Capital Commission | Erik Nielsen | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Associate Minister of National Defence | Vacant | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of National Defence | Allan McKinnon | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of National Health and Welfare | David Crombie | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of National Revenue | Walter Baker | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Postmaster General | John Allen Fraser | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
President of the Privy Council | Walter Baker | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Public Works | Erik Nielsen | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Regional Economic Expansion | Elmer MacKay | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for Royal Canadian Mint | Roch La Salle | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of State for Science and Technology | Ray Hnatyshyn | 4 June 1979 | 9 October 1979 |
Heward Grafftey | 9 October 1979 | 3 March 1980 | |
Secretary of State for Canada | David MacDonald | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Solicitor General | Allan Lawrence | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for Standards Council of Canada | Allan Lawrence | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister responsible for the Status of Women | David MacDonald | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Supply and Services and Receiver General | Roch La Salle | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Transport | Don Mazankowski | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
President of the Treasury Board | Sinclair Stevens | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of Veterans Affairs | Allan McKinnon | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
Minister of State | Martial Asselin (CIDA) (Francophonie) | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
William Jarvis (Federal-Provincial Relations) | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 | |
Heward Grafftey (Social Programmes) | 4 June 1979 | 9 October 1979 | |
Perrin Beatty (Treasury Board) | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 | |
Robert Howie (Transport) | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 | |
Steve Paproski (Fitness and Amateur Sport and Multiculturalism) | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 | |
Ron Huntington (Small Businesses and Industry) | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 | |
Michael Wilson (International Trade) | 4 June 1979 | 3 March 1980 |
References
- Government of Canada. "Twenty-First Ministry". Guide to Canadian Ministries since Confederation. Privy Council Office. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
Succession
Ministries of Canada | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | 21st Canadian Ministry 1979–1980 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
- First (1867–1873)
- Second (1873–1878)
- Third (1878–1891)
- Fourth (1891–1892)
- Fifth (1892–1894)
- Sixth (1894–1896)
- Seventh (1896)
- Eighth (1896–1911)
- Ninth (1911–1917)
- Tenth (1917–1920)
- Eleventh (1920–1921)
- Twelfth (1921–1926)
- Thirteenth (1926)
- Fourteenth (1926–1930)
- Fifteenth (1930–1935)
- Sixteenth (1935–1948)
- Seventeenth (1948–1957)
- Eighteenth (1957–1963)
- Nineteenth (1963–1968)
- Twentieth (1968–1979)
- Twenty-first (1979–1980)
- Twenty-second (1980–1984)
- Twenty-third (1984)
- Twenty-fourth (1984–1993)
- Twenty-fifth (1993)
- Twenty-sixth (1993–2003)
- Twenty-seventh (2003–2006)
- Twenty-eighth (2006–2015)
- Twenty-ninth (2015–present)
- Canada Portal
This Canadian government–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e