Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Deputy Premier of Ontario

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Deputy Premier of Ontario" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Deputy Premier of Ontario
Vice-première ministre de l'Ontario
Incumbent
Sylvia Jones
since June 24, 2022
Executive Council of Ontario
Style
StatusIncumbent
Member of
Reports to
SeatQueen's Park,Toronto
AppointerThelieutenant governor
on the advice of the premier
Term lengthAt His Majesty's pleasure
Inaugural holderBob Welch
FormationSeptember 21, 1977
(47 years ago)
 (1977-09-21)
Salary$101,750 (2018)[1]

Thedeputy premier of Ontario (French:vice-première ministre de l'Ontario) is aminister of the Crown and senior member of the provincialExecutive Council (Cabinet). The office was first created in 1977, and is conferred on the advice of thepremier of Ontario. Though the role is seen as informally important, it does not hold formal legal power in its own right, and does not automatically receive any powers in the case of absence or death of a premier.[2]

Sylvia Jones is the 12th and currentdeputy premier of Ontario, assuming office on June 24, 2022. She concurrently serves as theminister of health.[3]

Crown
Provincial legislature


Government
See also
Politics by province / territory

flagCanada portal

History

[edit]

For much of the province's early history, the position ofprovincial secretary and registrar of Ontario was the second most powerful position in theOntario Cabinet. This role diminished by the 1960s, overtaken by the deputy premier in 1977 and abolished in 1985.

To date, every person serving as deputy premier of Ontario has also concurrently held another senior position in the Ontario Cabinet.Bette Stephenson,Robert Nixon,Floyd Laughren,Ernie Eves,Jim Flaherty, andDwight Duncan were all concurrentlyprovincial treasurer or, as that position was renamed in 1993,minister of Finance.

Christine Elliott, deputy premier from 2018 to 2022, was widow ofJim Flaherty, deputy premier from 2001 to 2002 (who died in 2014).

Deputy premiers of Ontario

[edit]
NameTerm of officeTenurePolitical party
(Ministry)
Note
1Bob WelchSeptember 21, 1977February 8, 19857 years, 238 daysPC
(Davis)
WhileAttorney General,Provincial Secretary for Justice,Minister of Culture and Recreation (1977–78),Minister of Energy (1979–83) &Minister Responsible for Women's Issues (1983–85)
February 8, 1985May 17, 1985PC
(Miller)
While Attorney General
2Bette StephensonMay 17, 1985June 26, 198540 daysWhileTreasurer &Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet
VacantJune 26, 1985September 29, 1987Liberal
(Peterson)
3Robert NixonSeptember 29, 1987October 1, 19903 years, 2 daysWhile Treasurer, Minister of Economics and Minister of Financial Institutions
4Floyd LaughrenOctober 1, 1990June 26, 19954 years, 268 daysNDP
(Rae)
While Minister of Economics and Treasurer (1990–93) &Minister of Finance (1993-95)
5Ernie EvesJune 26, 1995February 8, 20015 years, 227 daysPC
(Harris)
While Minister of Finance
6Jim FlahertyFebruary 8, 2001April 14, 20021 year, 65 daysWhile Minister of Finance
7Elizabeth WitmerApril 15, 2002October 22, 20031 year, 190 daysPC
(Eves)
WhileMinister of Education
VacantOctober 23, 2003September 20, 2006Liberal
(McGuinty)
8George SmithermanSeptember 21, 2006November 9, 20092 years, 352 daysWhileMinister of Health and Long-Term Care (2006–08) &Minister of Energy and Infrastructure (2008–09)
VacantSeptember 9, 2009October 19, 2011
9Dwight DuncanOctober 20, 2011February 11, 2013[4]1 year, 114 daysWhile Minister of Finance & Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet
10Deb MatthewsFebruary 11, 2013January 17, 20184 years, 340 daysLiberal
(Wynne)
While Minister of Health and Long-Term Care (2013–14),President of the Treasury Board (2014–16) &Minister of Advanced Education and Skills Development (2016–18)
VacantJanuary 17, 2018June 29, 2018
11Christine ElliottJune 29, 2018June 24, 20223 years, 360 daysPC
(Ford)
While Minister of Health and Long-Term Care (until June 20, 2019) and while Minister of Health (June 20, 2019 – June 24, 2022)
12Sylvia JonesJune 24, 2022Present2 years, 322 daysWhile Minister of Health (June 24, 2022 – Present)

See also

[edit]
Provinces
Territories

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Public sector salary disclosure 2018: all sectors and seconded employees".Government of Ontario. June 14, 2019.
  2. ^Lang, Eugene (August 6, 2020)."The role of deputy prime minister is not as powerful as most think".Policy Options.Archived from the original on 2022-01-15. Retrieved2022-08-15.
  3. ^Jun 29, Marieke Walsh Published on; 2018 11:40am (2018-06-29)."Doug Ford reveals 21-member cabinet featuring deputy premier Christine Elliott".iPolitics. Retrieved2021-11-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^"Dwight Duncan". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Retrieved30 April 2024.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Deputy_Premier_of_Ontario&oldid=1253604950"
Category:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp