List of premiers of British Columbia
The Premier of British Columbia is the first minister for the Canadian province of British Columbia. The province was a British crown colony governed by the Governors of British Columbia[1] before joining Canadian Confederation in 1871.[2] Since then, it has had a unicameral Westminster-style parliamentary government, in which the premier is the leader of the party that controls the most seats in the legislative assembly. The premier is British Columbia's head of government, and the Queen of Canada is its head of state and is represented by the Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia. The premier picks a cabinet from the elected members to form the Executive Council of British Columbia and presides over that body.[3]
Members are first elected to the legislature during general elections. General elections must be conducted every four years from the date of the last election. An election may also take place if the governing party loses the confidence of the legislature by the defeat of a supply bill or tabling of a no-confidence motion.[3]
Before 1903, British Columbia did not use a party system; instead, premiers of British Columbia had no official party affiliation and were chosen by elected members of the legislative assembly from among themselves. Candidates ran as "Government", "Opposition", "Independent", or in formulations such as "Opposition independent", indicating their respective positions to the incumbent regime.
British Columbia has had 35 individuals serve as premier since joining Confederation, of which 14 individuals had no party affiliation, three were Conservatives, eight were Liberals, four were Socreds, and six were New Democrats. The first premier was John Foster McCreight, who was inaugurated in 1871. Joseph Martin spent the shortest time in office, at 106 days. At over twenty years, W. A. C. Bennett spent the longest time in office, and is the only premier to serve in more than four parliaments. The incumbent premier is John Horgan, who was sworn in on July 18, 2017.
Premiers of British Columbia
No party affiliation British Columbia Conservative Party British Columbia Liberal Party British Columbia Social Credit Party British Columbia New Democratic Party
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) District |
Term of office | Electoral mandates (Assembly) | Political party | |
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1 | John Foster McCreight (1827–1913) MLA for Victoria City |
November 14 1871 – December 23 1872 |
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no party affiliation
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2 | Amor De Cosmos (1825–1897) MLA for Victoria |
December 23 1872 – February 11 1874 |
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no party affiliation
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3 (1 of 2) |
George Anthony Walkem (1834–1908) MLA for Cariboo |
February 11 1874 – February 1 1876 |
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no party affiliation
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4 | Andrew Charles Elliott (1829–1889) MLA for Victoria City |
February 1 1876 – June 25 1878 |
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no party affiliation
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5 (2 of 2) |
George Anthony Walkem (1834–1908) MLA for Cariboo |
June 25 1878 – June 13 1882 |
no party affiliation
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6 | Robert Beaven (1836–1920) MLA for Victoria City |
June 13 1882 – January 29 1883 |
no party affiliation
|
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7 | William Smithe (1842–1887) MLA for Cowichan |
January 29 1883 – March 28 1887 |
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no party affiliation
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Died in office | ||||||
8 | Alexander Edmund Batson Davie (1847–1889) MLA for Lillooet |
April 1 1887 – August 1 1889 |
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no party affiliation
|
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Died in office | ||||||
9 | John Robson (1824–1892) MLA for New Westminster (until 1890) MLA for Cariboo (from 1890) |
August 2 1889 – June 29 1892 |
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no party affiliation
|
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In the 1890 election, he also won the seat in the riding of Westminster, but turned it down. Died in office. | ||||||
10 | Theodore Davie (1852–1898) MLA for Cowichan-Alberni |
July 2 1892 – March 4 1895 |
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no party affiliation
|
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11 | John Herbert Turner (1834–1923) MLA for Victoria City |
March 4 1895 – August 15 1898 |
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no party affiliation
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12 | Charles Augustus Semlin (1836–1927) MLA for Yale-West |
August 15 1898 – February 28 1900 |
no party affiliation
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13 | Joseph Martin (1852–1923) MLA for Vancouver City |
February 28 1900 – June 15 1900 |
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no party affiliation
|
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Immediately lost a vote of non-confidence 28-1 upon being appointed, but formed a cabinet and governed for another three months anyway. | ||||||
14 | James Dunsmuir (1851–1920) MLA for South Nanaimo |
June 15 1900 – November 21 1902 |
no party affiliation
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15 | Edward Gawler Prior (1853–1920) MLA for Victoria City |
November 21 1902 – June 1 1903 |
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no party affiliation
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Led final non-partisan administration. Dismissed by the Lieutenant Governor due to charges of conflict of interest that involved giving an important construction contract to his own hardware business. Appointed Lieutenant Governor in 1919. | ||||||
16 | Sir Richard McBride (1870–1917) MLA for Westminster-Dewdney (until 1903) MLA for Dewdney (1903–1907) MLA for Victoria City (from 1907) |
June 1 1903 – December 15 1915 |
Conservative Party Named leader in 1903
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|||
Led first partisan administration (and first Conservative). During First World War, the provincial government purchased and took possession of two submarines to defend the province from the threat of German attack; quickly transferred by order of the federal government to the Royal Canadian Navy in August 1914. Created the province's first university, the University of British Columbia. In the 1907 election he also won the seat in the riding of Dewdney, but turned it down. In the 1909 election he also won the seat in the riding of Yale, but turned it down. | ||||||
17 | William John Bowser (1867–1933) MLA for Vancouver City |
December 15 1915 – November 23 1916 |
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Conservative Party Named leader in 1915
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18 | Harlan Carey Brewster (1870–1918) MLA for Victoria City |
November 23 1916 – March 1 1918 |
Liberal Party Named leader in 1912
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First Liberal premier. Brought in women's suffrage, instituted prohibition, and combatted political corruption. In the 1916 election he also won the seat in the riding of Alberni, but turned it down. Died in office | ||||||
19 | John Oliver (1856–1927) MLA for Dewdney (until 1920) MLA for Victoria City (1920–1924) MLA for Nelson (from 1924) |
March 6 1918 – August 17 1927 |
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Liberal Party Named leader in 1918
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Developed the produce industry in the Okanagan Valley, and tried to persuade the federal government to lower the freight rate for rail transport. In 1923, hosted the visit of Warren Harding to Vancouver, the first ever visit of a sitting United States President to Canada. In the 1920 election he also won the seat in the riding of Delta, but turned it down. Died in office | ||||||
20 | John Duncan MacLean (1873–1948) MLA for Yale |
August 20 1927 – August 21 1928 |
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Liberal Party Named leader in 1927
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21 | Simon Fraser Tolmie (1867–1937) MLA for Saanich |
August 21 1928 – November 15 1933 |
Conservative Party Named leader in 1926
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Last Conservative premier. Attempted to apply "business principles to the business of government" during the Great Depression hit. Unemployment reached 28% – the highest in Canada. Set up relief camps. The Kidd Report recommended such sharp cuts to social services that the Conservative Party split and decided to run no candidates in the 1933 election. Local riding associations that supported Tolmie ran "Unionist" candidates while those supporting former premier Bowser stood "non-partisan" candidates and others ran as Independent Conservatives, resulting in electoral collapse and only 2 Conservative MLAs (one pro-Bowser, one pro-Tolmie) being returned and Tolmie losing his own seat. | ||||||
22 | Thomas Dufferin Pattullo (1873–1956) MLA for Prince Rupert |
November 15 1933 – December 9 1941 |
Liberal Party Named leader in 1929
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Attempted to extend government services and relief to the unemployed during the Great Depression. Re-elected in 1937 using the slogan "socialized capitalism". Failed to win a majority in 1941 and removed as leader by his party when he was unwilling to form a coalition government with the Conservative Party to keep the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation out of power. | ||||||
23 | John Hart (1879–1957) MLA for Victoria City |
December 9 1941 – December 29 1947 |
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Liberal Party (Coalition) Named leader in 1941
|
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Became Liberal leader and premier in order to form a coalition government with the Conservatives, which his predecessor had refused to do, in order to keep the socialist CCF out of power. Undertook an ambitious program of rural electrification, hydroelectric and highway construction. Built Highway 97 to northern British Columbia and relaunched the Bridge River Power Project, which was the province's first major hydroelectric development. Established the BC Power Commission to provide power to smaller communities that were not serviced by private utilities. | ||||||
24 | Boss Johnson (1890–1964) MLA for New Westminster |
December 29 1947 – August 1 1952 |
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Liberal Party (Coalition) Named leader in 1947
|
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Introduced compulsory health insurance, and a 3% provincial sales tax to pay for it, expanded the highway system, extended the Pacific Great Eastern Railway, and negotiated the Alcan Agreement, which facilitated construction of the Kenney Dam. Coalition government collapsed when Conservatives left to form the Official Opposition in January 1952, leaving Johnson to lead a straight Liberal government until its defeat in that year's general election. | ||||||
25 | W. A. C. Bennett (1900–1979) MLA for South Okanagan |
August 1 1952 – September 15 1972 |
Social Credit Party
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Longest-serving premier. Oversaw rapid expansion of the province's highway system and BC Rail, creation of BC Ferries, BC Hydro, and the Bank of British Columbia, hydro-electric dam-building projects on the Columbia and Peace Rivers and the creation of the University of Victoria and Simon Fraser University. | ||||||
26 | Dave Barrett (1930–2018[4]) MLA for Coquitlam |
September 15 1972 – December 22 1975 |
New Democratic Party Named leader in 1970
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First NDP premier. Reformed the welfare system, established the province's Labour Relations Board, and expanded the public sector. Reformed Legislative Assembly by introducing question period and full Hansard transcripts of legislative proceedings. Brought in the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) to protect the supply of farm land and Insurance Corporation of British Columbia to provide public car insurance. | ||||||
27 | Bill Bennett (1932–2015) MLA for South Okanagan (until 1979) MLA for Okanagan South (from 1979) |
December 22 1975 – August 6 1986 |
Social Credit Party Named leader in 1973
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Implemented significant cuts to social services and education and repealed labour laws, resulting in a general strike. Spent hundreds of millions of dollars on Expo 86 and the construction of BC Place, Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system, and the Vancouver Trade and Convention Centre. Built the Coquihalla Highway. | ||||||
28 | Bill Vander Zalm (b. 1934) MLA for Richmond |
August 6 1986 – April 2 1991 |
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Social Credit Party Named leader in 1986
|
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29 | Rita Johnston (b. 1935) MLA for Surrey-Newton |
April 2 1991 – November 5 1991 |
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Social Credit Party Named leader in 1991
|
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First female premier and last Social Credit premier. | ||||||
30 | Mike Harcourt (b. 1943) MLA for Vancouver-Mount Pleasant |
November 5 1991 – February 22 1996 |
New Democratic Party Named leader in 1987
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31 | Glen Clark (b. 1957) MLA for Vancouver-Kingsway |
February 22 1996 – August 25 1999 |
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New Democratic Party Named leader in 1996
|
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32 | Dan Miller (b. 1944) MLA for North Coast |
August 25 1999 – February 24 2000 |
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New Democratic Party Named leader in 1999 (interim)
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33 | Ujjal Dosanjh (b. 1947) MLA for Vancouver-Kensington |
February 24 2000 – June 5 2001 |
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New Democratic Party Named leader in 2000
|
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34 | Gordon Campbell (b. 1948) MLA for Vancouver-Point Grey |
June 5 2001 – March 14 2011 |
Liberal Party Named leader in 1993
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35 | Christy Clark (b. 1965) MLA for Vancouver-Point Grey (until 2013) MLA for Westside-Kelowna (2013–2017) MLA for Kelowna West (2017) |
March 14 2011 – July 18 2017 |
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Liberal Party Named leader in 2011
|
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Government remained in office after 2017 election until defeated 44–42 on a confidence vote less than a week into the legislative session. | ||||||
36 | John Horgan (b. 1959) MLA for Langford-Juan de Fuca |
July 18 2017 – Incumbent |
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New Democratic Party Named leader in 2014
|
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Asked to form a government by the Lieutenant Governor on the strength of a confidence and supply accord between the NDP and the Green Party, after the sitting Liberal government was defeated in the legislature on a confidence vote. Banned corporate and union political donations; initiated a referendum on electoral reform. | ||||||
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Timeline of British Columbia premiers
Premiers by region of the province
Location of riding | Number of premiers | Premiers |
---|---|---|
Interior | 12 |
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Lower Mainland | 5 |
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Vancouver | 7 | |
Vancouver Island | 15 |
Living former premiers
As of February 2020, eight former premiers are alive, the oldest being Bill Vander Zalm (1986–1991, born 1934). The most recent former premier to die was Dave Barrett (1972–1975), on February 2, 2018.[4]
Name | Term | Date of birth |
---|---|---|
Bill Vander Zalm | 1986–1991 | May 29, 1934 |
Rita Johnston | 1991 | April 22, 1935 |
Mike Harcourt | 1991–1996 | January 6, 1943 |
Glen Clark | 1996–1999 | November 22, 1957 |
Dan Miller | 1999–2000 | December 24, 1944 |
Ujjal Dosanjh | 2000–2001 | September 9, 1947 |
Gordon Campbell | 2001–2011 | January 12, 1948 |
Christy Clark | 2011–2017 | October 29, 1965 |
See also
- List of Leaders of the Opposition in British Columbia
- List of British Columbia premiers by time in office
References
General
- "Premiers of British Columbia, 1871–today". Province of British Columbia. Archived from the original on June 4, 2013. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
- "British Columbia". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
Specific
- "History and Heritage of British Columbia". BritishColumbia.com. Archived from the original on November 2, 2008. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
- "British Columbia – Canadian Confederation". Library and Archives Canada. August 9, 2006. Archived from the original on June 21, 2008. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
- "The Office of the Lieutenant Governor and the Legislature – Province of British Columbia". Province of British Columbia. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
- "Former B.C. Premier Dave Barrett dead at 87". CBC.ca. CBC. February 2, 2018. Retrieved February 2, 2018.