33rd Parliament of Ontario
The 33rd Legislative Assembly of Ontario was held from June 4, 1985, until July 31, 1987, just prior to the 1987 general election.
Hugh Alden Edighoffer served as speaker for the assembly.
Twenty-two days into the 33rd Parliament, Premier Frank Miller resigned following the defeat of his Progressive Conservative government in a motion of no confidence. Upon Miller's resignation, Lieutenant Governor John Black Aird appointed David Peterson, then Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, as Premier. Peterson went on to form a minority government with the support of the Ontario New Democratic Party.
Riding | Member | Party | Notes |
Algoma | Bud Wildman | New Democratic Party | |
Algoma—Manitoulin | John Gordon Lane | Progressive Conservative | |
Armourdale | Bruce McCaffrey | Progressive Conservative | |
Beaches—Woodbine | Marion Bryden | New Democratic Party | |
Bellwoods | Ross A. McClellan | New Democratic Party | |
Brampton | Bob Callahan | Liberal | |
Brant—Oxford—Norfolk | Robert Nixon | Liberal | |
Brantford | Phil Gillies | Progressive Conservative | |
Brock | Peter Partington | Progressive Conservative | |
Burlington South | Cam Jackson | Progressive Conservative | |
Cambridge | Bill Barlow | Progressive Conservative | |
Carleton | Robert C. Mitchell | Progressive Conservative | |
Carleton East | Gilles E. Morin | Liberal | |
Carleton-Grenville | Norm Sterling | Progressive Conservative | |
Chatham—Kent | Maurice Louis Bossy | Liberal | |
Cochrane North | Jacques Noe René Fontaine | Liberal | |
Cochrane South | Alan William Pope | Progressive Conservative | |
Cornwall | Luc Bernard Guindon | Progressive Conservative | |
Don Mills | Dennis Roy Timbrell | Progressive Conservative | |
Dovercourt | Antonio Lupusella | New Democratic Party | |
Downsview | Joseph Cordiano | Liberal | |
Dufferin—Simcoe | George R. McCague | Progressive Conservative | |
Durham East | Sammy Lawrence Cureatz | Progressive Conservative | |
Durham West | George Ashe | Progressive Conservative | |
Durham—York | Kenneth Ross Stevenson | Progressive Conservative | |
Eglinton | David James McFadden | Progressive Conservative | |
Elgin | Ronald Keith McNeil | Progressive Conservative | |
Erie | Raymond Louis Haggerty | Liberal | |
Essex North | Patrick Michael Hayes | New Democratic Party | |
Essex South | Remo J. Mancini | Liberal | |
Etobicoke | Ed Thomas Philip | New Democratic Party | |
Fort William | Michael Patrick Hennessy | Progressive Conservative | |
Frontenac—Addington | Lawrence George South | Liberal | |
Grey | Robert Carson McKessock | Liberal | |
Grey—Bruce | Edward Carson Sargent | Liberal | |
Haldimand—Norfolk | Gordon Irvin Miller | Liberal | |
Halton—Burlington | Donald S. Knight | Liberal | |
Hamilton Centre | Lily Oddie Munro | Liberal | |
Hamilton East | Bob Warren Mackenzie | New Democratic Party | |
Hamilton Mountain | Brian Albert Charlton | New Democratic Party | |
Hamilton West | Richard Alexander Allen | New Democratic Party | |
Hastings—Peterborough | James Pollock | Progressive Conservative | |
High Park—Swansea | Yuri Shymko | Progressive Conservative | |
Humber | Jim Henderson | Liberal | |
Huron—Bruce | Murray John Elston | Liberal | |
Huron—Middlesex | John Keith Riddell | Progressive Conservative | |
Kenora | Leo Edward Bernier | Progressive Conservative | |
Kent—Elgin | James Fitzgerald McGuigan | Liberal | |
Kingston and the Islands | Kenneth A. Keyes | Liberal | |
Kitchener | David R. Cooke | Liberal | |
Kitchener—Wilmot | John Sweeney | Liberal | |
Lake Nipigon | Gilles Pouliot | New Democratic Party | |
Lakeshore | Ruth Anna Grier | New Democratic Party | |
Lambton | David William Smith | Liberal | |
Lanark | Douglas Jack Wiseman | Progressive Conservative | |
Leeds | Robert W. Runciman | Progressive Conservative | |
Lincoln | Philip W. Andrewes | Progressive Conservative | |
London Centre | David Robertson Peterson | Liberal | Premier and Party Leader |
London North | Ronald George Van Horne | Liberal | |
London South | Elizabeth "Joan" Smith | Liberal | |
Middlesex | Douglas Richard Reycraft | Liberal | |
Mississauga East | Milton Edward Charles Gregory | Progressive Conservative | |
Mississauga North | Steven Offer | Liberal | |
Mississauga South | Margaret Marland | Progressive Conservative | |
Muskoka | Frank Stuart Miller | Progressive Conservative | Premier and Party Leader |
Niagara Falls | Vincent George Kerrio | Liberal | |
Nickel Belt | Floyd Laughren | New Democratic Party | |
Nipissing | Michael Harris | Progressive Conservative | Party Leader |
Northumberland | Howard Nicholas Sheppard | Progressive Conservative | |
Oakville | Terrance P. O'Connor | Progressive Conservative | |
Oakwood | Anthony William Grande | New Democratic Party | |
Oriole | Elinor Caplan | Liberal | |
Oshawa | Michael James Breaugh | New Democratic Party | |
Ottawa Centre | Evelyn Adelaide Gigantes | New Democratic Party | |
Ottawa East | Bernard C. Grandmaître | Liberal | |
Ottawa South | Claude Frederick Bennett | Progressive Conservative | |
Ottawa West | Reuben Conrad Baetz | Progressive Conservative | |
Oxford | Richard L. Treleaven | Progressive Conservative | |
Parkdale | Tony Ruprecht | Liberal | |
Parry Sound | Ernie Eves | Progressive Conservative | |
Perth | Hugh Alden Edighoffer | Liberal | |
Peterborough | John Melville Turner | Progressive Conservative | |
Port Arthur | James Francis Foulds | New Democratic Party | |
Prescott and Russell | Jean Poirier | Liberal | |
Prince Edward—Lennox | James A. Taylor | Progressive Conservative | |
Quinte | Hugh Patrick O'Neil | Liberal | |
Rainy River | Franklin Jack Pierce | Progressive Conservative | |
Renfrew North | Sean Conway | Liberal | |
Renfrew South | Paul Joseph Yakabuski | Progressive Conservative | Died in 1987 |
Riverdale | David R. Reville | New Democratic Party | |
Sarnia | Andy Brandt | Progressive Conservative | Party Leader |
Sault Ste. Marie | Karl Avid Morin-Strom | New Democratic Party | |
Scarborough Centre | William C. Davis | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough East | Edward A. Fulton | Liberal | |
Scarborough North | Alvin Curling | Liberal | |
Scarborough West | Richard Frank Johnston | New Democratic Party | |
Scarborough—Ellesmere | David William Warner | New Democratic Party | |
Simcoe Centre | Earl W. Rowe | Progressive Conservative | |
Simcoe East | Allan Kenneth McLean | Progressive Conservative | |
St. Andrew—St. Patrick | Lawrence Sheldon Grossman | Progressive Conservative | Party Leader |
St. Catharines | Jim Bradley | Liberal | |
St. David | Ian G. Scott | Liberal | |
St. George | Susan A. Fish | Progressive Conservative | |
Stormont—Dundas—Glengarry | Noble Villeneuve | Progressive Conservative | |
Sudbury | Jim Gordon | Progressive Conservative | |
Sudbury East | Elie Walter Martel | New Democratic Party | |
Timiskaming | David Ramsay | New Democratic Party | |
Victoria—Haliburton | John F. Eakins | Liberal | |
Waterloo North | Herbert Arnold Epp | Liberal | |
Welland—Thorold | Mel Swart | New Democratic Party | |
Wellington South | Rick Eugenio Ferraro | Liberal | |
Wellington—Dufferin—Peel | John McLellan Johnson | Progressive Conservative | |
Wentworth | Gordon Howlett Dean | Progressive Conservative | |
Wentworth North | Christopher Campbell Ward | Liberal | |
Wilson Heights | Monte Kwinter | Liberal | |
Windsor—Riverside | Dave Cooke | New Democratic Party | |
Windsor—Sandwich | William Munro Wrye | Liberal | |
Windsor—Walkerville | Bernard Newman | Liberal | |
York Centre | W. Donald Cousens | Progressive Conservative | |
York East | Robert Goldwin Elgie | Progressive Conservative | Resigned seat in 1985 |
Christine Hart | Liberal | Elected in by-election in 1986 | |
York Mills | Bette Stephenson | Progressive Conservative | |
York North | Greg Sorbara | Liberal | |
York South | Bob Keith Rae | New Democratic Party | Party Leader |
York West | Nicholas Georges Leluk | Progressive Conservative | |
Yorkview | Claudio Polsinelli | Liberal |