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The 31st National Assembly of Quebec was the provincial legislature in
Quebec ,
Canada that was elected in the
1976 Quebec general election . It sat for six sessions from 14 December 1976 to 23 December 1976; from 8 March 1977 to 22 December 1977; from 21 February 1978 to 20 February 1979; from 6 March 1979 to 18 June 1980; on 24 October 1980 (one day); and from 5 November 1980 to 12 March 1981. The
Parti Québécois led by
René Lévesque came to power for the first time, and organized the
1980 Quebec sovereignty referendum , which resulted in a win for the "no" side. The
Quebec Liberal Party opposition was led by interim leader
Gérard D. Levesque and later by
Claude Ryan .
Seats per political party
Member list
This was the list of members of the
National Assembly of Quebec that were elected in the
1976 election :
Other elected MNAs
Other MNAs were elected in by-elections during this mandate
Reed Scowen ,
Quebec Liberal Party , Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, July 5, 1978
[1]
Claude Ryan , Quebec Liberal Party, Argenteuil, April 30, 1979
[2]
Jean-Claude Rivest , Quebec Liberal Party, Jean-Talon, April 30, 1979
[3]
Hermann Mathieu , Quebec Liberal Party, Beauce-Sud, November 14, 1979
[4]
Georges Lalande , Quebec Liberal Party, Maisonneuve, November 14, 1979
[5]
Solange Chaput-Rolland , Quebec Liberal Party, Prévost, November 14, 1979
[6]
Herbert Marx , Quebec Liberal Party, D'Arcy-McGee, November 26, 1979
[7]
Pierre Paradis , Quebec Liberal Party, Brome-Missisquoi, November 17, 1980
[8]
Camille Picard , Quebec Liberal Party, Johnson, November 17, 1980
[9]
Fabien Bélanger , Quebec Liberal Party, Mégantic-Compton, Megantic-Compton, November 17, 1980
[10]
Pierre Fortier , Quebec Liberal Party, Outremont, November 17, 1980
[11]
Cabinet Ministers
Prime Minister and Executive Council President: René Lévesque
Deputy Premier: Jacques-Yvan Morin
Agriculture: Jean Garon (1976–1979)
Agriculture, Fisheries and Food: Jean Garon (1979–1981)
Labour and Workforce: Jacques Couture (1976–1977), Pierre-Marc Johnson (1977-1980), Pierre Marois (1980–1981)
Public Works and Provisioning: Lucien Lessard (1976–1977), Jocelyne Ouellette (1977–1981)
Public Office: Denis De Belleval (1976–1979), François Gendron (1979–1981)
Cultural Affairs: Louis O'Neill (1976–1978), Denis Vaugeois (1978–1981)
Cultural Development: Camille Laurin (1977–1980)
Cultural and Science Development: Camille Laurin (1980–1981)
Immigration: Jacques Couture (1976–1980), Gérald Godin (1980–1981)
Social Affairs: Denis Lazure
Social Development: Pierre Marois (1977–1980), Lise Payette (1980–1981)
Status of Women : Lise Payette (1976–1981)
Education: Jacques-Yvan Morin (1976–1980), Camille Laurin (1980–1981)
Youth, Recreation and Sports: Claude Charron (1977–1979)
Tourism, Hunting and Fishing: Lucien Lessard (1976–1979)
Recreation, Hunting and Fishing: Lucien Lessard (1979–1981)
Transportation: Lucien Lessard (1976–1979), Denis De Belleval (1979–1981)
Communications: Louis O'Neill (1976–1979), Denis Vaugeois (1979–1980), Clément Richard (1980–1981)
Municipal Affairs: Guy Tardif (1976–1980), Jacques Léonard (1980–1981)
Environment: Marcel Léger (1977–1981)
Energy: Guy Joron (1977–1979)
Lands, Forests and Natural Resources: Yves Bérubé (1976–1979)
Energy and Resources: Yves Bérubé (1979–1981)
Intergovernmental Affairs: Claude Morin
Parliamentary and electoral reform: Robert Burns (1977–1979)
Electoral reform: Marc-André Bedard (1979–1981)
Parliamentary Affairs: Claude Charron (1979–1981)
Industry and Commerce: Rodrigue Tremblay (1976–1979)
Industry, Commerce and Tourism: Yves Duhaime (1979–1981)
Planning: Jacques Leonard (1977–1980), Guy Tardif (1980–1981)
Consumers, Cooperatives and Financial: Lise Payette (1976–1979), Guy Joron (1979–1980), Pierre Marc Johnson (1980)
Housing: Guy Tardif (1980–1981)
Justice: Marc-André Bedard
Finances and President of the Treasury Board: Jacques Parizeau
Revenu: Jacques Parizeau (1976–1979), Michel Clair (1979–1981)
Economic Development: Bernard Landry (1977–1981)
New electoral districts
A significant electoral map reform took place in 1980 and was effective for the
1981 general elections.
[12] The number of seats went from 110 to 122.
The following electoral districts were created:
The following electoral districts disappeared:
References
Notes