The 67th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island is the 67th sitting of the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island and the 41st since confederation in 1873. The membership of the assembly was determined by the 2023 Prince Edward Island general election, where the Progressive Conservative Party of Prince Edward Island, led by Dennis King, won a majority of seats. It was then reduced by one following the by-election of Green MLA Matt MacFarlane. Dennis King resigned as premier on 21 February 2025 and as MLA for Brackley-Hunter River, being succeeded by Rob Lantz as premier.

Seating plan

McLane Arsenault Vacant Ramsay Redmond Deagle Bell
Hudson Myers MacKay Thompson LANTZ Burridge Compton
Vacant
Croucher Trivers PERRY McNeilly BERNARD MacFarlane
MacEwen Dillon MacLennan DesRoches Henderson Bevan-Baker

Current as of February 2024[1]

Members of the General Assembly

Cabinet ministers are in bold, party leaders are in italic, and the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly is designated by a dagger (†).

Name Party Riding First elected / previously elected
  Robin Croucher Progressive Conservative Souris-Elmira 2023
  Steven Myers Progressive Conservative Georgetown-Pownal 2011
  Cory Deagle Progressive Conservative Montague-Kilmuir 2019
  Darlene Compton Progressive Conservative Belfast-Murray River 2015
  Jenn Redmond Progressive Conservative Mermaid-Stratford 2023
  Jill Burridge Progressive Conservative Stratford-Keppoch 2023
  Sidney MacEwen Progressive Conservative Morell-Donagh 2015
  Bloyce Thompson Progressive Conservative Stanhope-Marshfield 2019
  Natalie Jameson
(until February 11, 2025)
Progressive Conservative Charlottetown-Hillsborough Park 2019
  Zack Bell Progressive Conservative Charlottetown-Winsloe 2020
  Susie Dillon Progressive Conservative Charlottetown-Belvedere 2023
  Karla Bernard Green Charlottetown-Victoria Park 2019
  Rob Lantz Progressive Conservative Charlottetown-Brighton 2023
  Gordon McNeilly Liberal Charlottetown-West Royalty 2019
  Dennis King
(until February 21, 2025)
Progressive Conservative Brackley-Hunter River 2019
  Mark McLane Progressive Conservative Cornwall-Meadowbank 2021
  Peter Bevan-Baker Green New Haven-Rocky Point 2015
  Brad Trivers Progressive Conservative Rustico-Emerald 2015
  Jamie Fox
(until November 11, 2023)
Progressive Conservative Borden-Kinkora 2015
  Matt MacFarlane
(since February 7, 2024)
Green 2024
  Matthew MacKay Progressive Conservative Kensington-Malpeque 2015
  Tyler DesRoches Progressive Conservative Summerside-Wilmot 2023
  Barb Ramsay Progressive Conservative Summerside-South Drive 2023
  Hilton MacLennan Progressive Conservative Tyne Valley-Sherbrooke 2023
  Gilles Arsenault Progressive Conservative Evangeline-Miscouche 2023
  Robert Henderson Liberal O'Leary-Inverness 2007
  Ernie Hudson Progressive Conservative Alberton-Bloomfield 2019
  Hal Perry Liberal Tignish-Palmer Road 2011[a]

Party membership

Number of members
per party by date
2023 2024 2025
Apr 3 Nov 11 Feb 7 Feb 11 Feb 21
  Progressive Conservative 22 21 20 19
  Liberal 3
  Green 2 3
Total members 27 26 27 26 25
Vacant 0 1 0 1 2
Government Majority 17 16 15 14 13

Membership changes

Membership changes in the 67th Assembly
Date Name District Party Reason
  April 3, 2023 See List of Members Election day of the 2023 Prince Edward Island general election
  November 11, 2023 Jamie Fox Borden-Kinkora Progressive Conservative Resigned to run for Malpeque seat, in the 2025 federal election[2]
  February 7, 2024 Matt MacFarlane Borden-Kinkora Green Won by-election
  February 11, 2025 Natalie Jameson Charlottetown-Hillsborough Park Progressive Conservative Resigned to run for Charlottetown seat, in the 2025 federal election
  February 21, 2025 Dennis King Brackley-Hunter River Progressive Conservative Resigned; later appointed Ambassador to Ireland[3]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ First elected as a Progressive Conservative

References

  1. ^ "Seating Plan". Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island. 27 February 2024. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  2. ^ "PC MLA Jamie Fox resigning from P.E.I. legislature, intends to run federally". CBC News. 10 November 2023. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
  3. ^ MacIsaac, Alex (March 3, 2025). "Dennis King appointed as Canada's ambassador to Ireland". CBC News. Retrieved March 6, 2025.
No tags for this post.