List of House members of the 44th Parliament of Canada

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This is a list of members of the House of Commons of Canada in the 44th Canadian Parliament.[1][2]

Members

More information Name, Party ...
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Changes since the 2021 election

Membership changes

More information Date, District ...
Date District Name Party before Party after Reason
May 27, 2022 Mississauga—Lakeshore Sven Spengemann Liberal Vacant Resigned to accept a position with the United Nations[4]
September 13, 2022 Richmond—Arthabaska Alain Rayes Conservative Independent Resigned from caucus following Pierre Poilievre's election as leader[5]
December 12, 2022 Winnipeg South Centre Jim Carr Liberal Vacant Died of multiple myeloma and kidney failure[6]
Mississauga—Lakeshore Charles Sousa Vacant Liberal Elected in a by-election[7]
December 31, 2022 Calgary Heritage Bob Benzen Conservative Vacant Resigned in order to return to the private sector[8]
January 28, 2023 Oxford Dave MacKenzie Conservative Vacant Resigned
February 28, 2023 Portage—Lisgar Candice Bergen Conservative Vacant Resigned[9]
March 8, 2023 Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Westmount Marc Garneau Liberal Vacant Resigned[10]
March 22, 2023 Don Valley North Han Dong Liberal Independent Resigned from caucus[11]
June 19, 2023 Winnipeg South Centre Ben Carr Vacant Liberal Elected in a by-election
Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Westmount Anna Gainey Vacant Liberal Elected in a by-election
Oxford Arpan Khanna Vacant Conservative Elected in a by-election
Portage—Lisgar Branden Leslie Vacant Conservative Elected in a by-election
July 24, 2023 Calgary Heritage Shuvaloy Majumdar Vacant Conservative Elected in a by-election
August 1, 2023 Durham Erin O'Toole Conservative Vacant Resigned
January 16, 2024 Toronto—St. Paul's Carolyn Bennett Liberal Vacant Resigned[12]
February 1, 2024 LaSalle—Émard—Verdun David Lametti Liberal Vacant Resigned to join a law firm[13]
March 4, 2024 Durham Jamil Jivani Vacant Conservative Elected in a by-election
March 31, 2024 Elmwood—Transcona Daniel Blaikie New Democratic Vacant Resigned to work for Manitoba premier Wab Kinew as special advisor[14]
May 27, 2024 Cloverdale—Langley City John Aldag Liberal Vacant Resigned to seek the BC NDP nomination for Langley-Abbotsford in the 2024 British Columbia general election[15]
June 24, 2024 Toronto—St. Paul's Don Stewart Vacant Conservative Elected in a by-election
August 31, 2024 Halifax Andy Fillmore Liberal Vacant Resigned to run in the 2024 Halifax mayoral election
September 16, 2024 LaSalle—Émard—Verdun Louis-Philippe Sauvé Vacant Bloc Québécois Elected in a by-election
Elmwood—Transcona Leila Dance Vacant New Democratic Elected in a by-election
September 19, 2024 Honoré-Mercier Pablo Rodriguez Liberal Independent Resigned from caucus to seek the leadership of the Quebec Liberal Party[16]
December 16, 2024 Cloverdale—Langley City Tamara Jansen Vacant Conservative Elected in a by-election
January 20, 2025 Honoré-Mercier Pablo Rodriguez Independent Vacant Resigned
January 30, 2025 Esquimalt—Saanich—Sooke Randall Garrison New Democratic Vacant Resigned
March 13, 2025 Eglinton—Lawrence Marco Mendicino Liberal Vacant Resigned to become Chief of Staff to the Prime Minister[17]
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Standings

More information Number of members per party by date, Sep 20 ...
Number of members
per party by date
2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Sep 20 Mar 22 May 27 Sep 13 Dec 31 Jan 28 Feb 28 Mar 8 Mar 22 Jun 19 Jul 24 Aug 1 Jan 16 Feb 1 Mar 4 Mar 31 May 27 Jun 24 Aug 31 Sep 4 Sep 16 Sep 19 Dec 16 Jan 20 Jan 30 Mar 14
Liberal 159 158[a] 157 156 158 157 156 155 154 153 152
Conservative 119 118 117 116 115 117 118 117 118 119 120
Bloc Québécois 32 33
New Democratic 25 24 25 24
Green 2
Independent 1 2 3 4 3
  Total members 338 337 336 335 334 333 337 338 337 336 335 336 335 334 335 334 336 337 336 335 334
Government majority -20 -21[a] -19 -18 -19 -21 -22 -21 -22 -23 -24 -25 -26 -27 -28 -30 -31 -32 -31 -30 -31
  Government majority
with C & S measures[b][c]
N/A[b] 30 29 31 32 31 29 28 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 23 22 N/A[c]
Vacant 0 1[a] 2 3 4 5 1 0 1 2 3 2 3 4 3 4 2 1 2 3 4
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  1. The Liberals briefly fell to 157 seats on December 12, 2022, during the period between Jim Carr's death and Charles Sousa's by-election victory in Mississauga—Lakeshore. During this period the government majority shrunk to -22, and the number of vacant seats rose to 2.
  2. The Liberal and New Democratic (NDP) parties reach a confidence and supply agreement on 22 March 2022.
  3. The New Democratic Party rescinds its confidence and supply agreement with the Liberal Party on September 4, 2024.

Notes

    References

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