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List of House members of the 45th Parliament of Canada

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This is a list of members of the House of Commons of Canada in the 45th Canadian Parliament, elected in the 2025 Canadian federal election.

More information Affiliation, House members ...

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Members

Note: The column "Party held electorally since" provides a notional measure of partisan support longevity for each electoral district, but with a number of caveats:
  • It discounts representation by a rival party if the rival party only represented a minority portion of the district.
  • It discounts interruption caused by floor-crossing, MPs leaving caucus to sit as independent or joining a breakaway caucus that exist for a short period, etc.
  • It treats the Conservative Party and its formal predecessor parties (Progressive Conservative, Reform and Canadian Alliance) as the same party, but treats the Social Credit Party as a rival party as it never formally merged into the Conservative Party.
More information Electoral district, Name ...
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Changes since the 2025 election

More information Number of members per party by date, Apr 28 ...

Notes

  1. In Liberal column since 2003 when Scott Brison crossed the floor to join the Liberals
  2. Defeated in 2015, returned to parliament in 2019
  3. Plamondon was first elected as a Progressive Conservative, left the party in 1990 and was a founding member of the BQ caucus.
  4. Defeated in 2011 and returned in 2015
  5. No comparable electoral district prior to this election
  6. Defeated in 2019 and returned to parliament in 2025
  7. In Liberal column since 2012 when Lise St-Denis crossed the floor to join the Liberals
  8. Defeated in 2015, returned to parliament in 2025
  9. Tracing its history to the Ottawa electoral district, a duo-member district that in 1926 ousted both its incumbent Conservative members and returned two Liberal members.
  10. 1935 if the Social Credit Party is counted as a predecessor party of the Conservative Party.
  11. From 1949 to 1963, Calgary's two districts, whether as East and West or North and South, bucked provincial trend, returning PC MPs instead of Socred MPs.
  12. When it was part of Calgary South
  13. Majority of Edmonton Gateway (population & geography) would have been in Edmonton--Beaumont under the 2003 Representation Order (in effect for 2004, 2006, 2008, 2011 general elections). Liberal David Kilgour, who was first elected as a Progressive Conservative but as a Liberal for his final four elections, stood down in 2006.
  14. Majority of Edmonton Northwest (population & geography) would have been in Edmonton West under the 1996 Representation Order. Former Liberal Deputy PM Anne McLellan was returned in both the 1997 and 2000 elections but opted to run in Edmonton Centre in 2004.
  15. 1930 if the Social Credit Party is counted as a predecessor party of the Conservative Party.
  16. While Liberal Anne McLellan was MP for Edmonton West between 1997 and 2004 (contested under 1996 Representation Order), Edmonton West (under 2023 Representation Order) was entirely within Edmonton Southwest during that period. McLellen represented a small portion (<20%) of this district as the MP for Edmonton Centre between 2004-06. Other than that portion, this district has returned Conservative, Alliance, Reform or PC MPs since former Speaker Marcel Lambert was first elected here in 1957.
  17. When former Prime Minister Joe Clark gained Rocky Mountain from Liberal incumbent Allen Sulatycky
  18. When PC gained Athabaska from Liberal
  19. 1945 if the Social Credit Party is counted as a predecessor party of the Conservative Party.
  20. 1957 if the Social Credit Party is counted as a predecessor party of the Conservative Party, when Socred gained Vegreville from Liberal
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References

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