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LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ONTARIO

(Redirected from Ontario Legislative Assembly)

The 'Legislative Assembly of Ontario' (also known as ''Ontario Legislative Assembly'' or ''OntLA''), is the legislature of the Canadian province of Ontario. It is located in the Legislative Buildings at Queen's Park in Toronto, Ontario.
The ''British North America Act'' section 69 stipulates "There shall be a Legislature for Ontario consisting of the Lieutenant-Governor and of One House, styled the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". The Legislative Assembly is unicameral, without an upper house (replacing the bicameral Legislative Assembly of Canada (lower house) and Legislative Council of Canada (upper house), with 107 seats representing ridings elected in a first-past-the-post system across the province.
The Legislative Assembly is informally known as the "Ontario Provincial Parliament". This is because unlike the other Canadian provinces, members of this assembly refer to themselves as "Members of the Provincial Parliament" ("MPPs") as opposed to "Members of the Legislative Assembly" ("MLAs"). Ontario is the only province to do so, in accordance with a resolution passed in the Assembly on April 7, 1938. However, the ''Legislative Assembly Act'', R.S.O. 1990, c. L10 refers only to "members of the Assembly".

Contents
Lawmaking
Coat of Arms
Media
Party standings
List of members
Notes
See also
External links

Lawmaking


In accordance with the traditions of the Westminster System, most laws originate with the cabinet (Government bills), and are passed by the legislature after stages of debate and decision-making. Although ordinary Members of the Legislature pass few laws they have introduced privately (Private Members' bills) they nonetheless play an integral role in scrutinizing, debating and amending bills presented to the legislature by cabinet.
Members are expected to be loyal to both their parliamentary party and to the interests of their ridings.
In the Ontario Legislature this confrontation provides much of the material for Oral Questions and Members' Statements. Legislative scrutiny of the executive is also at the heart of much of the work carried out by the Legislature's Standing Committees, which are made up of ordinary backbenchers.
A Member's day will typically be divided among participating in the business of the House, attending caucus and committee meetings, speaking in various debates, or returning to his or her constituency to address the concerns, problems and grievances of constituents. Depending on personal inclination and political circumstances, some Members concentrate most of their attention on House matters while others focus on constituency problems, taking on something of an ombudsman's role in the process.
Finally, it is the task of the Legislature to provide the personnel of the executive. As already noted, under responsible government, ministers of the Crown are expected to be Members of the Assembly. When a political party comes to power it will invariably place its more experienced parliamentarians into the key cabinet positions, where their parliamentary experience may be the best preparation for the rough and tumble of political life in government.

Coat of Arms


The Legislative Assembly of Ontario is the first legislature in Canada to have a Coat of Arms separate from the provincial coat of arms.

Green and gold are the principal colours in the shield of arms of the province. The Mace is the traditional symbol of the authority of the Speaker. Shown on the left is the current Mace. On the right is the original Mace from the time of the first parliament in 1792. The crossed Maces are joined by the shield of arms of Ontario.
The crown on the wreath represents national and provincial loyalties; its rim is studded with the provincial gemstone, the amethyst. The griffin, an ancient symbol of justice and equity, holds a calumet, which symbolizes the meeting of spirit and discussion that Ontario's First Peoples believe accompanies the use of the pipe.
The deer represent the natural riches of the province. The Loyalist coronets at their necks honour the original European settlers in Ontario who brought with them the parliamentary form of government. The Royal Crowns, left 1992, right 1792, recognize the parliamentary bicentennial and recall our heritage as a constitutional monarchy. They were granted as a special honour by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on the recommendation of the Governor General.
In the base, the maple leaves are for Canada, the trilliums for Ontario and the roses for York (now Toronto), the provincial capital.
The motto "'AUDI ALTERAM PARTEM'" is one of a series of Latin phrases carved in the Chamber of the Legislative Building. It challenges Members of Provincial Parliament to "Hear the Other Side."

Media


Procedings of the Legislative Assembly are broadcast to Ontario cable television subscribers as the Ontario Parliament Network.

Party standings


The Ontario Legislature Building at Queen's Park

'Affiliation' 'Members'
  Liberal Party 68
  Progressive Conservative Party 24
  New Democratic Party 10
  Independent 1
 'Total'
'103'
 'Government Majority'
'16'
























































































































































































































































































































































LO













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Seating Plan


Seating Plan (PDF)


P = Premier, LO = Leader of Opposition, L = Leader of the NDP.

List of members


Ted ArnottProgressive ConservativeWaterloo—Wellington
Wayne ArthursLiberalPickering—Ajax—Uxbridge
Bas BalkissoonLiberalScarborough—Rouge River
Toby BarrettProgressive ConservativeHaldimand—Norfolk—Brant
'Rick Bartolucci'LiberalSudbury
'Chris Bentley'LiberalLondon West
Lorenzo BerardinettiLiberalScarborough Southwest
Gilles BissonNew DemocratTimmins—James Bay
'Marie Bountrogianni'LiberalHamilton Mountain
'Jim Bradley'LiberalSt. Catharines
'Laurel Broten'LiberalEtobicoke—Lakeshore
Mike BrownLiberalAlgoma—Manitoulin
Jim BrownellLiberalStormont—Dundas—Charlottenburgh
'Michael Bryant'LiberalSt. Paul's
'Donna Cansfield'LiberalEtobicoke Centre
'David Caplan'LiberalDon Valley East
'Mary Anne Chambers'LiberalScarborough East
Michael ChanLiberalMarkham
Ted ChudleighProgressive ConservativeHalton
'Mike Colle'LiberalEglinton—Lawrence
Kim CraitorLiberalNiagara Falls
Bruce CrozierLiberalEssex
Bob DelaneyLiberalMississauga West
Vic DhillonLiberalBrampton West—Mississauga
'Caroline DiCocco'LiberalSarnia—Lambton
Cheri DiNovoNew DemocratParkdale—High Park
'Leona Dombrowsky'LiberalHastings—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington
Brad DuguidLiberalScarborough Centre
'Dwight Duncan'LiberalWindsor—St. Clair
Garfield DunlopProgressive ConservativeSimcoe North
Christine ElliottProgressive ConservativeWhitby—Ajax
Paul FerreiraNew DemocratYork South—Weston
Kevin FlynnLiberalOakville
Peter FonsecaLiberalMississauga East
'John Gerretsen'LiberalKingston and the Islands
Michael GravelleLiberalThunder Bay—Superior North
''Howard Hampton''New DemocratKenora—Rainy River
Ernie HardemanProgressive ConservativeOxford
Andrea HorwathNew DemocratHamilton East
Pat HoyLiberalChatham-Kent—Essex
Tim HudakProgressive ConservativeErie—Lincoln
Linda JeffreyLiberalBrampton Centre
Frank KleesProgressive ConservativeOak Ridges
Peter KormosNew DemocratNiagara Centre
Kuldip KularLiberalBramalea—Gore—Malton—Springdale
'Monte Kwinter'LiberalYork Centre
Jean-Marc LalondeLiberalGlengarry—Prescott—Russell
Jeff LealLiberalPeterborough
Dave LevacLiberalBrant
Lisa MacLeodProgressive ConservativeNepean—Carleton
Rosario MarcheseNew DemocratTrinity—Spadina
Judy MarsalesLiberalHamilton West
Shelley MartelNew DemocratNickel Belt
Gerry MartiniukProgressive ConservativeCambridge
Deb MatthewsLiberalLondon North Centre
Bill MauroLiberalThunder Bay—Atikokan
'''Dalton McGuinty'''LiberalOttawa South
Ted McMeekinLiberalAncaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Aldershot
Phil McNeelyLiberalOttawa—OrlĂ©ans
'Madeleine Meilleur'LiberalOttawa—Vanier
Norm MillerProgressive ConservativeParry Sound—Muskoka
John MilloyLiberalKitchener Centre
Carol MitchellLiberalHuron—Bruce
Jennifer MossopLiberalStoney Creek
Julia MunroProgressive ConservativeYork North
Bill MurdochProgressive ConservativeBruce—Grey—Owen Sound
John O'TooleProgressive ConservativeDurham
David OraziettiLiberalSault Ste. Marie
Jerry OuelletteProgressive ConservativeOshawa
Richard PattenLiberalOttawa Centre
'Steve Peters'LiberalElgin—Middlesex—London
Tim PetersonIndependentMississauga South
'Gerry Phillips'LiberalScarborough—Agincourt
Michael PrueNew DemocratBeaches—East York
'Sandra Pupatello'LiberalWindsor West
Shafiq QaadriLiberalEtobicoke North
Mario RaccoLiberalThornhill
Khalil RamalLiberalLondon—Fanshawe
'David Ramsay'LiberalTimiskaming—Cochrane
Lou RinaldiLiberalNorthumberland
Bob RuncimanProgressive ConservativeLeeds—Grenville
Tony RuprechtLiberalDavenport
Liz SandalsLiberalGuelph—Wellington
Joyce SavolineProgressive ConservativeBurlington
Laurie ScottProgressive ConservativeHaliburton—Victoria—Brock
Mario SergioLiberalYork West
Monique SmithLiberalNipissing
'George Smitherman'LiberalToronto Centre—Rosedale
'Greg Sorbara'LiberalVaughan—King—Aurora
Norm SterlingProgressive ConservativeLanark—Carleton
Peter TabunsNew DemocratToronto—Danforth
'Harinder Takhar'LiberalMississauga Centre
Joe TasconaProgressive ConservativeBarrie—Simcoe—Bradford
''John Tory''Progressive ConservativeDufferin—Peel—Wellington—Grey
Maria Van BommelLiberalLambton—Kent—Middlesex
'Jim Watson'LiberalOttawa West—Nepean
John WilkinsonLiberalPerth—Middlesex
Jim WilsonProgressive ConservativeSimcoe—Grey
Elizabeth WitmerProgressive ConservativeKitchener—Waterloo
Kathleen WynneLiberalDon Valley West
John YakabuskiProgressive ConservativeRenfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke
David ZimmerLiberalWillowdale
vacant1Prince Edward—Hastings




★ Cabinet ministers are in bold, leaders are in italics and the Speaker of the Legislature has a dagger next to his name.
Notes

1 Vacant since appointment of Ernie Parsons as a Justice of the Peace on July 12, 2007; no byelection will be held as the 2007 provincial election is less than six months away.

See also



List of Ontario political parties

Cabinet of Ontario

List of Ontario general elections

Ontario provincial by-election, 2007


External links



Legislative Assembly of Ontario official site

Emporis Listing

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