29th Canadian Parliament


The 29th Canadian Parliament was in session from January 4, 1973, until May 9, 1974. The membership was set by the 1972 federal election on October 30, 1972, and it was dissolved prior to the 1974 election.
There were two sessions of the 29th Parliament:
SessionStartEnd
1stJanuary 4, 1973February 26, 1974
2ndFebruary 27, 1974May 9, 1974

Overview

The 29th Canadian Parliament was controlled by a Liberal Party minority led by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and the 20th Canadian Ministry, with the support of David Lewis's New Democratic Party. The Official Opposition was the Progressive Conservative Party, led by Robert Stanfield. The Speaker was Lucien Lamoureux.
The government lost the confidence of the house in 1974 when finance minister John Turner's budget was defeated by a vote of 137 to 123, prompting the prime minister to seek dissolution of parliament for the next election.

Major events

Housing programs

The government introduced changed to the National Housing Act resulting in three distinct programs. Providing assistance in purchasing housing to new home buyers, providing loans to create co-operative housing, and providing loans for municipal and non-profit housing development.

Expansion of RRSP

Changes to the Income Tax Act during the 29th Parliament resulted in population wide access to Registered Retirement Savings Plans. The program had previously been available only to self-employed Canadians.

Legislation and motions

Act's which received royal assent under 29th Parliament

1st Session

Public acts
Local and private acts

2nd Session

Public acts
Local and private acts

Parliamentarians

House of Commons

Members of the House of Commons in the 29th parliament arranged by province.
Key:

Saskatchewan

Committees

House

Standing

Special

  • Special Committee on Trends in Food Prices

Senate

Standing

Special

  • Special Committee on Science Policy

Joint

  • Standing Joint Committee on Regulations and other Statutory Instruments

Ministry

The 20th Canadian Ministry began near the end of the 27th Canadian Parliament and governed throughout the 28th Canadian Parliament, 29th Canadian Parliament, and 30th Canadian Parliament.

Changes to Party Standings

By-elections

No by-elections were called during the 29th Parliament. Two seats remained vacant when the 1974 federal election was called.