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1UsefulNotes/{{Canada}}'s [[UsefulNotes/CanadianPolitics head of government]] is the Prime Minister, or PM for short,[[note]]The UsefulNotes/{{British|Political System}} term "Premier" is not used to refer to the prime minister in Canada, as "Premier" is instead the popular term for the various prime ministers of the Canadian provinces and territories.[[/note]] who by default is the leader of the largest party in the House of Commons -- though two prime ministers, John Abbott and Mackenzie Bowell, governed while members of the Senate. Three [=PM=]s -- Charles Tupper, John Turner, and Kim Campbell -- never faced Parliament during their tenure. Not coincidentally, all had been appointed PM shortly before an election which saw their party defeated and them removed from power. However, Tupper and Campbell ran for re-election as incumbent [=MP=]s, making Turner the only PM who was neither an MP nor a senator.[[note]]Ironically, although Turner badly lost the election which saw him removed as PM, he ''did'' manage to win his seat and served in the Commons as Leader of the Opposition for six years thereafter.[[/note]] More commonly the PM has lost their seat in a general election, then returned to the Commons in a subsequent by-election, usually in a safe seat for the party after the incumbent has voluntarily stepped down.[[note]]Said incumbent is traditionally appointed to the Senate as a reward for their loyalty.[[/note]] The Prime Minister's official residence since 1951 is 24 Sussex Drive in Ottawa; however the incumbent Justin Trudeau has not lived there since 2019 as the house is badly dilapidated and in need of major renovations. In typical Canadian fashion, these renovations have been long delayed with no clear end date in sight.
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3All the country's prime ministers have been from either the Liberal or an incarnation of the Conservative Party, and Kim Campbell is the only woman who has yet held the office.
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5All prime ministers have been of European descent, and to wit, all have had significant ancestry from UsefulNotes/{{England}}, UsefulNotes/{{France}}, UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}} or UsefulNotes/{{Scotland}}. There is no requirement for a prime minister to be "natural-born", and four prime ministers, including three of the first five, were immigrants (albeit all from the UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdom, and more specifically either Scotland or England).
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7Seven of the ten provinces have been represented by a sitting prime minister. The three which have not are New Brunswick,[[note]]R.B. Bennett was a New Brunswicker but emigrated to and represented Alberta.[[/note]] Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland & Labrador (all in the Atlantic Canada region).[[note]]Western Canada, by contrast, has been represented, but mainly by [=PMs=] who served only very briefly (Joe Clark, Kim Campbell) or by some born in eastern Canada who moved as adults (R.B. Bennett, Arthur Meighen, Stephen Harper).[[/note]] No prime minister has represented any of the Canadian territories in either the Commons or the Senate.
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9All prime ministers have been at least nominally Christian, although there is a tradition of anti-clericalism among the many French-Canadian Catholic prime ministers. The current breakdown of prime-ministerial religious affiliation (at least nominally) is as follows: 10 Catholic, 4 Anglican, 3 Presbyterian, 3 Baptist, 2 Methodist (via United Church of Canada), and 1 Evangelical (via the Christian and Missionary Alliance).
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11Please note that despite the numbers below, Canadian prime ministers--unlike American presidents--are not given multiple denominations for non-consecutive terms. As such, the current prime minister, Justin Trudeau, is reckoned only the 23rd prime minister, not the 28th.
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13# '''Sir John A. Macdonald''' (Conservative, 1867–1873) -- Born in Scotland. The dominant figure in achieving Canadian Confederation, he can essentially be thought of as Canada's [[TheAlcoholic functionally-alcoholic answer]] to UsefulNotes/GeorgeWashington, only without the need for a war or sticking to that whole "two terms" thing. Extended Canada to the Pacific and Arctic coasts and created the North-West Mounted Police to patrol this vast territory, though this also involved suppressing Louis Riel's Red River Rebellion. He governed while serving as MP for Kingston during this time. Ruled with minimal opposition until forced to resign by a corruption scandal related to building the transcontinental Railway, though he remained party leader.
14# '''Alexander Mackenzie''' -- (Liberal, 1873–1878) -- Born in Scotland. The first prime minister from the Liberal Party. A [[WorkingClassHero stonemason]] before entering politics, and a [[HumbleHero staunch anti-aristocrat]].[[note]]He refused on principle to accept knighthood or appointment to the UK Privy Council, thus deferring the titles of "Sir" and "the Right Honourable".[[/note]] Appointed to office after the fall of the Macdonald government and won a clear majority two months later. Created the Supreme Court, the office of Auditor General, and the Royal Military College. However, he struggled to deal with the economic depression following the Panic of 1873 and progress on the transcontinental railway stalled, resulting in a landslide comeback for Macdonald and the Conservatives. He governed while serving as MP for Lambton. Remained leader of the Opposition until 1880, when Edward Blake succeeded him for his second turn at the helm of the party, and an MP until his death in 1892. The first prime minister with facial hair (a beard).
15# '''Sir John A. Macdonald''' (Conservative, 1878–1891) -- Returned to power after a five-year hiatus and ruled the country until his death largely by championing a "National Policy" of fostering national unity via the transcontinental railway, industrial growth via protective tariffs, and settling Western Canada via immigration that would remain relatively unchanged until UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. This helped touch off a second conflict with Louis Riel, whose subsequent execution alienated Quebecers (most of whom, like Riel, were Catholic Francophones). Died in office just three months after winning his record sixth majority,[[note]]At 76, he remains the oldest person to sit as Prime Minister of Canada.[[/note]] and was immediately hailed as (and proved to be) a very ToughActToFollow. He governed while serving as MP for Victoria (from 1878 to 1882), Lennox (briefly in 1882), Carleton (1882–1887), and Kingston (1887–1891) during this time. One of the bridges linking Ottawa to Gatineau is named after him and his French-Canadian political partner George-Étienne Cartier, as are Ottawa's international airport and Ontario Highway 401, whose UsefulNotes/{{Toronto}}-area section is the busiest road in North America.
16# '''Sir John Abbott''' (Conservative, 1891–1892) -- An English Quebecker and the first native-born prime minister. As the Conservative government leader in the Senate, where he was the senator for the division of Inkerman,[[note]]Unusually among Canadian provinces, Quebec has named senatorial divisions because the British North America Act -- which became Canada's constitution -- called for it.[[/note]] he only took the job after John Thompson turned it down, and essentially just held the fort for 18 months before retiring, dying less than a year after leaving office. He is also the great-grandfather of Creator/ChristopherPlummer.
17# '''Sir John Thompson''' (Conservative, 1892–1894) -- A Nova Scotian protégé of Macdonald, he was also the first Catholic prime minister and at just 47 the youngest to hold the office until 1920, almost thirty years later. Was actually offered the office before Abbott, but initially [[RefusalOfTheCall declined]] because of concerns of prejudice towards his Catholicism after ConvertingForLove. Also served as his own Justice minister and did a respectable job, but died of a heart attack[[note]]While sitting down to lunch with UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria, no less![[/note]] after just two years at age 49, making him Canada's most WhatCouldHaveBeen PM and the one with the shortest lifespan; every living PM has outlived him, every other deceased PM lived to be at least 70 years old, and every living person who's served as PM except for Harper and Justin Trudeau ''is'' more than 70 years old. He governed while serving as MP for Antigonish. After Macdonald, he's the second and last (to date) prime minister to die in office.
18# '''Sir Mackenzie Bowell'''[[note]]Pronounced more like "bowl" than "bowel".[[/note]] (Conservative, 1894–1896) -- Born in England. Like Abbott, as senior cabinet minister and government Senate leader, [[YouAreInCommandNow power fell to him]] after Thompson's death. He then spent two years [[PerilousOldFool floundering around]] over the divisive issue of public-school funding in Manitoba until forced to resign by a cabinet coup. Generally considered the country's worst prime minister, excluding those who only held power for a few months. The country's only PM to have a full beard.[[note]]Alexander Mackenzie had a beard but no moustache, while Justin Trudeau grew a goatee after his re-election in 2019.[[/note]] Second and last prime minister to govern from the Senate (wherein he represented Ontario at large), which he remained a member of until his death at age 93 in 1917.
19# '''Sir Charles Tupper''' (Conservative, May–July 1896) -- The country's [[ShortLivedLeadership shortest-serving]] prime minister (69 days), as well as the oldest to assume office (at age 74). He governed while serving as MP for Cape Breton. Previously the premier who led Nova Scotia into Confederation in 1867, Tupper was thrust directly into an uphill election and almost won, but ultimately failed thanks to his party's [[WeAreStrugglingTogether internal bickering]] over schools in Manitoba and the Liberals flipping the script on economics by embracing much of Macdonald's old National Policy. In the end, Tupper's party won the popular vote (48% to 41%), but a Liberal landslide in Quebec and near draw in Anglophone Canada brought the opposition party a 55% majority of seats, and when Tupper insisted on trying to go on governing, Governor General Lord Aberdeen simply refused to cooperate, prompting Tupper's resignation. He tried again in the 1900 election and was soundly defeated, even losing his riding. Still got a mountain named after him, though. Ironically, the shortest-serving PM was also the longest-lived, dying at the age of 94 in 1915.
20# '''Sir Wilfrid Laurier''' (Liberal, 1896–1911) -- The country's first Francophone prime minister and the only one to hold office for [[LongRunners 15 consecutive years]] after Confederation, as well as the national record-holder for longest-serving MP (45 years, 3 weeks) and major party leader (31 years, 8½ months). He was the first PM to serve under three monarchs (Victoria, Edward VII, and George V) and the first to serve as PM for a monarch's entire reign (that of Edward VII). Sought and found compromise on the Manitoba Schools Question, and later on imperial relations with Britain by sending volunteers rather than militia to the Boer War and establishing the Royal Canadian Navy rather than sending money to aid Britain in its naval arms race with UsefulNotes/ImperialGermany, but also raised the [[YellowPeril head tax on Chinese immigrants]] from fifty dollars (established by Macdonald) to five hundred dollars, and his government fell when it tried to reverse the old National Policy and increase "reciprocity" (i.e., free trade) with the UsefulNotes/UnitedStates. Also created the prairie provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan from the Northwest Territories, and established Quebec as the Liberals' primary base by softening the party's anti-clerical stance and opposing conscription in 1917, which led to a short-term drubbing but great long-term success for the party. He governed while serving as MP for Quebec East. Died in office as leader of the Opposition in 1919. Widely considered one of the PowerTrio of prime ministers, along with John A. Macdonald and W. L. Mackenzie King, Laurier has been depicted on the Canadian $5 bill since 1972. He and Macdonald have a political think tank named after them as well.
21# '''Sir Robert Borden''' (Conservative/Unionist, 1911–1920) -- The last prime minister born before Confederation and the last Nova Scotian to hold the office. He governed while serving as MP for Halifax during his first mandate and Kings during his second. Recognizable by his moustache. After a decade floundering as opposition leader, he proved a popular and effective prime minister after gaining power, giving women the right to vote, establishing a proper taxation system, and taking Canada through UsefulNotes/WorldWarI and into the League of Nations while lobbying for greater autonomy within the British Empire.[[note]]For instance, as a British dominion, Canada didn't declare war on anyone in World War I, but thanks to Borden's efforts it did sign the peace treaty and join the League of Nations.[[/note]] Ran for re-election during the war as part of the Unionist Party coalition of pro-war, pro-conscription Conservatives and Liberals while Laurier led a rump Liberal-dominated Opposition ("Laurier Liberals"). No party has ever bettered the 56.9% of the popular vote won by Borden's coalition in 1917. However, the conscription policies he imposed during the war and the violent crackdown on the 1919 Winnipeg General Strike, would come back to hurt the party in the long run, especially in Quebec. The last prime minister to be knighted; the inconsistently enforced "Nickle Resolution" barring Canadian citizens from accepting "foreign honours" due to several scandals sprouting from controversial British peerages being awarded to Canadian supporters of the war effort was passed during his term. Died in 1937. Depicted on the Canadian $100 bill since 1976 but slated for removal (probably to make room for John A. Macdonald, who was displaced from the $10 by Viola Desmond in 2018).
22# '''Arthur Meighen''' (Liberal-Conservative, 1920–1921) -- The first PM born after Confederation (he was born in 1874) and the only one yet who has represented a Manitoba riding, governing while serving as MP for Portage la Prairie.[[note]]Meighen was an Ontarian who moved to Manitoba after completing law school.[[/note]] First came to prominence as minister of justice under Borden, though also gained some measure of infamy by his involvement in the implementation of conscription, plus his handling the Winnipeg General Strike. Though touted as the handpicked successor to Borden after the latter decided to step down with just over a year of his term remaining, in reality he was the only Tory who really wanted the top job, as Borden's other cabinet members were either too old, infirm, or knew the party had little chance of staying in power at the next election. Although he tried to maintain the 1917 coalition under the "Liberal-Conservative" brand, he promptly lost the 1921 election (including his own seat) and saw his party fall to third place behind the new Progressive Party.
23# '''William Lyon Mackenzie King''' (Liberal, 1921–1926) -- The country's longest-serving prime minister and the only one to serve three non-consecutive terms. A lifelong bachelor and [[CloudCuckoolander eccentric]] who believed in the occult and regularly consulted mediums, but also a benchmark [[TheChessmaster Chessmaster]] of Canadian politics. He governed while serving as the MP for York North during this time. Currently depicted on the Canadian $50 bill. Coming to power at the head of Canada's first true minority government,[[note]]Alexander Mackenzie technically led a minority after Macdonald's 1873 resignation, but Parliament was almost immediately dissolved for the 1874 election.[[/note]] he struggled to find his feet and had to rely on support from the new Progressive Party. His 1925 re-election bid saw his party lose the popular vote and drop 15 seats behind the Conservatives, and he lost his own seat. However, King refused to give up power and succeeded where Charles Tupper had failed by calling on his Progressive allies to prop up his government. This coalition quickly collapsed, however, when a cabinet minister was discovered to have taken bribes, so King pre-empted censure by asking Governor General Julian Byng to call a new election. When Byng declined, insisting that Meighen's larger Conservative caucus also deserved a chance to form a government, King denounced this as "[[InsistentTerminology foreign intervention]]", resulting in the infamous King–Byng Affair. Another interesting fact is that his grandfather and namesake, William Lyon Mackenzie, was the leader of the failed republican Upper Canada Rebellion back in 1837 and the following Patriot War of 1838, the only president of the unrecognized Republic of Canada, and the first mayor of Toronto.
24# '''Arthur Meighen''' (Conservative, 1926) -- An extremely short-lived return. Unable to risk losing a confidence vote while his cabinet was absent seeking the traditional validation of token by-elections, Meighen appointed only acting ministers. However, this--combined with his own controversial appointment--just convinced the Progressives to go back to the Liberals and bring down Meighen's government (by a [[DecidedByOneVote margin of one vote]]) after just three days. In the ensuing election, the Liberals campaigned as much against the Governor General's right to appoint Meighen as Meighen himself, and made an informal pact against vote-splitting with the Progressives, resulting in Meighen winning the largest popular vote (again) but losing the election[[note]]In Manitoba, for instance, Meighen's party won 40% of the vote but no seats.[[/note]] and his own seat ''[[HereWeGoAgain again]]''.[[note]]Adding insult to injury, Meighen made a comeback as Conservative leader in the early 1940s, but had to resign after repeatedly failing to win a seat in the Commons. He had resigned from the Senate to do so.[[/note]] Died in 1960.
25# '''W.L. Mackenzie King''' (Liberal, 1926–1930) -- Second term in office. Despite being a lifelong Ontarian, now he was governing while serving as MP for Prince Albert in Saskatchewan. Did a little better than his first time around, introducing old-age pensions, devolving more power to the provinces, and gradually increasing Canadian autonomy from Britain, but lost re-election thanks to the onset of TheGreatDepression, which he initially considered temporary or even a "Tory conspiracy", and infamously claimed he "would not give a five-cent piece" for provincial unemployment relief.
26# '''R.B. Bennett, 1st Viscount Bennett''' (Conservative, 1930–1935) -- The first PM to represent an Alberta riding, namely Calgary West.[[note]]Though he was born in New Brunswick, the only PM to be born there, in fact.[[/note]] Managed to win power with a very polished election campaign (including an early appreciation of the radio), only to take the UsefulNotes/HerbertHoover approach of assuming the Depression would fix itself. Ultimately realized his mistake and tried to replicate UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's "New Deal" by instituting a progressive income tax, a minimum wage, a limited workweek, unemployment and health insurance, expanded pensions, and bailouts for farmers. However, this wasn't enough to appease his critics and only prompted a [[WeAreStrugglingTogether split within his own party]], with the resulting backlash wrecking the original Conservative Party as an electoral force for nearly a quarter of a century at the national level, forcing them to merge with elements of the dying Progressive Party. Founded the [[Creator/{{CBC}} Canadian Radio Broadcasting Corporation]], the Canadian Wheat Board, and the Bank of Canada. Also probably the richest Canadian ever elected PM, and his personal charity to those afflicted by the Depression outstripped his income, exceeding $2.3 million. Bennett himself retired to England in 1938, where he was later appointed to the British House of Lords (in apparent violation of the Nickle Resolution passed during Borden's government but without any repercussions) for his unpaid work for the British Ministry of Aircraft Production during World War II. He is the only former PM to be elevated to the peerage.[[note]]Macdonald had been earmarked for elevation to a Barony after he retired from office, but of course he died before that could happen, and his widow was created Baroness Macdonald in his stead. Both titles are extinct, as Bennett never married, and Macdonald's only child was a daughter, who died without issue.[[/note]] Died in 1947.
27# '''W.L. Mackenzie King''' (Liberal, 1935–1948) -- His third, longest, and most influential term as Prime Minister. After tactfully playing CommanderContrarian in Opposition, took back power after the worst of the Depression was past and set about helping the recovery by expanding the financial and social welfare systems and trade with the United States. Also reconstituted the Canadian (Radio) Broadcasting Corporation as a publicly-owned corporation, nationalized the Bank of Canada, and established the precursor of Air Canada. King won a majority of the popular vote for the first and only time in his 1940 re-election bid with 51.3% of the vote; the Liberals have never done better in Canadian history. Led Canada through UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and into the United Nations, with mixed results ranging from successes in economic, scientific, and industrial mobilization to ambiguities like [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscription_Crisis_of_1944 finessing the conscription issue]] to discredits like Japanese internment camps. Continued governing while serving as MP for Prince Albert until he surprisingly lost the seat despite the Liberals retaining government in the 1945 federal election; MP William [=MacDiarmid=] stood down from his Glengarry riding and King won the by-election there. Retired from the premiership in 1948 and from the House of Commons in 1949. He was the second PM to serve under three monarchs (George V, Edward VIII, and George VI) and the second to serve for a monarch's entire reign (granted, Edward VIII reigned for less than a year and King, like all the other Commonwealth [=PM=]s, was in favour of abdication). Died in 1950.
28# '''Louis St. Laurent''' (Liberal, 1948–1957) -- Mackenzie King's Quebec lieutenant and hand-picked successor. Like Laurier, he governed while serving as MP for Quebec East, making that one of two constituencies to be represented by multiple sitting prime ministers. Popularly known as "Uncle Louis", he cultivated a paternal image, right down to having an honest-to-goodness StandardFiftiesFather moustache ([[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/90/Louis_St._Laurent_1954_37112_%28cropped%29.jpg here's a photo of him in 1954]]). Took Canada into NATO and expanded the country's military presence (including the UsefulNotes/KoreanWar), along with establishing most of the country's current boundaries (incorporating what was then just called Newfoundland as the tenth province) and federal structure. Also oversaw major infrastructure projects like the Trans-Canada Highway, Trans-Canada Pipeline, and St. Lawrence Seaway. Presided over a long post-war boom, before an economic downturn and fatigue with 36 years of almost continuous Liberal power brought down his government. Some Liberals suggested that he should try to cling to power with a coalition as King had in 1925,[[note]]The Liberals actually won 2% more votes thanks to massive majorities in Quebec.[[/note]] but St. Laurent considered this unsustainable and, being 75 years old, was ready to retire, so he passed power to Diefenbaker. (A viable coalition would have needed support from both the left-wing Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and the right-wing Social Credit to work.) He was the first of Queen UsefulNotes/ElizabethII's twelve Canadian prime ministers -- yes, the ''majority'' of Canada's [=PM=]s have served under a single monarch! Died in 1973.
29# '''John Diefenbaker''' (Progressive-Conservative, 1957–1963) -- The first prime minister of substantially non-British or French heritage (his father was the son of UsefulNotes/{{German|y}} immigrants), and the only prime minister from Saskatchewan.[[note]]Though he was born in Ontario, his family moved to Saskatchewan when he was eight years old, two years ''before'' it even became a province.[[/note]] He governed while serving as the MP for Prince Albert, making that the second constituency to be represented by multiple incumbent prime ministers.[[note]]He even ''challenged King'', the other Prince Albert MP to be PM, in the 1926 election.[[/note]] Rose to prominence after he successfully argued in court against the conviction of a dispatcher accused of negligence in [[http://www.gendisasters.com/british-columbia/8532/canoe-river-bc-train-collision-nov-1950 a deadly train wreck]]. After two unsuccessful attempts,[[note]]He ran for the Tory leadership in 1942, but lost to John Bracken, and 1948, losing to George Drew.[[/note]] he was elected as party leader in late 1956, and was the leader who cemented the Tories as a primarily western populist party. Initially elected to a minority government, when the Liberals called on him to resign for causing an economic downturn after just nine months, he showed the Liberals had predicted the downturn but done nothing about it, called another election, and won [[LandslideElection the biggest majority government in Canadian history]] (208 of 265 seats; no party since has outperformed the 53.67% of the popular vote, 78.5% of seats, or 151-seat overall majority Diefenbaker's [=PC=]s got that year). Passed substantial civil rights legislation including the Canadian Bill of Rights and voting rights for Indigenous people, and appointed the first female cabinet minister (Ellen Fairclough, who was his Secretary of State for Canada -- basically the go-between with the British government -- and later minister for citizenship and immigration). Joined with the US to create NORAD, but cancelled the Avro Arrow (largely because the advent of ballistic missiles limited the need for interceptor fighters).[[note]]Ironically, had the Arrow survived, it's likely that Avro wouldn't have found any buyers for it, and the Arrow would have ''instead'' been remembered as a typical Canadian public works boondoggle. Still, Diefenbaker had promised during his initial election campaign that he ''wouldn't'' cancel the Arrow -- St. Laurent, by contrast, stayed silent over the issue -- meaning the blowback when he did pull the plug was inevitable. Many Avro engineers headed south to work on a little thing called [[UsefulNotes/{{NASA}} Project Mercury]].[[/note]] Personally very thin-skinned, Diefenbaker got along superbly with UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower, but UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy thought very little of him. His refusal to let the US install ballistic missile defences with nuclear warheads, which resulted in a revolt by his cabinet, helped cause his downfall. After leaving office, remained leader of the Opposition until 1967, when Robert Stanfield succeeded him, and an MP until his death in 1979. Has an airport (in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan's largest city) and a large artificial lake named after him.
30# '''Lester B. Pearson''' (Liberal, 1963–1968) -- A distinguished diplomat and winner of the 1957 Nobel Peace Prize. He had been Minister of External Affairs during the King and St. Laurent ministries, and is generally credited with developing the idea of UsefulNotes/UnitedNations peacekeeping (mostly in response to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict). After a less than auspicious start leading the Liberals to their worst defeat to date, he eventually rebounded and won power, with substantial help from President Kennedy. Over five years and two minority governments, during which he also served as MP for Algoma East, he mostly laid the groundwork for what would follow under his successor, but also introduced the current Canadian flag (much to Diefenbaker's chagrin) and the country's current healthcare, pension, and immigration systems. In international affairs, he reversed Diefenbaker's policy and allowed US nukes into Canada but did not send troops to fight in UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar. Nevertheless he did not get along well with US President UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson (whose term in office overlapped almost completely with his own). Toronto's Pearson International Airport, the busiest airport in the country serving its largest city, has been named for him since 1984. He was the last PM born in the 19th century and the most recent to represent a riding in Ontario, Canada's most populous province, though three subsequent [=PM=]s[[note]]Paul Martin, from Windsor, who was elected from Quebec; Stephen Harper, from Toronto, who was elected from Alberta; and Justin Trudeau, born in Ottawa while his father was PM, representing Quebec.[[/note]] were born there. All five subsequent Liberal [=PMs=] to date either served directly in Pearson's cabinet or were sons of men who did. Died in 1972.
31# '''UsefulNotes/PierreTrudeau''' (Liberal, 1968–1979) -- One of the country's most well-remembered, but also controversial prime ministers, who legalized homosexuality, pushed for official bilingualism and invoked military force during an attempted Quebec uprising ([[VindicatedByHistory the latter two being unpopular at the time, but in retrospect likely helping stop the province from seceding]]), but also gained a reputation for economic turmoil, backtracking on policies, and behaving arrogantly towards political opponents ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXKSGRyZtz8 one (in)famous example]]). He governed while serving as MP for Mount Royal. He deliberately defined himself in opposition to US President UsefulNotes/RichardNixon by welcoming the many {{draft dodg|ing}}ers who fled across the border with open arms and seeking closer relationships with the West's traditional enemies, particularly Chairman UsefulNotes/MaoZedong of UsefulNotes/{{China}} (which Nixon eventually did too) and ''especially'' UsefulNotes/FidelCastro of UsefulNotes/{{Cuba}}, who became a close friend and even attended his funeral. Trudeau also instituted {{the metric system|IsHereToStay}} in 1977, resulting in a bastardized system.[[note]]Even 40 years later many Canadians still use Celsius for outdoors but Fahrenheit for body temperature, measure weight in pounds and short distances in inches and feet, and most packaging is just labelled differently (i.e., a 12-ounce can just says 355 mL instead).[[/note]] Lost power due to soaring inflation and introducing (among other things) price controls after pledging he wouldn't do so.
32# '''Joe Clark''' (Progressive-Conservative, 1979–1980) -- The only prime minister born in Alberta, as well as the youngest, taking office just a day short of his 40th birthday. Originally regarded as something of a joke by the Canadian press, who dubbed him "Joe Who?" contrasting his sober attitude with the charismatic Trudeau and portraying him, tall and thin with an oversized head, as a walking candy apple, he eventually became regarded as an effective opposition leader and managed to win the 1979 election. He governed while serving as MP for Yellowhead. Managed to win a minority government against expectations, but was unable to strike an alliance with any of the three smaller parties, though he did poach one of the six Social Credit [=MPs=] elected in 1979. He's also the only person in Canada to lead government while never having their party win the popular vote, barring those who took over during somebody else's mandate.[[note]]The 1979 Liberals won a popular-vote victory exceeding 4% due to massive majorities in Quebec.[[/note]] After seven months in office, his government tried to raise fuel taxes in its budget but lost the ensuing vote of confidence when the five remaining Socreds abstained after Clark refused to allocate the new revenues to Quebec, and proceeded to lose the general election that resulted. One of Clark's ministers called the short nine-month government, "Long enough to conceive, just not long enough to deliver". (As their reward, the Socreds never again elected a member to Parliament.) However, his brief term in office happened to coincide with the Iranian diplomatic hostage crisis, and not only did Clark and his Secretary of State for External Affairs, Flora [=McDonald=], have to oversee an extremely tense situation in Tehran, but [[https://youtu.be/pt69Ya79veQ in the end it was Clark who had to call for secret authorization of Canadian passports for the (eventually successful exfiltration of) six hidden American "houseguests", without specifying what the passports were for]]. By 1983, fearing internal dissent after only two-thirds of the party supported his leadership, Clark called a leadership race and was trounced by his 1976 rival Brian Mulroney, who proceeded to take the party back into power. Remained an MP after his defeat, serving on Mulroney's frontbenches until his [[TenMinuteRetirement (temporary) retirement]] in 1993. The most recent PM to try to return to office after a defeat, Clark led the rump [=PC=]s in the 2000 election (Prime Minister Chrétien often called him the "real leader of the opposition" as opposed to Preston Manning, the leader of the more right-wing Reform Party, which was treated as a "western grievances" party). The result was a disappointing drop-off from their modest 1997 recovery,[[note]]Calgary Centre, where Clark ran after a short stint representing Kings--Hants in Nova Scotia, was the only seat the old Tories managed to flip, and their twelve seats were only just enough to maintain official party status.[[/note]] prompting Clark's retirement and a merger with the Canadian Alliance to form the modern Conservatives, a move he opposed so firmly that he sat as an independent for the last six months before he retired from the House for good. Still living, the earliest PM for whom this is the case.[[note]]It's not so surprising because he was ''still'' born later than four of his successors, not counting Pierre Trudeau, who preceded and succeeded him.[[/note]]
33# '''UsefulNotes/PierreTrudeau''' (Liberal, 1980–1984) -- [[ChangedMyMindKid Cancelled]] his [[TenMinuteRetirement retirement]] when Clark's government fell, returned to the head of his party and to the PMO, and soundly defeated the Quebec secessionist movement in a 1980 referendum, largely by promising constitutional reform. This resulted in the 1982 patriation of the Canadian constitution,[[note]]Previously, any amendment to Canada's constitution had to be passed through the British parliament.[[/note]] the final step in Canada's independence from Britain, but also in long and bitter negotiations with the provinces that ended with Quebec as the odd province out, setting the stage for continued rancour in Quebec and forever staining Trudeau's reputation in his native province. Meanwhile, a series of difficult budgets and soaring inflation, interest rates, and unemployment did nothing to improve Trudeau's economic reputation, and his already-bitter relationship with Western Canada[[note]]In 1980, the Liberals won only two seats west of Ontario, both in the city of Winnipeg. In fairness to Trudeau, the Tories had utterly dominated the western provinces since the Diefenbaker era -- Pearson never won more than nine seats west of Ontario, with the real competition to the Tories in those provinces generally coming from the New Democratic Party -- but the schism grew wider during Trudeau's time as PM.[[/note]] soured even further when he responded to the era's energy crisis by creating the National Energy Program, which western provinces saw as a devastating (and unconstitutional) federal intrusion into their oil-rich economies and prompted such a backlash that the idea of the western provinces separating from Canada actually gained some traction.[[note]]A 1982 provincial by-election in Alberta, the province with by far the largest oil reserves, was famously won by a separatist candidate -- the only one to win outside of Quebec in over a century.[[/note]] With his personal and party popularity approaching rock-bottom levels, Trudeau took "a long walk in the snow" and decided to resign for good in 1984, but on his way out the door he recommended over 200 Liberals (some with doubtful qualifications) to patronage positions as senators, judges, and bureaucratic and Crown corporation executives, which generated yet more political backlash for his successor. Died in 2000.
34# '''John Turner''' (Liberal, June–September 1984) -- Born in England; the last foreign-born PM to date. [[HesBack Returned to politics after nine years away]] to beat out Trudeau's protégé Jean Chrétien as party leader, thus becoming PM despite lacking a seat in Parliament (he called his own approach "governing from the hallway"). In addition to maintaining Trudeau's controversial patronage appointments, Turner made 70 more patronage appointments himself. Misled by polls showing a Liberal surge, rather than parachute into a safe seat in a by-election Turner called a general election almost as soon as he took office despite not being required to do so for another year, and proceeded to run one of the most incompetent electoral campaigns in Canadian history, resulting in the Liberals' worst-ever defeat up to that point.[[note]]In addition to a lack of charisma and many personal gaffes, Turner's attempts to differentiate himself from his predecessor only managed to alienate the party's Quebec base and legitimize the rival PC platform at a stroke. The tipping point came during the English-language leaders' debate when Turner claimed he "had no option" but to let Trudeau's controversial patronage appointments stand, which Mulroney countered by saying, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_had_an_option,_sir "You had an option, sir—to say no—and you chose to say yes."]][[/note]] Despite this, Turner ''did'' oust Tory MP Bill Clarke in the riding of UsefulNotes/{{Vancouver}} Quadra in British Columbia, the only seat the Liberals flipped in 1984.[[note]]Another gambit of his that didn't pay off: he hoped to try to rebuild the Liberals in the West by running there. The only Liberal candidate to be elected west of Ontario in 1984 after Turner, though, was Lloyd Axworthy, who held on to his Manitoba seat, Winnipeg--Fort Garry, by a lean margin.[[/note]] He also chose to stay on as party leader and came close to a comeback campaigning against free trade with the US in the 1988 election, but ultimately failed when the [=PCs=] dropped the gloves and [[AttackOfThePoliticalAd mercilessly targeted]] Turner's personal credibility. This second defeat prompted Turner's resignation as party leader and MP in 1990, and his favoured successor Paul Martin lost the leadership to Jean Chrétien. As a result, Turner is the only Liberal PM never to win an electoral mandate while leading the party. Died in 2020, at the age of 91, putting him in the company of Bowell and Tupper as men who barely lasted as prime minister but lived long in person.
35# '''Brian Mulroney''' (Progressive-Conservative, 1984–1993) -- An Anglophone Quebecker. Won two majority governments, one mammoth and one "just" very healthy, and was part of the 1980s Conservative PowerTrio with UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan and UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher. His friendship with Reagan was particularly strong,[[note]]In addition to their similar political views, both were descended from UsefulNotes/TheIrishDiaspora. Mulroney and Thatcher were the only non-Americans to gave eulogies at Reagan's funeral, and Mulroney was the only one to do so in person as the ailing Thatcher's eulogy was pre-recorded.[[/note]] generally regarded as the closest between any Canadian PM and American president, and produced the predecessor to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Mulroney's first attempt to win the party leadership in 1976 resulted in his finishing third, with a strong performance on the first ballot tailing off after his campaign was judged to be too much style, too little substance; by the time of his second attempt at the party leadership in 1983 his ability to mount a flashy campaign was seen as much more of an asset thanks to Reagan's and Thatcher's own electoral successes being owed to polished media personas, though this time he made sure he had the policy credentials to back it up too. He governed while serving as MP for Manicouagan during his first mandate and Charlevoix during his second. His 1984 landslide marked the last time any party won a majority of the popular vote, and the last time to date any party has won over 200 seats (211, to be precise, the most seats any party has won in Canada and second-largest seat percentage and majority after those Diefenbaker got in 1958). However, his botched handling of Quebec sovereignty and the Goods and Services Tax, combined with allegations of personal corruption in the Airbus Affair, wrecked the popularity of Mulroney, his government, and his party, prompting his key bases in Quebec and Western Canada to split off into the Bloc Québécois and Reform Party, respectively. [[KnowWhenToFoldEm Recognizing the inevitable]] (his approval rating bottomed out at 12%![[note]]He just misses out on joining UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush and UsefulNotes/TheresaMay in the club of world leaders who've earned both the highest and lowest approval ratings for a leader of their country, as both Pierre and Justin Trudeau, along with Jean Chrétien, earned very slightly higher approval ratings than Mulroney ever managed.[[/note]]), he [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere jumped ship]] just six months before he had to call an election. This technicality makes him the first prime minister to win every election they contested. Died in 2024, making him the most recently deceased prime minister.
36# '''Kim Campbell''' (Progressive-Conservative, June–November 1993) -- Canada's only female prime minister, and the only one born in British Columbia.[[note]]BC has a ''long'' history -- going all the way back to Sir John A! -- of [=PM=]s who lose their seats in elections parachuting into "safe" ridings in the province.[[/note]] Taking over with only four months remaining of Mulroney's mandate, initially it looked like she might achieve the seemingly impossible and keep the Tories in power. During the election, however, her BrutalHonesty approach proved a turn-off to voters, the party's manifesto was criticised for its confused and inconsistent policies, and most damagingly, the Tories released a negative advertisement that was perceived to be mocking Liberal leader Jean Chrétien's facial paralysis -- Campbell didn't authorise the ad's creation, but her [[TheDitherer indecision vis-à-vis whether to apologise for it]] just made the affairs go FromBadToWorse. Ultimately, the Tories lost ''[[CurbStompBattle all but two of their seats]]'', including Campbell's own seat of Vancouver Centre,[[note]]The Liberal who unseated Campbell, Hedy Fry, has been re-elected in every subsequent federal election through 2021. Fry is only the fifth Canadian politician to unseat a sitting PM and the first to do so on their first attempt.[[/note]] though her personal popularity remained high (48%). This makes her the most recent prime minister not to win their own mandate as a party leader. Still living.
37# '''Jean Chrétien''' (Liberal, 1993–2003) -- A veteran of Pierre Trudeau's governments, who dropped out of politics for a while after a very short-lived stint as deputy PM to John Turner, before [[HesBack making a comeback]] in the early 1990s. Won election in a landslide thanks to the Progressive-Conservative implosion and the opposition being severely fragmented, and was a popular prime minister for a while, but [[CondemnedByHistory came to be seen (especially in retrospect) as incredibly corrupt and arrogant]]. He did at least manage to persuade Quebec not to secede from the rest of the country in a 1995 referendum (which is probably why the Queen gave him the ludicrously prestigious [[UsefulNotes/KnightFever Order of Merit]]). He governed while serving as MP for Saint-Maurice. The second PM to win every election they contested and the most recent one to date who had a majority government throughout their premiership; his final victory in 2000 also marks the last time to date that any party has received over 40% of the popular vote. Known for being inarticulate, he was memorably described as "fluent in ''neither'' of Canada's official languages."[[note]]He even [[SelfDeprecation said it of himself]], as he found the line ActuallyPrettyFunny.[[/note]] He famously told punk rock journalist Creator/NardwuarTheHumanServiette: "For me, pepper, I put it on my plate" after being told about a crowd of protesters in Vancouver getting pepper-sprayed at an APEC conference. Also noted for suffering from paralysis on the left side of his face due to a childhood bout with Bell's palsy, with Campbell's massive election defeat partly attributed to a TV ad that her party released, which was seen (intentionally or not) as mocking his disfigurement; Chrétien famously responded to the ad by saying that, while he could only talk out one side of his mouth, [[TakeThat Conservatives would talk out of both]]. Still living; currently the oldest living former PM.[[note]]Chrétien was born in 1934, while Martin was born in 1938, Clark in 1939, Campbell in 1947, and Harper in 1959. Incumbent Justin Trudeau, born in 1971, is the youngest living prime minister.[[/note]]
38# '''Paul Martin''' (Liberal, 2003–2006) -- The son of another high-ranking Liberal politician, [[GenerationXerox Paul Martin Sr.]], who had repeatedly failed to win the Liberal leadership.[[note]]He ran for leadership in 1948, losing to St. Laurent, in 1958, losing to Pearson, and in 1968, losing to Pierre Trudeau.[[/note]] Paul Jr. was a bit more successful, only for the scandals that had been building up under Chrétien's reign to blow up at last (to be fair, Martin himself was implicated in several of them), costing him power after just over two years. For British readers, he's basically the UsefulNotes/GordonBrown equivalent to Chrétien's UsefulNotes/TonyBlair, right down to a lengthy and extremely successful tenure as Finance minister, and a very long-standing rivalry with Chrétien dating back to their fight for the party leadership in 1990, resulting in over a decade of TeethClenchedTeamwork and the entire Liberal Party dividing into "Chrétienite" and "Martini" factions with the latter eventually forcing the former out of office. Unlike Brown, however, Martin did (barely) manage to win an election (with a minority government) in 2004. He governed while serving as MP for [=LaSalle=]--Émard. His most lasting legislative contribution is probably the legalization of same-sex marriage. Still living.
39# '''Stephen Harper''' (Conservative, 2006–2015) -- The first prime minister from the new Conservative Party, the only Baby Boomer elected to the office,[[note]]Kim Campbell is the only other Boomer, and she never won her own mandate.[[/note]] and the only PM in Canadian history to perform successively better in three elections (four if you count the one in 2004 before he became PM), starting out with a pair of minorities before earning a strong majority in 2011.[[note]]Harper is the second-longest-serving Tory PM after Macdonald, beating out Borden and Mulroney by almost a year. He and Diefenbaker are also the only two Tory [=PM=]s since Macdonald to win three mandates, each with two minorities and a majority.[[/note]] He governed while serving as MP for Calgary Southwest. Instituted the Accountability Act and a law to fix the maximum lifespan of Parliament at four years, and lowered the Goods and Services Tax, but his tenure came to be dominated by the Great Recession, which Canada weathered better than most thanks to prior regulation and pragmatic management including generous stimulus spending that ran contrary to conservative dogma. However, in 2011, his government also achieved a MedalOfDishonor by being the first in Commonwealth history to be found in contempt of Parliament, forcing a general election, but the public quickly decided the whole thing was a bunch of fuss over nothing and handed him a majority. [[NoSocialSkills Stiff and stodgy]] like many past Conservative leaders, he was never personally popular but governed fairly moderately (if at times underhandedly), especially when he had only minority governments, focusing on fiscal issues while avoiding divisive social issues, though his steadfast support for Canadian oil, especially that derived from bituminous sands in northern Alberta that is a lot more resource-intensive to produce, grew more controversial as climate change emerged as a rising global concern. Like UsefulNotes/TonyBlair in the UK, Harper had the good fortune of facing several terrible (and uncharismatic) opponents in a row.[[note]]Martin stepped down after his defeat in 2006 only to be replaced by former Intergovernmental Affairs and Environment minister Stéphane Dion (a {{dark horse|Victory}} candidate who came up the middle in a hotly-contested leadership race, revealing a deeply divided party), who was a decade ahead of his time with his [[SingleIssueWonk single-issue focus]] on the environment, including plans to introduce a carbon tax. When Dion lost after attempting to form a centre-left coalition government -- with tacit support from the separatist Bloc Québécois -- without an election in 2008, he was replaced by Michael Ignatieff, the 2006 runner-up and "chosen one" recruited by the backroom boys in the Liberal Party, admired for his Pearson-esque intellectual and internationalist credentials. However, Ignatieff's opportunism (he had spent most of his professional career outside of Canada, leading to the devastating "he didn't come back for ''you''" attack ad, and would leave Canada ''again'' soon after his defeat), his refusal to accept advice from his seasoned campaign workers, and his refusal to take the job seriously (in the 2011 English leaders' debate, NDP leader Jack Layton lampooned his poor attendance record in Parliament in what is considered the greatest line in Canadian debates since 1984 -- "Most Canadians, if they don't show up for work, they don't get a promotion") would see the Liberals collapse to third place and their worst showing in Canadian history, with only 34 seats and 18.91% of the popular vote. Ignatieff even lost his own seat of Etobicoke--Lakeshore. Dion and Ignatieff are the only permanent Liberal leaders since the 19th century never to become prime minister. Layton then became opposition leader and, despite being seen by many as being among the best prime ministers Canada never had, he tragically died after only three months in the position. This resulted in Quebec MP Tom Mulcair becoming the opposition leader for the remainder of Harper's premiership, and while Mulcair proved an effective opponent, he ultimately crumbled under the weight of a brutal series of Conservative attack ads and the poor reception of what was seen as an unambitious NDP manifesto, causing both him and Harper to be blindsided by Justin Trudeau.[[/note]] Ultimately, he lost power in 2015 thanks to factors including an ill-timed recession, a manifesto seen as too right-wing, and complacency over the seemingly moribund Liberal Party. He's also notorious for his public relations with the two US presidents he served alongside: his cozy relationship with UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush (who famously called him "Steve"[[note]]Harper had used that hypocorism when he first ran for the House in 1988, but stopped before he was first elected in 1993.[[/note]]) and his awkward relationship with UsefulNotes/BarackObama, who was essentially his polar opposite. Quit as Conservative leader on election night in 2015 and resigned from the House in summer 2016. Still living, and currently chair of the International Democrat Union, a global alliance of right-wing parties.

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