List of premiers of Manitoba by time in office
This is a list of Premiers of Manitoba in order of time served in office as Premier of Manitoba as of August 15, 2020. The preceding Premier always stays in office during an election campaign, and that time is included in the total.
Rank | Premier | Incumbency | Dates in Power | Mandates |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | John Bracken[1] | 20 years, 159 days | 1922-8-8—1943-1-14[2] | 5[3] |
2 | Rodmond Roblin | 14 years, 195 days | 1900-10-29—1915-5-12[2] | 4 |
3 | Thomas Greenway | 11 years, 352 days | 1888-1-19—1900-1-6[2] | 3 |
4 | Gary Filmon | 11 years, 149 days | 1988-5-9—1999-10-5[4] | 3 |
5 | Gary Doer | 10 years, 14 days | 1999-10-5—2009-10-19[4] | 3 |
6 | Douglas Lloyd Campbell[5] | 9 years, 229 days | 1948-11-13—1958-6-30[2] | 2 |
7 | Dufferin Roblin | 9 years, 150 days | 1958-06-30—1967-11-27[2] | 4 |
8 | John Norquay | 9 years, 69 days | 1878-10-16—1887-12-24[2] | 4 |
9 | Edward Schreyer | 8 years, 132 days | 1969-7-15—1977-11-24[4] | 2 |
10 | Tobias Norris | 7 years, 88 days | 1915-5-12—1922-8-8[2] | 2 |
11 | Greg Selinger | 6 years, 197 days | 2009-10-19—2016-5-3[4] | 1 |
12 | Howard Pawley | 6 years, 161 days | 1981-11-30—1988-5-9[4] | 2 |
13 | Stuart Garson[5] | 5 years, 304 days | 1943-1-14—1948-11-13[2] | 1 |
14 | Brian Pallister (incumbent) | 4 years, 104 days | 2016-5-3—present | 1 |
15 | Sterling Lyon | 3 years, 358 days | 1977-11-24—1981-11-17[2] | 1 |
16 | Robert Atkinson Davis | 3 years, 317 days | 1874-12-3—1878-10-16[2] | 1 |
17 | Henry Joseph Clarke | 2 years, 116 days | 1872-3-14—1874-7-8[2] | 0 |
18 | Walter Weir | 1 year, 230 days | 1967-11-27—1969-7-15[2] | 0 |
19 | Alfred Boyd | 1 year, 89 days | 1870-09-16—1871-12-14[2] | 1 |
20 | Hugh John Macdonald | 292 days | 1900-1-10—1900-10-29[2] | 1 |
21 | Marc-Amable Girard | 91 days | 1871-12-14—1872-3-14[2] | 0 |
22 | David Howard Harrison | 24 days | 1887-12-26—1888-1-19[2] | 0 |
Notes
- The Progressives (United Farmers of Manitoba) won a majority in the 1922 election without a leader. Bracken was then approached by the party to become leader and Premier. Following the 1932 election Bracken's Progressives formed a coalition with the Liberals. Henceforth the two parties ran joint candidates and eventually merged into the Liberal-Progressive Party. Following the 1936 election a broader coalition was formed including the Social Credit party and at times the CCF, but only the Liberals and Progressives ran joint candidates.
- "Biographies of Deceased Members". Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. August 4, 2009. Retrieved April 3, 2013.
- Includes the 1922 election won by the leaderless Progressives who asked Bracken to lead their government after the election.
- "Biographies of Living Members". Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. November 4, 2009. Retrieved April 3, 2013.
- Liberal-Progressive
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gollark: Having a P2P/mesh network thing, while very cool for other reasons, does not mean you magically don't need hardware.
gollark: You forget that making silicon chips for computers is actually ridiculously hard. Seriously. Literally the most capital intensive industry around.
gollark: I have not, but I assume it's a P2P thing?
gollark: How correlated *are* reaction times and intelligence anyway?
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