38th Manitoba Legislature
| 38th Manitoba Legislature | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Majority parliament | |||
| Parliament leaders | |||
| Premier | Gary Doer May 2, 2003 — April 20, 2007 | ||
| Leader of the Opposition | Stuart Murray | ||
| Hugh McFadyen | |||
| Party caucuses | |||
| Government | New Democrat | ||
| Opposition | Progressive Conservative | ||
| Unrecognized | Liberal | ||
| Legislative Assembly | |||
| Speaker of the Assembly | George Hickes | ||
| Members | 57 MLA seats | ||
| Sovereign | |||
| Monarch | Elizabeth II 6 Feb. 1952 – 8 Sept. 2022 | ||
| Lieutenant Governor | Hon. Peter Liba March 2, 1999 – June 30, 2004 | ||
| Hon. John Harvard June 30, 2004 – August 4, 2009 | |||
| Sessions | |||
| 1st session June 23, 2003 – October 1, 2003 | |||
| 2nd session November 20, 2003 – June 10, 2004 | |||
| 3rd session November 22, 2004 – June 16, 2005 | |||
| 4th session October 27, 2005 – June 13, 2006 | |||
| 5th session November 15, 2006 – April 19, 2007 | |||
| |||
The members of the 38th Manitoba Legislature were elected in the Manitoba general election held in June 2003. The legislature sat from June 23, 2003, to April 20, 2007.
The New Democratic Party led by Gary Doer formed the government.
Stuart Murray of the Progressive Conservative Party was Leader of the Opposition. Hugh McFadyen was elected party leader in 2006 after Murray resigned in November 2005.
George Hickes served as speaker for the assembly.
There were five sessions of the 38th Legislature:
Peter Liba was Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba until June 30, 2004, when John Harvard became lieutenant governor.