Hancock Ministry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hancock Ministry

15th ministry of Alberta
Dave Hancock in 2011
Date formedMarch 23, 2014 (2014-03-23)
Date dissolvedSeptember 15, 2014 (2014-09-15)
People and organisations
MonarchElizabeth II
Lieutenant GovernorDonald Ethell
PremierDave Hancock
Member partyProgressive Conservative
Status in legislatureMajority
History
Legislature term(s)28th Alberta Legislature
PredecessorRedford Ministry
SuccessorPrentice Ministry

The Hancock Ministry was the combined Cabinet (called Executive Council of Alberta), chaired by 15th Premier of Alberta Dave Hancock, that governed Alberta from March 23, 2014 to September 15, 2014. It was made up of members of the Progressive Conservative Party (PC).

Hancock, previously deputy premier in the Redford Ministry, was sworn into office following Alison Redford's resignation. He inherited Redford's cabinet and, as he was only serving as premier until the party could elect a permanent leader, said he was "not planning to make any real changes in cabinet." However, he also said that any cabinet minister who decides to runs for the leadership must resign, in order to prevent an unfair advantage.[1] On May 7, Ric McIver resigned in order to contest the leadership; he was replaced as infrastructure minister by Wayne Drysdale.[2]

List of ministers[edit]

Name Date Appointed Date Departed
Dave Hancock President of the Executive Council (Premier) March 23, 2014 September 15, 2014
Doug Horner President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014
Frank Oberle Jr. Minister of Aboriginal Relations December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Verlyn Olson Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development May 8, 2012 May 23, 2015
Heather Klimchuk Minister of Culture May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014
Jeff Johnson Minister of Education May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014
Diana McQueen Minister of Energy December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Robin Campbell Minister of Environment and Sustainable Resource Development December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Fred Horne Minister of Health May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014
Manmeet Bhullar Minister of Human Services December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Ric McIver Minister of Infrastructure December 13, 2013 May 6, 2014
Wayne Drysdale May 15, 2014 September 14, 2014
Dave Hancock Minister of Innovation and Advanced Education December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Cal Dallas Minister of International and Intergovernmental Relations May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014
Thomas Lukaszuk Minister of Jobs, Skills, Training and Labour December 13, 2013 May 22, 2014
Kyle Fawcett May 26, 2014 September 14, 2014
Jonathan Denis Minister of Justice and Solicitor General May 8, 2012 April 25, 2015
Ken Hughes Minister of Municipal Affairs December 13, 2013 April 7, 2014
Greg Weadick May 15, 2014 September 14, 2014
Doug Griffiths Minister of Service Alberta December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Richard Starke Minister of Tourism, Parks and Recreation February 8, 2013 September 14, 2014
Wayne Drysdale Minister of Transportation December 13, 2013 May 24, 2015
Naresh Bhardwaj Associate Minister for Persons with Disabilities December 13, 2013 March 13, 2015
Rick Fraser Associate Minister for Public Safety December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Rick Fraser Associate Minister for Recovery and Reconstruction of High River June 25, 2013 September 14, 2014
Greg Weadick Associate Minister for Recovery and Reconstruction of Southeast Alberta June 25, 2013 May 15, 2014
Dave Quest Associate Minister for Seniors December 13, 2013 September 14, 2014
Don Scott Associate Minister of Accountability, Transparency and Transformation May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014
Sandra Jansen Associate Minister of Family and Community Safety August 1, 2013 September 14, 2014
Teresa Woo-Paw Associate Minister of International and Intergovernmental Relations May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014
Kyle Fawcett Associate Minister of Recovery and Reconstruction of Southwest Alberta June 25, 2013 May 26, 2014
Dave Rodney Associate Minister of Wellness May 8, 2012 September 14, 2014

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Bennett, Dean (March 23, 2014). "Dave Hancock sworn in as Alberta's new premier". CTV News. The Canadian Press. Retrieved July 24, 2022.
  2. ^ "Ric McIver quits cabinet, announces run for leadership of Alberta Tories". Red Deer Advocate. May 7, 2014. Retrieved July 24, 2022.

Sources[edit]

"Premier Alison Redford shuffles cabinet". CBC News. December 6, 2013. Retrieved July 24, 2022.