The Legislative Assembly was first known as the
Temporary North-West Council and was created in 1870. The first appointments to the council were made on December 28, 1872. The Temporary Council was dissolved in 1876 and a new permanent council was appointed and moved to the new capital of
Fort Livingstone in 1876. The council moved to
Battleford a year later based on the planned location there of the
Canadian Pacific Railway. The very first election to the Assembly would take place on March 23, 1881, as
Lawrence Clarke was elected to represent the electoral district of
Lorne. In 1883 the Assembly moved south to
Regina based on amendments to the route of the railway. The first territory-wide election took place on September 15, 1885, known as the
1885 North-West Territories election. Three years later the
first general election took place. All the voting members of the Assembly were elected for the first time, and an elected speaker took office. The Lieutenant Governor still had executive authority however and appointed and ran the cabinet. After the
second general election in 1891 the first fully elected Assembly without any appointed members. The Assembly achieved
Responsible Government for the first time in October 1897 as the Lieutenant Governor appointed
Frederick Haultain as the first Premier to form a government.
Robert Brett became the first Leader of the official opposition and party lines were roughly drawn based on Conservatives and Liberals. The Haultain government lobbied for
Government of Canada for provincial powers for the North-West Territories. In response on September 1, 1905, the provinces of
Alberta and
Saskatchewan were created by Prime Minister
Wilfrid Laurier out of the southern populated portion of the territories. ==Court of law==