, 12th lieutenant governor of Manitoba, from 1934 to 1940 The office of lieutenant governor of Manitoba came into being in 1870, upon Manitoba's entry into
Canadian Confederation, and evolved from the earlier position of
lieutenant governor of the Northwest Territories, though the occupants continued to simultaneously act as lieutenant governors of the Northwest Territories and later as lieutenant governors of
Keewatin District, until the latter was reabsorbed into the Northwest Territories in 1905. Since 1867, 24 lieutenant governors have served the province, amongst whom were notable firsts, such as
Pearl McGonigal the first female lieutenant governor of the province and
Yvon Dumont the first
Métis lieutenant governor. The shortest mandate by a lieutenant governor of Manitoba was
Adams George Archibald, from August 1870 to October 1872, while the longest was
Roland Fairbairn McWilliams, from 1 November 1940 to 1 August 1953. The first two holders of the title (
Adams George Archibald and
Alexander Morris) held more power in the province so much so in becoming a de facto Premier and only changed under
Joseph-Édouard Cauchon. In 1919, the Manitoba legislature voted in favour of The Initiative and Referendum Act, which sought to eliminate the lieutenant governor from the legislative process in the province.
Royal Assent to the bill was reserved by Lieutenant Governor
James Aikins and eventually the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council at
Westminster ruled that, since the law affected an appointee of the federal Crown, it was
ultra vires and struck down. Lieutenant Governor
George Johnson was called upon to use his reserve powers in March 1988. The governing
New Democratic Party (NDP) lost its thin majority in the legislature when one of its
Members of the Legislative Assembly,
Jim Walding, moved to an opposition party and voted along with the rest of the opposition against the proposed budget, a matter of
confidence and supply. Johnson thereafter dissolved the legislature and called an election and the premier,
Howard Pawley, announced his resignation both as premier and as leader of the NDP. Pawley felt that he could "hand over the premiership" to whoever succeeded him as party leader. Johnson, however, retained Pawley as premier, waiting until after the provincial election to appoint a successor, so that whoever was by then NDP leader could face and test the confidence of the legislature, should the NDP even win. The NDP failed to win
the election, regardless. ==See also==