The lieutenant governor of Quebec came into being in 1867, upon the creation of Quebec at
Confederation. Since that date, 28 lieutenant governors have served the province, amongst whom were notable firsts, such as Lise Thibault—the first female and first disabled lieutenant governor of the province. The shortest mandate by a lieutenant governor of Quebec was that of Sir
Lomer Gouin, from January to March 1929, while the longest was
Hugues Lapointe, from 1966 to 1978. , 15th Lieutenant Governor of Quebec, from January to March 1929 One of the few examples in Canada of a viceroy exercising the
royal prerogative against or without
ministerial advice came in 1887, when Lieutenant Governor
Auguste-Réal Angers dismissed the Cabinet headed by
Premier Honoré Mercier; a report concluded that Mercier's government had benefited from a
kickback scheme with contractors building the
Baie des Chaleurs railway. The appointment of
Jean-Louis Roux as lieutenant governor of Quebec by Governor General
Roméo LeBlanc, on the advice of
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, stirred controversy, as Roux was well known as a strong opponent of Quebec independence and, soon after he took up the post, it was revealed that, as a university student in the 1940s, he had worn a
swastika on his
lab coat in protest of the
proposal to invoke conscription for service in
World War II and had participated in an antisemitic protest. Roux had, in an interview after his appointment as lieutenant governor, stated that he might have to use the
reserve powers of the Crown should certain circumstances arise following a referendum result in favour of Quebec's separation from Canada; a statement that displeased Roux's premier at the time,
Lucien Bouchard. The following year, Bouchard tabled in the legislature three motions, calling the Office of the lieutenant governor "a heritage of the colonial past", the appointment process controversial and interfering, and demanding the post be abolished, though, until then, the federal Crown-in-Council should appoint a person "democratically designated by the Quebec Assembly". ==Residences and offices==