# 25th Canadian Ministry

> Mediated Wiki article. Canonical URL: https://mediated.wiki/source/25th_Canadian_Ministry
> Markdown URL: https://mediated.wiki/source/25th_Canadian_Ministry.md
> Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/25th_Canadian_Ministry
> Source revision: 1320756419
> License: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)

Government cabinet of Canada (1993)

25th Canadian Ministry 25e conseil des ministres du Canada 25th ministry of Canada Date formed June 25, 1993 Date dissolved November 4, 1993 People and organizations Monarch Elizabeth II Governor General Ray Hnatyshyn Prime Minister Kim Campbell Deputy Prime Minister Jean Charest No. of ministers 25 Member party Progressive Conservative Status in legislature Majority Opposition party Liberal Opposition leader Jean Chrétien History Incoming formation 1993 PC leadership election Outgoing formation 1993 federal election Legislature term 34th Canadian Parliament Predecessor 24th Canadian Ministry Successor 26th Canadian Ministry

The **Twenty-Fifth Canadian Ministry** was the [cabinet](/source/Cabinet_of_Canada) chaired by [Prime Minister](/source/Prime_Minister_of_Canada) [Kim Campbell](/source/Kim_Campbell). It governed [Canada](/source/Canada) from 25 June 1993 to 4 November 1993, including only the last two months of the [34th Canadian Parliament](/source/34th_Canadian_Parliament) until its dissolution in September of that year. It was smaller than the cabinet of her predecessor, [Brian Mulroney](/source/Brian_Mulroney).[1]

The government was formed by the [Progressive Conservative Party of Canada](/source/Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Canada). It was the last ministry to be led by that party, which merged with the [Alliance](/source/Canadian_Alliance) to form the [Conservative Party of Canada](/source/Conservative_Party_of_Canada) in 2003 as part of the Canadian [Unite the Right](/source/Unite_the_Right_(Canada)) movement.

## Ministers

Portfolio Minister Term Start End Prime Minister Kim Campbell 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Deputy Prime Minister Jean Charest 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Agriculture Charles Mayer 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Amateur Sport Mary Collins 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency Ross Reid 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for the Canadian Dairy Commission Charles Mayer 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Canadian International Development Agency Perrin Beatty 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation Paul Dick 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Canada Post Corporation Larry Schneider 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for the Canadian Wheat Board Charles Mayer 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Communications Monique Landry 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs and Registrar General Jean Charest 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Defence Construction Canada Paul Dick 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Employment and Immigration Bernard Valcourt 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Energy, Mines, and Resources Bobbie Sparrow 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of the Environment Pierre H. Vincent 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians Jim Edwards 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Secretary of State for External Affairs Perrin Beatty 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister for External Relations Perrin Beatty 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Federal-Provincial Relations Kim Campbell 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for the Federal Office of Regional Development – Quebec Jean Charest 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Finance Gilles Loiselle 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Ross Reid 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Forestry Bobbie Sparrow 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development Pauline Browes 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Industry, Science and Technology Jean Charest 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of International Trade Tom Hockin 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Justice and Attorney General Pierre Blais 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for La Francophonie Perrin Beatty 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Labour Bernard Valcourt 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Leader of the Government in the House of Commons Doug Lewis 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Leader of the Government in the Senate Lowell Murray 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Multiculturalism and Citizenship Gerry Weiner 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for National Capital Commission Gerry Weiner 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Associate Minister of National Defence Vacant 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of National Defence Tom Siddon 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of National Health and Welfare Mary Collins 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of National Revenue Garth Turner 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 President of the Privy Council Pierre Blais 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Public Security Doug Lewis 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Public Works Paul Dick 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Royal Canadian Mint Paul Dick 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister for Science Rob Nicholson 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Secretary of State for Canada Monique Landry 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Solicitor General Doug Lewis 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Small Business Rob Nicholson 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Small Communities and Rural Areas Charles Mayer 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for Standards Council of Canada Jean Charest 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister responsible for the Status of Women Mary Collins 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Supply and Services and Receiver General Paul Dick 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Transport Jean Corbeil 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 President of the Treasury Board Jim Edwards 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Veterans Affairs Peter McCreath 25 June 1993 4 November 1993 Minister of Western Economic Diversification Larry Schneider 25 June 1993 4 November 1993

## References

- Government of Canada. ["Twenty-Fifth Ministry"](https://web.archive.org/web/20120305010614/http://www.pco-bcp.gc.ca/mgm/dtail.asp?lang=eng&mstyid=25&mbtpid=1). *Guide to Canadian Ministries since Confederation*. Privy Council Office. Archived from [the original](http://www.pco-bcp.gc.ca/mgm/dtail.asp?lang=eng&mstyid=25&mbtpid=1) on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 1 July 2010.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** Wilson-Smith, Anthony (5 July 1993). ["OTTAWA'S FRESH FACES | Maclean's | JULY 5, 1993"](https://web.archive.org/web/20200807005605/https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1993/7/5/ottawas-fresh-faces). MacLeans. Archived from [the original](https://archive.macleans.ca/article/1993/7/5/ottawas-fresh-faces) on 7 August 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2025.

## Succession

Ministries of Canada Preceded by 24th Canadian Ministry 25th Canadian Ministry 1993 Succeeded by 26th Canadian Ministry

v t e Cabinet of Prime Minister Kim Campbell (1993) Kim Campbell Perrin Beatty Pierre Blais Pauline Browes Jean Charest Mary Collins Jean Corbeil Paul Dick Jim Edwards Tom Hockin Monique Landry Doug Lewis Gilles Loiselle Peter McCreath Charles Mayer Lowell Murray Rob Nicholson Ross Reid Larry Schneider Tom Siddon Bobbie Sparrow Garth Turner Bernard Valcourt Pierre H. Vincent Gerry Weiner

v t e Ministries of Canada ■ 1. Macdonald I (1867–1873) ■ 2. Mackenzie (1873–1878) ■ 3. Macdonald II (1878–1891) ■ 4. Abbott (1891–1892) ■ 5. Thompson (1892–1894) ■ 6. Bowell (1894–1896) ■ 7. Tupper (1896) ■ 8. Laurier (1896–1911) ■ 9. Borden I (1911–1917) ■ 10. Borden II (1917–1920) ■ 11. Meighen I (1920–1921) ■ 12. King I (1921–1926) ■ 13. Meighen II (1926) ■ 14. King II (1926–1930) ■ 15. Bennett (1930–1935) ■ 16. King III (1935–1948) ■ 17. St. Laurent (1948–1957) ■ 18. Diefenbaker (1957–1963) ■ 19. Pearson (1963–1968) ■ 20. Trudeau, P. I (1968–1979) ■ 21. Clark (1979–1980) ■ 22. Trudeau, P. II (1980–1984) ■ 23. Turner (1984) ■ 24. Mulroney (1984–1993) ■ 25. Campbell (1993) ■ 26. Chrétien (1993–2003) ■ 27. Martin (2003–2006) ■ 28. Harper (2006–2015) ■ 29. Trudeau, J. (2015–2025) ■ 30. Carney (2025–present) Category Canada portal

v t e Progressive Conservative Party of Canada History Leaders Leadership elections Leaders John Bracken George A. Drew William Earl Rowe (interim) John Diefenbaker Robert Stanfield Joe Clark Erik Nielsen (interim) Brian Mulroney Kim Campbell Jean Charest Elsie Wayne (interim) Joe Clark Peter MacKay Leadership elections 1942 1948 1956 1967 1976 1983 1993 Endorsements 1998 2003 Governments Diefenbaker Clark Mulroney Campbell Parliamentary election candidates 1945 1949 1953 1957 1958 1962 1963 1965 1968 1972 1974 1979 1980 1984 1988 1993 1997 2000 Related political parties Liberal-Conservative (1867–1873) Conservative (1867–1942) Reform (1987–2000) Canadian Alliance (2000–2003) Conservative (2003–present) Miscellaneous Beau risque Blue Tory Red Tory Progressive Conservative Youth Federation Unite the Right movement

This Canadian government–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.

- [v](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Canada-gov-stub)
- [t](/source/Template_talk%3ACanada-gov-stub)
- [e](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:EditPage/Template:Canada-gov-stub)

---
Adapted from the Wikipedia article [25th Canadian Ministry](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/25th_Canadian_Ministry) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/25th_Canadian_Ministry?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
