Provincial Secretary and Registrar of Ontario
The Provincial Secretary and Registrar of Ontario was a senior position in the provincial cabinet of Ontario from before Canadian Confederation until the 1960s.
The Provincial Secretary and Registrar was originally the second highest position in the provincial cabinet, equivalent to the position of Deputy Premier. The Provincial Secretary was the equivalent of the former Canadian Cabinet position of Secretary of State for Canada. Like its federal counterpart it included an eclectic variety of responsibilities that were not assigned to other ministers, most of which would eventually evolve into portfolios of their own. The provincial secretary was also responsible for official communications between the provincial government and the Colonial Office in London as well as with other provincial and colonial governments (and after 1867 the federal government). As well, the position also included various duties related to ceremonial occasions, visits by dignitaries, protocol, relations between the government and the office of lieutenant governor and commemorative events particularly in relation to the monarchy.
Generally, the Provincial Secretary acted as a province's Registrar-General and was responsible for formal documents and records such as licences, birth and death certificates, land registries and surveys, business registrations and writs. As well, the position was generally responsible for the administration of the civil service and of elections. Provincial secretaries were usually the most senior member of the provincial cabinet outside of the Premier, and the office holder was often designated as Acting Premier when the Premier was out of province, ill or otherwise unavailable. The last individual to hold the position of Provincial Secretary and Registrar (renamed Provincial Secretary and Minister of Citizenship in 1961) was John Yaremko who left office in 1975.
In 1972 the Progressive Conservative government of Bill Davis adopted the provincial secretary title for a non-departmental cabinet portfolio in which the occupant either having responsibility spreading over several ministries, assisting a senior minister in an area or as a secondary portfolio for a senior minister giving him a broader responsibility or mandate area. The three positions created were Provincial Secretary for Social Development, Provincial Secretary for Justice and Provincial Secretary for Resource Development. These positions were unrelated to the original Provincial Secretary position except for the common name. The positions were retained by Davis' successor, Frank Miller, in 1985 but were abolished when the Progressive Conservatives lost power to David Peterson's Liberals in 1985.
Pre-Confederation Provincial Secretary
editPrior to Confederation and the creation of the office of Premier, the Provincial Secretary was the most important and powerful figure in provincial politics. The title holder was appointed by the Lieutenant Governor and many sat as members of the Legislative Council.
Upper Canada
edit- William Jarvis (1791-1817) Family Compact (Conservative)
- Sir John Robinson, 1st Baronet, of Toronto (1817-1829) Family Compact (Conservative)
- Robert Baldwin Sullivan (1838-1840)
United Provinces of Canada
edit- Sir Dominick Daly (1844-1848) - former Provincial Secretary of Lower Canada (1827-1840), Canada East (1843-1844)
- Pierre Joseph Olivier Chauveau (1853-1854) Conservative
- Sir George-Étienne Cartier (1855-1857) Conservative
Provincial Secretary and Registrar
edit- Matthew Crooks Cameron (1867-1871) Conservative
- Stephen Richards (1871) Conservative
- Alexander Mackenzie (1871) Liberal
- Peter Gow (1871-1872) Liberal
- Timothy Pardee (1872-1873) Liberal
- Christopher Fraser (1873) Liberal
- Samuel Wood (1875-1877) Liberal
- Arthur S. Hardy (1877-1889) Liberal
- John Gibson (1889-1896) Liberal
- William Balfour (1896) Liberal
- Elihu Davis (1896-1899) Liberal
- James Stratton (1899-1904) Liberal
- George Graham (1904-1905) Liberal
- William Hanna (1905-1916) Conservative
- William McPherson (1916-1919) Conservative
- Harry Nixon (1919-1923) United Farmers of Ontario
- Lincoln Goldie (1923-1930) Conservative
- Leopold Macaulay (1930-1931) Conservative
- George Challies (1931-1934) Conservative
- Harry Nixon (1934-1942) Liberal
- Norman Hipel (1942-1943) Liberal
- Harry Nixon (1943) as Premier Liberal
- George Dunbar (1943-1946) Progressive Conservative
- Roland Michener (1946-1948) Progressive Conservative
- Dana Porter (1948-1949) Progressive Conservative
- George Welsh (1949-1955) Progressive Conservative
- William Nickle (1955) Progressive Conservative
- George Dunbar (1955-1958) Progressive Conservative
- Mac Phillips (1958-1960) Progressive Conservative
- John Yaremko (1960-1961) Progressive Conservative
The Registrar General of Ontario eventually transferred to the Ministry of Government Services in 1972.
Provincial Secretary and Minister of Citizenship
edit- John Yaremko (1961-1966) Progressive Conservative
- Robert Welch (1966-1971) Progressive Conservative
- John Yaremko (1971-1972) Progressive Conservative
After 1972 the responsibility of Citizenship affairs was transferred to the Ministry of Citizenship and Culture when it was formed in 1982.
Provincial Secretaries for Social Development
edit- Robert Welch (1972-1974)
- Margaret Birch (1974-1983)
- Bruce McCaffrey (while Minister of Community and Social Services) (1983)
- Gordon Dean (1983-1985)
- Larry Grossman (1985)
Provincial Secretaries for Justice
edit- Allan Lawrence (1972)
- George Kerr (1972-1974)
- Robert Welch (while Attorney-General) (1974-1975)
- John Clement (while Attorney-General and Solicitor General) (1975)
- John MacBeth (1975-1978)
- George Kerr (while Solicitor-General) (1978)
- Gordon Walker (1979-1982)
- Norm Sterling (1982-1983)
- Reuben Baetz (1985)
Provincial Secretaries for Resource Development
edit- Albert Lawrence (1972-1974)
- Allan Grossman (1974-1975)
- Donald Irvine (1975-1977)
- René Brunelle (1977-1981)
- Russ Ramsay (1981-1982)
- Lorne Henderson (1982-1983)
- Norm Sterling (1983-1985)
- Ernie Eves (1985)
See also
edit- Ministry of Government Services (Ontario) - current ministry where the Registrar of Ontario resides
- Provincial Secretary of Quebec