Senate Liberal Caucus
The Senate Liberal Caucus, also known as the Senate Liberals, was a parliamentary grouping in the Senate of Canada made up of independent senators who were individually members of the Liberal Party of Canada and were appointed on the advice of previous Liberal prime ministers. The caucus was not formally affiliated to or recognized by the Liberal Party.
The caucus was dissolved on November 14, 2019 and its members formed a new non-partisan parliamentary group, the Progressive Senate Group. The dissolution of the Senate Liberals marked the first time the Senate of Canada had no Liberal members since Canadian Confederation in 1867.
History
Liberal senators were part of the national Liberal Party parliamentary caucus, alongside MPs, until party leader Justin Trudeau expelled all 32 senators from the caucus January 29, 2014. The expulsion came as part of Trudeau's proposal for a non-partisan Senate, arguing that "the party structure within the Senate interferes with responsibilities," and said the remaining Liberal senators would have no formal ties to the Liberal Party machinery. The move came as a surprise to the Senate Liberals, who were not informed the decision ahead of time. Although Trudeau described them as "former Liberal senators" and that they would now sit as independents, the 32 senators chose to keep the designation "Liberal" and continue to sit together as a caucus. Jim Cowan, the former leader of the Liberal Party in the Senate, remained the leader of his Liberal colleagues, and continued to be recognized as the as Leader of the Opposition in the Senate. According to Cowan, the only change would be that they "will not need to be concerned any more about the real or perceived direction from the national Liberal caucus."Unlike previous practice in which the Liberal leaders in the Senate were appointed by the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, the leader of the Senate Liberal Caucus was directly elected by Liberal senators. When the Liberal Party under Trudeau formed the government following the 2015 federal election, contrary to previous practice, the Senate Liberals did not become the government caucus in the Senate. Instead, Trudeau appointed a non-affiliated senator to be the Representative of the Government in the Senate. Since 2015, several senators have left the caucus and redesignated themselves as non-affiliated senators or joined the Independent Senators Group.
The Senate Liberals were expected to lose their status as an official Senate caucus on January 24, 2020, when the caucus would have been reduced to eight senators with the retirement of Senator Joseph A. Day. A minimum of nine members is required for official caucus status which entitles the grouping to access to funding for a research budget and other supports and privileges. Additionally, Liberal party member Senators Joyal and Dyck were to retire from the Senate on February 1, 2020, and August 24, 2020, respectively, which meant that the parliamentary group would have been further reduced to six senators.
Day announced in a November 14, 2019 press conference that the Senate Liberal Caucus had been disbanded, with its current complement of nine members forming a new non-partisan parliamentary group called the Progressive Senate Group. Unlike the Independent Senators Group and the Canadian Senators Group, which impose either prohibitions or limits, respectively, on outside partisan activities, there was no mention that the new Progressive Senate Group would have similar limits; however, Day confirmed that, like the aforementioned two groups, the PSG would not have whipped votes, and the requirements of membership included supporting or holding "progressive" political values, support of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and supporting a new relationship with Canada's Indigenous peoples. With the dissolution of the Senate Liberal Caucus, the Senate was without any Liberal senators for the first time in its history.
Leaders of the Senate Liberal Caucus
Membership
Members at dissolution
Name | Province | Mandatory retirement date |
Nova Scotia | 2 July 2025 | |
Quebec | 28 September 2024 | |
New Brunswick | 24 January 2020 | |
Prince Edward Island | 8 July 2029 | |
Saskatchewan | 24 August 2020 | |
Quebec | 1 February 2020 | |
Nova Scotia | 6 May 2022 | |
Ontario | 14 July 2021 | |
New Brunswick | 15 April 2023 |
Former members
Name | Province | Left caucus | Reason |
Newfoundland and Labrador | 4 September 2017 | Retired | |
Prince Edward Island | 25 July 2014 | Retired | |
British Columbia | 6 April 2016 | Joined Independent Senators Group | |
Manitoba | 1 March 2016 | Retired | |
Ontario | 17 April 2015 | Retired | |
Nova Scotia | 22 January 2017 | Retired | |
Quebec | 17 June 2014 | Retired | |
Ontario | 29 September 2018 | Retired | |
Quebec | 2 February 2018 | Retired | |
Newfoundland and Labrador | 3 December 2015 | Left to sit as non-affiliated | |
Quebec | 22 April 2018 | Retired | |
Prince Edward Island | 8 September 2017 | Retired | |
British Columbia | 20 December 2018 | Left to sit as non-affiliated | |
Quebec | 30 October 2017 | Joined Independent Senators Group | |
Saskatchewan | 31 March 2017 | Retired | |
Alberta | 2 May 2016 | Left to sit as non-affiliated | |
Nova Scotia | 14 January 2017 | Retired | |
New Brunswick | 2 February 2016 | Joined Independent Senators Group | |
New Brunswick | 2 December 2014 | Retired | |
Northwest Territories | 5 May 2016 | Left to sit as non-affiliated | |
Ontario | 16 May 2016 | Retired | |
Alberta | 2 February 2018 | Retired | |
Quebec | 16 March 2018 | Retired |