27th Legislature of Yukon
The 27th Yukon Legislative Assembly convened in 1989.[1] The NDP government led by Tony Penikett re-elected with a majority government.
Membership in the 27th Assembly
The following members were elected to the 27th Yukon Legislative Assembly in the general election of 1989:[2]
| Member | Party | Electoral district | First elected / previously elected | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sam Johnston | NDP | Campbell | 1985 | |
| Maurice Byblow | NDP | Faro | 1978,[a] 1989 | |
| Willard Phelps | Progressive Conservative | Hootalinqua | 1974,[b] 1985 | |
| Independent Alliance | ||||
| Art Webster | NDP | Klondike | 1985 | |
| Bill Brewster | Progressive Conservative | Kluane | 1982 | |
| Yukon Party | ||||
| Piers McDonald | NDP | Mayo | 1982 | |
| Norma Kassi | NDP | Old Crow | 1985 | |
| Danny Joe | NDP | Tatchun | 1987 | |
| John Devries | Progressive Conservative | Watson Lake | 1989 | |
| Yukon Party | ||||
| Margaret Commodore | NDP | Whitehorse North Centre | 1982 | |
| Daniel Lang | Progressive Conservative | Whitehorse Porter Creek East | 1974 | |
| Yukon Party | ||||
| Alan Nordling | Progressive Conservative | Whitehorse Porter Creek West | 1986 | |
| Independent Alliance | ||||
| Doug Phillips | Progressive Conservative | Whitehorse Riverdale North | 1985 | |
| Yukon Party | ||||
| Bea Firth | Progressive Conservative | Whitehorse Riverdale South | 1982 | |
| Independent Alliance | ||||
| Joyce Hayden | NDP | Whitehorse South Centre | 1989 | |
| Tony Penikett | NDP | Whitehorse West | 1978 |
Membership changes
By-elections
Notes
- ^ First elected as Independent
- ^ Whitehorse Riverdale
References
- ^ Steven Smyth, The Yukon's Constitutional Foundations: Volume One, The Yukon Chronology (1897-1999). Clairedge Press, 1999.
- ^ Report of the Chief Electoral Officer of Yukon on the 1989 General Election Elections Yukon, 1989.
