1996 in Canada
See also: 1995 in Canada, other events of 1996, 1997 in Canada and the list of 'years in Canada'.
Table of contents |
Incumbents
- Premier of Alberta – Ralph Klein
- Premier of British Columbia – Mike Harcourt then Glen Clark
- Premier of Manitoba – Gary Filmon
- Premier of New Brunswick – Frank McKenna then Raymond Frenette
- Premier of Newfoundland – Clyde Wells then Brian Tobin
- Premier of Nova Scotia – John Savage then Russell MacLellan
- Premier of Ontario – Mike Harris
- Premier of Prince Edward Island – Catherine Callbeck then Keith Milligan then Pat Binns
- Premier of Quebec – Jacques Parizeau then Lucien Bouchard
- Premier of Saskatchewan – Roy Romanow
See also: 1996 Canadian incumbents
Events
- January 14 – a free trade agreement with Israel is announced
- January 15 – the Corel Centre opens in Ottawa
- January 25 – Jean Chrétien launches a major cabinet shuffle. Pierre Pettigrew and Stéphane Dion are brought in, despite not having seats in parliament.
- January 26 – Brian Tobin becomes premier of Newfoundland, replacing Clyde Wells
- January 29 – Lucien Bouchard becomes premier of Quebec, replacing Jacques Parizeau
- February 7 – Bob Rae, former premier of Ontario leaves politics
- February 14 – Mr. Dressup does his last show
- February 15 – Chrétien throttles a protester in Ottawa, launching a small controversy over the "Shawinigan Handshake"
- February 17 – Michel Gauthier is elected new leader of the Bloc Québécois
- February 22 – Glen Clark becomes premier of British Columbia, replacing Michael Harcourt
- February 22 – Brian Tobin leads the Newfoundland Liberal Party to victory in the 1996 Newfoundland election
- February 27 – the Los Angeles Kings trade Wayne Gretzky to the St. Louis Blues
- March 6 – the federal budget continues the assault on the deficit
- March 16 – the Montreal Canadiens play their first game at the Molson Centre against the New York Rangers
- March 26 – the ANIK E-1 satellite malfunctions
- March 27 – the Quebec budget proposes sweeping cuts to government funding
- April 3 – all members of the Canadian Forces are ordered to spend the entire day searching for documents that may aid the Somalia inquiry
- April 5 – a gunman in B.C. kills nine relatives and then himself
- April 11 – the Ontario government announce a 15 per cent reduction in the civil service
- April 22 – John Nunziata is expelled from the Liberal caucus for voting against the budget
- April 23 – Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland agree to replace their provincial sales taxes and the GST with a Harmonized Sales Tax.
- May 7 – the Ontario government cuts provincial income taxes by 30 per cent
- May 10 – Jan Brown resigns from the Reform Party
- May 19 – Marc Garneau flies on a second space mission
- May 24 – Conrad Black's Hollinger takes over the Southam newspaper chain
- May 28 – The British Columbia NDP wins a surprise re-election
- May 29 – Six Taiwanese sailors are charged with the murder of three Romanian stowaways aboard the Maersk Dubai
- June 10 – the Quebec government reintroduces the "Language Police"
- June 17 – Sheila Copps, who had resigned over the GST, wins back her Hamilton–Wentworth seat in a by-election
- June 20 – Robert Thirsk flies aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia
- June 24 – a riot in Quebec City causes a million dollars in damage
- July 1 – the Winnipeg Jets leave Canada and become the Phoenix Coyotes
- July 7-July 11 – a major AIDS conference is held in Vancouver
- July 19 – the Atlanta Olympics open, Canadian sprinter Donovan Bailey wins the 100-metre dash
- July 20-July 21 – floods in Quebec kill ten
- July 25 – Coach House Press closes
- July 26 – Gretzky signs with the New York Rangers
- August 8 – former Prime Minister Kim Campbell is named consul general to Los Angeles
- August 8 – Jean-Louis Roux appointed Lieutenant Governor of Quebec
- August 29 – former B.C. Premier W.R. Bennett is found guilty of insider trading
- October 4 – Defence Minister David Collenette resigns
- October 10 – Keith Milligan becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing Catherine Callbeck
- October 19 – Piers McDonald becomes government leader of Yukon, replacing John Ostashek
- November – SaskTel becomes the first Canadian Internet Service Provider to rollout ADSL
- November 5 – Jean-Louis Roux forced to resign as Lieutenant Governor of Quebec when pictures of him at Nazi rallies in the 1930s are published
- November 27 – Pat Binns becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing Keith Milligan
- December 16 – Chrétien formally apologizes for lying about the GST
- Karen Kain becomes the first Canadian to win the Cartier Lifetime Achievement Award
- General Jean Boyle resigns over Somalia Inquiry controversy
- Dalton McGuinty is elected leader of the Ontario Liberal Party
- Canada sends over a thousand troops to take part in IFOR
Arts and literature
- New books
- John Ralston Saul – The Unconscious Civilization
- Nancy Huston – Slow Emergencies
- Pierre Berton – Farewell to the Twentieth Century
- Elisabeth Harvor – Let Me Be the One
- Yann Martel – Self
- Timothy Findley – You Went Away
- Di Brandt – Dancing Naked: Narrative Strategies for Writing Across Centuries
- Douglas Coupland – Polaroids from the Dead
- Awards
- Giller Prize for Canadian Fiction: Margaret Atwood – Alias Grace
- See 1996 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
- Books in Canada First Novel Award: Keath Fraser, Popular Anatomy
- Geoffrey Bilson Award: Marianne Brandis, Rebellion: A Novel of Upper Canada
- Gerald Lampert Award: Maureen Hynes, Rough Skin
- Marian Engel Award: Barbara Gowdy
- Pat Lowther Award: Lorna Crozier, Everything Arrives at the Light
- Stephen Leacock Award: Marsha Boulton, Letters from the Country
- Trillium Book Award English: Anne Michaels, Fugitive Pieces
- Trillium Book Award French: Nancy Vickers, Le Pied de Sappho and Alain Bernard Marchand, Tintin au pays de la ferveur
- Vicky Metcalf Award: Margaret Buffie
- New Music
- Barenaked Ladies – Born on a Pirate Ship
- Bruce Cockburn – The Charity of Night
Births
Deaths
- January 26 – Sally Gribble, founder of MADD Canada
- January 26 – Yvonne Housser, painter
- January 27 – Brian Kelleher, journalist
- January 31 – Beth Amos, actress
- February 2 – Phyliss Marshall, actor
- February 7 – Barbara Hamilton, actor
- February 7 – Lucien Maynard, leader of Alberta francophones
- February 9 – Henri Masson, painter
- February 19 – Ernest C. Manning former Premier of Alberta
- February 21 – Gordon Armstrong, playwright
- February 29 – Robert O'Driscoll, scholar
- March 28 – Edith Fowke, ethnologist
- April 13 – Stewart McLean, Manitoba politician
- April 23 – Jean Allard former Chief of the Defence Staff
- May 5 – Salli Terri, musician
- May 11 – Hilda Grant, author
- May 22 – Robert Christie, actor
- June 10 – George Hees, cabinet minister
- July 1 – Harold Greenberg, businessman
- July 5 – Fred Davis, moderator of Front Page Challenge
- July 5 – Bob Southam, newspaper publisher
- July 17 – Susan Cole, puppeteer
- July 18 – Robert Needham, journalist
- July 20 – Ronald Buick, scientist
- July 22 – Carl Goldenberg, Senator
- August 1 – Patrick O'Callaghan, newspaper publicist
- August 10 – Walter MacNutt, organist
- August 21 – Mary Earley, aboriginal rights campaigner
- September 22 – Ludmilla Chiriaeff, ballet dancer
- September 23 – Joe Borowski, anti-abortion activist
- October 2 – Robert Bourassa, former Premier of Quebec
- October 3 – Winnifred Holden, actor
- October 9 – Colleen Peterson, singer/songwriter
- October 11 – Joe Morris, chairman of International Labour Organization
- October 11 – William Vickrey, nobel prize winner, professor
- October 17 – Laura Sabia, feminist, women's rights activist
- October 19 – James Bourque, Aboriginal activist
- October 21 – Rejean Boily, horse racer
- October 22 – Ed Kubin, AIDS activist for hemophiliacs
- October 22 – Jan Verdun, designed 3 quart (2.8 L) milk jug, pioneered sale of milk in stores
- October 23
- Kurt Freund, sexologist
- Mervin Good Eagle, actor
- Ran Ide, first president of TVOntario
- October 27 – Arthur Tremblay, senator
- October 28 – Reuben Baetz, Ontario politician
- October 28 – Jack Reitman, chairman of the board of Reitmans
- November 9 – Joseph A. Ghiz, Premier of PEI
- November 18 – John Josiah Robinette, courtroom lawyer
- December 1 – Peter Bronfman, founded Edper Investments
- December 5 – Wilf Carter, composer and singer
- December 13 – Ear Walls, boxer
- December 17 – Nancy Malloy, Red Cross nurse, murdered in Chechnya
- December 19 – Austin Taylor, financier
- December 21 – Douglas Fullerton, headed National Capital Commission
- December 21 – Clarence Gosse, Lt-governor of Nova Scotia
- December 26 – Al Adair, Alberta politician
- December 29 – Dorothy Livesay, poet, journalist, peace activist, feminist
Categories: 1996 | Years in Canada