2019 in Canada
Events from the year 2019 in Canada.
Incumbents
The Crown
- Monarch – Elizabeth II
Federal government
- Governor General – Julie Payette
- Prime Minister – Justin Trudeau
- Parliament – 42nd, then 43rd
Provincial governments
Lieutenant Governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Alberta – Lois Mitchell
- Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia – Janet Austin
- Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba – Janice Filmon
- Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick –
- Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador – Judy Foote
- Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia – Arthur LeBlanc
- Lieutenant Governor of Ontario – Elizabeth Dowdeswell
- Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island – Antoinette Perry
- Lieutenant Governor of Quebec – J. Michel Doyon
- Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan –
Premiers
- Premier of Alberta – Rachel Notley, then Jason Kenney
- Premier of British Columbia – John Horgan
- Premier of Manitoba – Brian Pallister
- Premier of New Brunswick – Blaine Higgs
- Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador – Dwight Ball
- Premier of Nova Scotia – Stephen McNeil
- Premier of Ontario – Doug Ford
- Premier of Prince Edward Island – Wade MacLauchlan, then Dennis King
- Premier of Quebec – François Legault
- Premier of Saskatchewan – Scott Moe
Territorial governments
Commissioners
- Commissioner of Nunavut – Nellie Kusugak
- Commissioner of the Northwest Territories – Margaret Thom
- Commissioner of Yukon – Angélique Bernard
Premiers
- Premier of Nunavut – Joe Savikataaq
- Premier of the Northwest Territories – Bob McLeod, then Caroline Cochrane
- Premier of Yukon – Sandy Silver
Events
January
- January 5 – Finland won the gold medal match of the 2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.
- January 11 – A double-decker bus accident OC Transpo struck a bus shelter killing three people and injuring 23 others in Ottawa.
- January 13 to 30 - The 2019 Canadian Figure Skating Championships were held.
- January 22 – A CN Rail train derailed at a level crossing on Saskatchewan Highway 11 north of Saskatoon. Nobody was hurt. There was significant damage to the train and crossing.
February–March
- February 15 to March 3 – 2019 Canada Winter Games in Red Deer.
- March 10 daylight saving time starts
- March 16 to 17 – Juno Awards of 2019 in London
- March 18 – Proceedings of the Senate of Canada were televised for the first time in the chamber's history.
- March 30 to April 7 – 2019 World Men's Curling Championship in Lethbridge
April–May
- April 16 – Alberta general election held. United Conservatives win a majority government, defeating New Democrats.
- April 23 – Prince Edward Island general election held. The Progressive Conservative Party wins a minority government, the Green Party will form the official opposition.
- May 15 – The 2019 Canadian Championship began. They are to be held till September 25, 2019.
- May 16 – Newfoundland and Labrador general election held. The Liberal Party retains power but with a minority government.
- May 17 to 26 – 2019 Memorial Cup held in Halifax
June–July
- June 13 – The Toronto Raptors win their first NBA championship in the 2019 NBA Finals, the first time a Canadian team had won the NBA championship.
- June 17 – Quebec passed Bill 21, a law which bars public servants from wearing religious symbols while on duty.
- July 9 – 46 people were sent to the hospital after a serious carbon monoxide leak at a Super 8 motel in Winnipeg. There were no fatalities.
- July 14 to July 19 – 2019 Northern British Columbia murders
- July 31 – Canada withdrew its peacekeeping forces from Mali.
August–September
- August 7 – Bodies believed to be the suspects of the Northern British Columbia murders are found in dense brush near the Nelson River.
- August 11 – Bianca Andreescu wins the 2019 Rogers Cup in the women's singles event after Serena Williams retires the match due to an upper back injury This is the first time a Canadian has won the event since 1969.
- August 31 contracts for Ontario teachers and education workers expires
- September 10 – Manitoba general election held. The Progressive Conservative Party wins a second majority government.
- September 19 – Photos and a video of blackface from 2001 of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are released. Trudeau later apologizes for the photos and the video.
October–November
- October 1 – Northwest Territories general election was held
- October 21 – The 2019 Canadian federal election was held, with the Liberal Party forming a minority government.
- November 3 Daylight Saving Time Ends
- November 11 – Longtime hockey analyst Don Cherry is fired from Hockey Night in Canada, by Sportsnet.
- November 23 – Calgary Dinos win the Vanier Cup, in Quebec City.
- November 24 – Winnipeg Blue Bombers win the Grey Cup, in Calgary.
December
- December 4 Ontario Secondary School teachers federation holds a province wide one day strike
- December 9 – Bianca Andreescu awarded the 2019 Lou Marsh Trophy
- December 12 – Andrew Scheer announces pending resignation as leader of the Conservative Party.
Deaths
January
- 3 January – William Miller, football player
- 4 January
- * Peter Doucette, politician
- * Frank Mugglestone, 94, English rugby league footballer.
- *Norman Snider, screenwriter
- 5 January
- * Jean-Eudes Dubé, politician
- * Gerry Plamondon, ice hockey player
- * Alexis Smirnoff, wrestler
- * Myron Thompson, politician
- 6 January
- * George Crowe, ice hockey coach
- * Gene Zwozdesky, politician
- 9 January
- * Pierre de Bané, senator
- * Paul Koslo, actor
- 11 January
- * Mark Elliot, radio host
- * Marge Callaghan, baseball player
- 12 January
- * George Ball, entomologist
- * Dennis Marvin Ham, politician
- 13 January – Bo Westlake, rower
- 14 January – Gavin Smith poker player
- 16 January
- * Jean Chatillon, composer
- * Alfred Kunz, composer
- 18 January
- * Walter Craig, mathematician
- * Gilles Paquet, economist
- * François Protat, cinematographer
- 19 January – Red Sullivan, ice hockey player
- 22 January – A. Brian Deer, librarian
- 23 January – Jim McKean, Major League Baseball umpire
- 25 January – Jacques Berthelet, Roman Catholic bishop
- 29 January – Andy Hebenton, ice hockey player
- 31 January
- * Ron Joyce, businessman, co-founder of Tim Hortons
- * William Winegard, politician
February
- 1 February – Raymond Ratzlaff, politician
- 2 February
- * Michael Ferguson, Auditor General of Canada
- * William Slater, swimmer
- 4 February – Phil Western, musician
- 6 February – Paul Dewar, educator and politician from Ottawa
- 10 February – Michael Wilson, politician
- 11 February
- * James Burns, businessman
- * Joe Schlesinger, television journalist, and author
- 15 February – Erminie Cohen, senator
- 16 February – Albert Ludwig, politician and author
- 18 February – Charles Deblois, politician
- 23 February – Bob Adams, decathlete
- 24 February – Trevor Eyton, senator and businessman
- 25 February – Chantal duPont, multidisciplinary artist
- 27 February – Sandra Faire, television producer and philanthropist
- 28 February – Ed Bickert, jazz guitarist
March
- March 1 – Elly Mayday, model and women's health advocate
- March 4
- * Robert Wagner Dowling, politician
- * Art Hughes, Canadian soccer player
- * Ted Lindsay, professional ice hockey player
- March 5
- * Richard Allen, politician
- * Stephen Irwin, architect
- March 6
- * Gordon Osbaldeston, civil servant
- * Charlie Panigoniak, Inuktitut singer and guitarist
- March 7 – Patrick Lane, poet
- March 9 – Harry Howell, ice hockey player
- March 11 – Joe Rosenblatt, poet
- March 16 – Joe Fafard, sculptor
April
- April 3 – Mary Borgstrom, potter and ceramist
- April 19 – William Krehm, author, journalist, political activist and real estate developer
- April 28 – Wayson Choy, writer
May
- May 2
- * Red Kelly, ice hockey player and politician
- * Murray Thomson, activist
- May 23 – Mike Laffin, politician and dentist
June
- June 20 – Mark Warawa, politician
- June 30 – John Rafferty, politician
July
- July 2 – W. Thomas Molloy, 22nd Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan
- July 7 – Edna Anderson, politician.
- July 8 – Greg Johnson, ice hockey player
August
- August 2
- * Jocelyne Roy-Vienneau, 31st Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick
- * Deepak Obhrai, Canadian Member of Parliament for Calgary Forest Lawn
- August 19 – Bette Stephenson, physician and politician
September
- September 17 – Harvey Wylie, gridiron football player
- September 18 – Graeme Gibson, writer
- September 20 – Rick Bognar, wrestler
October
- October 30 – Anne Hart, writer
- October 30 – Bernard Slade, playwright
December
- December 24 – Kelly Fraser, Inuk pop singer and songwriter