March 11th, 2026
Chamber of Commerce

Idlout one of more than 300 MPs who have crossed the floor in Parliament’s history


By Canadian Press on March 11, 2026.

OTTAWA — When Nunavut MP Lori Idlout left the NDP to join the Liberals on Wednesday, she became the fourth member of Parliament to do so in the last four months.

But she is one of more than 300 members of Parliament to cross the floor since Confederation.

The move pushes Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government to within two seats of a majority, with three crucial byelections still to come on April 13.

Idlout said she decided to cross the floor after receiving feedback from constituents and her family. She is the first member of the NDP to join Carney’s Liberal caucus.

Nova Scotia MP Chris d’Entremont was the first to leave the Conservative caucus to join the Liberals in November, followed by Ontario MP Michael Ma, who did so on Dec. 18.

Alberta MP Matt Jeneroux crossed the floor from the Conservative party to join the Liberal caucus in February.

Switching parties between elections — a practice known as floor-crossing — is controversial. It’s not overly common but more than 300 members of Parliament have changed parties while in office since 1867.

About half of them changed affiliation from one party to another, while the others were Independents either before or after changing affiliation.

The first known MP to cross the floor was Stewart Campbell, a Nova Scotian who, in 1868, left the Anti-Confederates for the Liberal-Conservatives under Sir John A. Macdonald. The Dictionary of Canadian Biography says Campbell was later pelted with eggs at a “social occasion.”

Library of Parliament data shows that over the last 25 years, about 80 MPs have changed their party affiliation between elections. Those switches often happened following a change in leadership, or sometimes after a complete overhaul of the party itself.

In September 2000, Quebec MPs David Price and Diane St-Jacques left the Progressive Conservatives to join the Liberals, announcing their decision just after Joe Clark won a byelection to return to the House of Commons as the leader of the PCs. They said it was to prevent their seats from going to the Bloc Québécois.

Former Progressive Conservative MP André Harvey, who had left the party to sit as an Independent months earlier, also joined the Liberals later that month.

In 2003, days after the vote that merged the Progressive Conservative party with the Canadian Alliance to form the modern Conservative party, Progressive Conservative MP Scott Brison crossed the floor to the Liberals, saying the party better reflected his personal values.

Brison — who later became Canada’s first openly gay federal cabinet minister — said he struggled with the merger and the fact that the PC party he grew up with no longer existed.

Belinda Stronach, who ran for the leadership of the new Conservative party in early 2004, crossed the floor to the Liberal party in 2005. She said that then-Conservative leader Stephen Harper wasn’t sensitive to the needs of all parts of the country.

In 2006, David Emerson jumped to the Conservative bench just two weeks after he won a federal election as a Liberal. Emerson accepted a role as a minister in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s first cabinet. His move led to an inquiry by the Office of the Ethics Commissioner, which found that no rules were broken by either Emerson or Harper.

Leona Alleslev crossed the floor from the Liberals to join the Conservatives in 2018. Alleslev said the Liberal government had not adequately addressed some of the challenges facing Canada, citing its handling of the economy, tax reform, foreign affairs, trade and military spending.

In 2021, Fredericton MP Jenica Atwin left the Green Party to join the Liberals after winning the party’s first ever seat in Atlantic Canada. Atwin said at the time there were too many distractions in the Green Party and she wanted to work in a more supportive and collaborative environment.

Ontario MP Eve Adams crossed the floor to the Liberals in 2015. She said she no longer felt a part of the Conservative party, either “politically or intellectually.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 11, 2026.

— With files from Kyle Duggan and David Baxter

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press

Share this story:

25
-24
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments


0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x