More than 300 MPs have crossed the floor in Parliament since Confederation
OTTAWA — Nova Scotia MP Chris d’Entremont surprised many on Tuesday when he left the Conservative caucus to join the Liberals, bringing the government caucus to within two votes of a majority.
While switching parties between elections — a practice known as floor crossing referring to physically crossing the floor of the House of Commons to sit with a different caucus — is a controversial practice. More than 300 members of Parliament have changed parties while in office since 1867.
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 in the last 25 years, there have been 80 MPs who changed party affiliations between elections. Often times it came following a change in leadership, or sometimes a complete overhaul of the party itself.


