Incumbents
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Events
January
- January 1: Thirty cities across the province of Quebec are reconstituted as the result of a referendum held on June 20, 2004.
- January 6: The Canadian Junior Hockey Team wins its 12th gold medal in the 2006 World Junior Hockey Championship
- January 8- Kyle Nissen, Jeff Bean, Warren Shouldice and Ryan Blais finish first, second, third, and fourth in men's Freestyle Grand Prix at the World Cup Aerials.
- January 10: 29 seniors injured in a Toronto bus crash.
- January 20: Karla, the controversial movie about the murders of two Canadian teens, Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French, is released in Canada.
- January 23: The 39th Canadian general election results in the Conservative Party of Canada holding the largest number of seats in Parliament, meaning Stephen Harper will become the first Conservative Prime Minister in 13 years.
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
- August 2: The day after record-breaking heat in Ontario and Quebec and just two weeks following another series of powerful storms, severe thunderstorms hit a vast swath of Cottage country in central and eastern Ontario. Eight confirmed tornadoes touch down, the single largest one-day outbreak in the province since 1985. The two strongest tornadoes are rated F2, one near Bancroft and other a direct hit on the town of Combermere in Renfrew County. Close to 200,000 residents lose power in the storms and more than 20,000 remain without power for over one week after the event. Extensive property and forest damage results. Amazingly no fatalities result.
- August 9: Journalist Barbara Kay publishes a controversial piece in the National Post, "The Rise of Quebecistan", which accuses several Quebec politicians of endorsing terrorism and anti-semitism.
- August 13: The XVI International AIDS Conference opens in Toronto. Prime Minister Stephen Harper is widely criticized in the media for declining to attend.
- August 26: Elizabeth May is elected leader of the Green Party of Canada
- Falconbridge Ltd. is acquired by Swiss mining company Xstrata
September
October
November
December
Unknown dates
Arts and literature
Albums
- Susan Aglukark, I Will Return
- April Wine, Roughly Speaking
- Eva Avila, Somewhere Else
- Delerium, Nuages du Monde
- Nelly Furtado, Loose
- Pierre Lapointe, La Forêt des Mal-Aimés
- Antoine Gratton, Il était une fois dans l'est
- Malajube, Trompe-l'oeil
- Loreena McKennitt, An Ancient Muse
- Richard Séguin, Lettres ouvertes
- Billy Talent, Billy Talent II
- Tragically Hip, World Container
- Chantal Kreviazuk, Ghost Stories
Books
Awards
- David Foster, musical producer, is appointed to the Order of Canada
- Steve Smith, comedian, is appointed to the Order of Canada
- Judith Thompson, playwright, is appointed to the Order of Canada
- Ranee Lee, musician, is appointed to the Order of Canada
- Chantal duPont, video artist, wins the 2005 Bell Canada Award in Video Art
- Sylvia Legris's Nerve Squall is named winner of the Canadian Griffin Poetry Prize
- C.R.A.Z.Y. is named Best Picture at the 26th Genie Awards
- April 2: Juno Awards of 2006
- June 11: Canadian musical, The Drowsy Chaperone, wins five Tony Awards
- September 2-September 3: Inaugural Osheaga Festival held in Montreal
- October 11: Media reports announce that Bon Cop, Bad Cop has beat Porky's to become the top-grossing Canadian film of all time in domestic box office; these are later disputed as not having taken inflation into account.
- Scotiabank Giller Prize: Vincent Lam, Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures
- November 21: 2006 Governor General's Awards
Sports
- January 9-15: Canadian Figure Skating Championships1
- Men's medalists: Jeffrey Buttle, Gold; Emanuel Sandhu, Silver; Shawn Sawyer, Bronze.
- Women's medalists: Joannie Rochette, Gold; Mira Leung, Silver; Lesley Hawker, Bronze.
- Pairs' medalists: Valérie Marcoux / Craig Buntin, Gold; Jessica Dubé / Bryce Davison, Silver; Utako Wakamatsu / Jean-Sebastien Fecteau, Bronze.
- Dance: Marie-France Dubreuil / Patrice Lauzon, Gold; Megan Wing / Aaron Lowe, Silver; Tessa Virtue / Scott Moir, Bronze.
- January 24: Mario Lemieux announces his second retirement.
- Winter Olympic Games held in Turin, Italy:
- May 7- NBA: Canadian Steve Nash is named NBA MVP for the 2nd year in a row.
- September 17- WWE: Canadian Trish Stratus retires from professional wrestling.
- November 19- Canadian Football League: The 94th Grey Cup is held in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The B.C. Lions beat the Montreal Alouettes 25-14.
Births
Deaths
January
- January 4 - Irving Layton, poet and two-time nominee for the Nobel Prize for literature (b. Israel Pincu Lazarovitch, 1912)
February
March
April
May
August
September
October
November
References
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