Kildonan—St. Paul

Kildonan—St. Paul
Manitoba electoral district
Kildonan—St. Paul in relation to otherfederal electoral districts in Winnipeg
Federal electoral district
Legislature House of Commons
MP
 
 
 
Joy Smith
Conservative
District created 2003
First contested 2004
Last contested 2011
District webpage profile, map
Demographics
Population (2006) 81,532
Electors (2006) 63,508
Area (km²) 178
Pop. density (per km²) 458
Census divisions Winnipeg
Census subdivisions Winnipeg, East St. Paul, West St. Paul

Kildonan—St. Paul is a federal electoral district in Manitoba, Canada, that has been represented in the Canadian House of Commons since 2004.

It consists of the far northern end of Winnipeg and the rural municipalities of East St. Paul and West St. Paul.

Contents

History

This riding was created in 2003 from Winnipeg North—St. Paul, Winnipeg North Centre and a small part of Winnipeg—Transcona riding.

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following Member of Parliament:

Parliament Years Member Party
38th 2004–2006     Joy Smith Conservative
39th 2006–2008
40th 2008–2011
41st 2011–present

Current Member of Parliament

Its Member of Parliament is Joy Smith, a former teacher and small business owner. She was first elected in 2004. She is a member of the Conservative Party of Canada. In the last parliamentary session she served as a member of the Legislative Committee on Bill C-38 and the Standing Committee on the Status of Women.

Election results

Canadian federal election, 2011
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
     Conservative Joy Smith 22,670 58.16 +4.76
     New Democrat Rachelle Devine 11,727 30.08 -2.62
     Liberal Victor Andres 3,199 8.21 +0.07
     Green Alon Weinberg 1,020 2.62 -1.98
     Independent Brett Ryall 218 0.56 -
     Independent Eduard Hiebert 145 0.37 -0.21
Total valid votes/Expense limit 38,979 100.00 -
Total rejected ballots 154 0.93 +0.03
Turnout 39,133 62.05 +4
Eligible voters 63,066
Canadian federal election, 2008
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
     Conservative Joy Smith 19,751 53.40 +10.27 $64,584
     New Democrat Ross Eadie 12,093 32.70 +12.53 $25,719
     Liberal Lesley Hughes* 3,009 8.14 -25.33
     Green Kevan Bowkett 1,685 4.60 +1.89 $101
     Christian Heritage Jordan Loewen 233 0.63 - $1,302
     Independent Eduard Hiebert 214 0.58 +0.06 $3,872
Total valid votes/Expense limit 36,985 100.00 $78,899
Total rejected ballots 156 0.42 +0.08
Turnout 37,141 58 -6
     Conservative hold Swing -1.13

* Lesley Hughes was nominated as the Liberal candidate but subsequently lost the nomination. Since she lost it after the candidate nomination deadline, she was still listed on the ballot as a Liberal[1][2]

Canadian federal election, 2006
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
     Conservative Joy Smith 17,524 43.13 +5.83 $58,321
     Liberal Terry Duguid 13,597 33.47 -3.06 $70,764
     New Democrat Evelyn Myskiw 8,193 20.17 -2.35 $16,314
     Green Colleen Zobel 1,101 2.71 +0.64 $0.00
     Independent Eduard Hiebert 213 0.52 - $3,521
Total valid votes 40,628 100.00
Total rejected ballots 137 0.34 +0.02
Turnout 40,765 66 +6
Canadian federal election, 2004
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
     Conservative Joy Smith 13,582 37.30 -0.43 $51,857
     Liberal Terry Duguid 13,304 36.53 +3.97 $64,226
     New Democrat Lorene Mahoney 8,202 22.52 -5.37 $32,687
     Green Jacob Giesbrecht 756 2.07 - $1,928
     Marijuana Rebecca Whittaker 290 0.79 -
     Christian Heritage Katharine Reimer 278 0.76 - $1,475
Total valid votes 36,412 100.00
Total rejected ballots 117 0.32
Turnout 36,529 60.19

Change is from redistributed results. Conservative change is from a combination of Progressive Conservative and Canadian Alliance voters.

See also

References

External links