Contents |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
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Newfoundland and Labrador has long been a Liberal heartland, with only the city of St. John's electingProgressive Conservatives on a relatively consistent basis. It remains to be seen if the new Conservative Party of Canada can match the old federal PC Party's level of support.
Notes: |
••••••• | 2004 |
••••••• | 2000 | |
••••••• | 1997 | |
••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••• | 1988 | |
••••••• | 1984 | |
••••••• | 1980 | |
••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal |
Conservative |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Avalon | John Efford 18,335 |
Rick Dalton 9,211 |
Michael Kehoe 3,450 |
Don Ferguson 430 |
John Efford | |
Bonavista—Exploits | Scott Simms 15,970 |
Rex Barnes 13,786 |
Samuel McLean 2,667 |
Ed Sailor White 367 |
John Lannon (Ind.) 344 |
Rex Barnes1 |
Humber—St. Barbe—Baie Verte | Gerry Byrne 17,820 |
Wynanne Downer 6,538 |
Holly Pike 3,743 |
Steve Durant 384 |
Gerry Byrne | |
Labrador | Lawrence O'Brien 5,524 |
Merrill Strachan 1,400 |
Shawn Crann 856 |
Lori-Ann Martino 178 |
Ern Condon (Ind.) 919 |
Lawrence O'Brien |
Random—Burin—St. George's | Bill Matthews 12,383 |
Larry Peckford 4,820 |
Desmond McGrath 8,797 |
Justin Dollimont 474 |
Bill Matthews | |
St. John's North | Walter Noel 13,343 |
Norman E. Doyle 15,073 |
Janine Piller 7,198 |
Scott Vokey 791 |
Norman E. Doyle | |
St. John's South | Siobhan Coady 11,879 |
Loyola Hearn 13,330 |
Peg Norman 7,989 |
Steve Willcott 493 |
Loyola Hearn |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
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Prince Edward Island has not elected a non-Liberal MP since 1984. The riding of Cardigan has been the closest, with Lawrence MacAulay winning by less than 300 votes in both 1997 and 2000. Once again in 2004, the Liberals swept P.E.I. | •••• | 2004 |
•••• | 2000 | |
•••• | 1997 | |
•••• | 1993 | |
•••• | 1988 | |
•••• | 1984 | |
•••• | 1980 | |
•••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal |
Conservative |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Cardigan | Lawrence MacAulay 11,064 |
Peter McQuaid 6,889 |
Dave MacKinnon 2,103 |
Jeremy Stiles 670 |
Lawrence MacAulay | |
Charlottetown | Shawn Murphy 9,175 |
Darren Peters 5,121 |
Dody Crane 3,428 |
Will McFadden 760 |
Baird Judson (CHP) 105 |
Shawn Murphy |
Egmont | Joe McGuire 10,220 |
Reg Harper 5,363 |
Regena Kaye Russell 2,133 |
Irené Novaczek 717 |
Joe McGuire | |
Malpeque | Wayne Easter 9,782 |
Mary Crane 6,126 |
Ken Bingham 1,902 |
Sharon Labchuk 1,037 |
Wayne Easter |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
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The Liberals swept Nova Scotia in 1993, but managed to lose every single seat in 1997. Under former leader Alexa McDonough, the NDP made major gains in Nova Scotia in 1997 and 2000; picking up seats in the Halifax and Cape Breton areas. With Toronto's Jack Layton as leader, the NDP might not fare as well this time. The Liberals, wiped out in 1997, made a resurgence in 2000, and gained MP Scott Brison from the Conservatives in 2003. The Conservatives' strengths are concentrated in rural mainland Nova Scotia.
Notes: |
••••••••••• | 2004 |
••••••••••• | 2000 | |
••••••••••• | 1997 | |
••••••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••••••• | 1988 | |
••••••••••• | 1984 | |
••••••••••• | 1980 | |
••••••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal |
Conservative |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Cape Breton—Canso | Rodger Cuzner 20,139 |
Kenzie MacNeil 7,654 |
Shirley Hartery 9,197 |
Seumas Gibson 820 |
Rodger Cuzner | |
Central Nova | Susan Green 9,986 |
Peter MacKay 16,376 |
Alexis MacDonald 10,470 |
Rebecca Steeves-Mosher 1,015 |
Peter MacKay | |
Dartmouth—Cole Harbour | Michael Savage 17,425 |
Michael MacDonald 8,739 |
Susan MacAlpine-Gillis 13,463 |
Michael Marshall 1,311 |
Tracy Parsons (PC) 415 Charles Spurr (M-L) 70 |
Wendy Lill1 |
Halifax | Sheila Fougere 17,267 |
Kevin Keefe 6,457 |
Alexa McDonough 18,341 |
Michael Oddy 2,081 |
Alexa McDonough | |
Halifax West | Geoff Regan 19,083 |
Ken MacPhee 8,413 |
Bill Carr 11,228 |
Martin Willison 1,452 |
Geoff Regan | |
Kings—Hants | Scott Brison 17,555 |
Bob Mullan 11,344 |
Skip Hambling 6,663 |
Kevin Stacey 1,364 |
James Hnatiuk (CHP) 493 Richard Hennigar (Ind.) 242 |
Scott Brison2 |
North Nova | Dianne Brushett 10,591 |
Bill Casey 20,188 |
Margaret Sagar 7,560 |
Sheila G. Richardson 1,245 |
Jack Moors (PC) 399 |
Bill Casey |
Sackville—Eastern Shore | Dale Stevens 11,222 |
Steve Streatch 8,363 |
Peter Stoffer 17,925 |
David Fullerton 1,007 |
Greg Moors (PC) 645 |
Peter Stoffer |
South Shore—St. Margaret's | John Chandler 12,658 |
Gerald Keddy 14,954 |
Gordon Earle 10,140 |
Katie Boudreau 1,700 |
Gerald Keddy | |
Sydney—Victoria | Mark Eyking 19,372 |
Howie MacDonald 5,897 |
John Hugh Edwards 10,298 |
Chris Milburn 855 |
Cathy Thériault (Mar.) 474 Chris Gallant (Ind.) 264 |
Mark Eyking |
West Nova | Robert Thibault 18,343 |
Jon Carey 14,209 |
Arthur Bull 9,086 |
Matt Granger 1,385 |
Robert Thibault |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
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New Brunswick results in federal elections are divided among geographical and linguistic lines: The Liberals fare better in the predominantly francophone eastern and northern sections of the province, while the anglophone south and west has historically tended to favour the Conservatives. Although the Liberals hold three seats in the latter region (Fredericton, Fundy and Tobique-Mactaquac), each of them are generally believed to be more vulnerable; and the Conservatives are targeting all three in this election. In 1993, Saint John was one of only two ridings in the country to go Progressive Conservative, electing Elsie Wayne. One of them is held by John Herron, who defected from the old PC party in 2003. The NDP holds one seat in northeastern New Brunswick.
Notes: |
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•••••••••• | 2000 | |
•••••••••• | 1997 | |
•••••••••• | 1993 | |
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•••••••••• | 1980 | |
•••••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal |
Conservative |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Acadie—Bathurst | Serge Rouselle 14,452 |
Joel Bernard 4,841 |
Yvon Godin 23,857 |
Mario Lanteigne 1,085 |
Yvon Godin | |
Beauséjour | Dominic LeBlanc 21,934 |
Angela Vautour 11,604 |
Omer Bourque 6,056 |
Anna Girouard 1,574 |
Dominic LeBlanc | |
Fredericton | Andy Scott 19,819 |
Kent Fox 14,193 |
John Carty 7,360 |
Daron Letts 997 |
Andy Scott | |
Fundy | John Herron 11,635 |
Rob Moore 14,997 |
Pat Hanratty 5,417 |
Karin Bach 1,051 |
David Amos (Ind.) 358 |
John Herron1 |
Madawaska—Restigouche | Jean-Claude D'Amours 14,144 |
Benoit Violette 7,605 |
Rodolphe Martin 8,737 |
Jovette Cyr 1,185 |
Jeannot Castonguay2 | |
Miramichi | Charles Hubbard 15,647 |
Michael Morrison 9,448 |
Hilaire Rousselle 5,980 |
Gary Sanipass 1,468 |
Charles Hubbard | |
Moncton—Riverview—Dieppe | Claudette Bradshaw 25,266 |
Jean LeBlanc 10,003 |
Hélène Lapointe 5,344 |
Judith Hamel 1,998 |
Claudette Bradshaw | |
St. Croix—Belleisle | James Dunlap 9,702 |
Greg Thompson 16,339 |
Patrick Webber 3,600 |
Erik Millett 960 |
David Szemerda (CAP) 194 |
Greg Thompson |
Saint John | Paul Zed 15,725 |
Bob McVicar 12,212 |
Terry Albright 6,926 |
Jonathan Cormier 807 |
Tom Oland (Ind.) 290 Jim Wood (Mar.) 369 |
Elsie Wayne3 |
Tobique—Mactaquac | Andy Savoy 16,787 |
Mike Allen 13,779 |
Jason Mapplebeck 2,957 |
Scott Jones 1,282 |
Andy Savoy |
Throughout most of recent history, the Liberals have dominated in federal politics in Quebec, even when Quebec voters were simultaneously electing the Parti Québécois at the provincial level.
There have been temporary Conservative breakthroughs, under Diefenbaker in the 1958 election and under native son Brian Mulroney in the 1984 election and the 1988 election, but these did not last. The 1958 result was helped by an alliance with Maurice Duplessis's formidable provincial electoral machine, but by the 1962 election Duplessis had died and his Union Nationale party was out of office and in disarray, and Diefenbaker's support in Quebec had evaporated. And the Mulroney-era resurgence also collapsed entirely when he retired from politics.
The Bloc Québécois was formed for the 1993 election (in the aftermath of the failure of the Meech Lake Accord and Charlottetown Accord) and has won more seats in Quebec than the Liberals in every election it has run in. The number of seats won by the Bloc has declined in each successive election from 1993 to 1997 to 2000, but the party has now had a resurgence due to the sponsorship scandal and the unpopularity of Jean Charest's provincial Liberal government (which influences support for the federal Liberals even though the two parties are entirely independent of one another).
Polls show the Bloc with a strong lead, and they may return to the number of seats they had in 1993. However, the Liberals are likely to dominate in many parts of Montreal. Ridings where anglophone voters are a significant factor are among the safest Liberal seats in all of Canada.
The other two major federal parties, the Conservatives and the New Democratic Party (NDP) are not expected to win any seats and are struggling to move out of single digits in the polls. The NDP in particular has historically never had any electoral success in Quebec.
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
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Until 1984, this region was Liberal territory. The Social Credit has also done well here, winning in Rimouski and in Bellechasse in 1979. Brian Mulroney was able to sweep this region for the Conservatives in 1984 and 1988, using the strong nationalist sentiment in the area. has been a Bloc Québécois stronghold; the Liberals only won Montmagny in 1997 and the Bonaventure region in 1993. When the BQ experienced a decline the Liberal were able to win in the Gaspé, and in a Lévis by-election. However, the BQ have recently experienced a surge in popularity, and it is expected they will pick up seats they had lost here.
Notes: |
••••• | 2004 |
•••••• | 2000 | |
•••••• | 1997 | |
••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••• | 1988 | |
••••••• | 1984 | |
••••••• | 1980 | |
••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Gaspésie—Îles-de-la-Madeleine | Raynald Blais 21,446 |
Georges Farrah 12,579 |
Guy de Coste 2,636 |
Phil Toone 805 |
Bob Eichenberger 1,060 |
Georges Farrah | |
Lévis—Bellechasse | Réal Lapierre 21,930 |
Christian Jobin 13,664 |
Gilles Vézina 9,425 |
Louise Foisy 1,910 |
Sylvain Castonguay 2,372 |
Christophe Vaillancourt (Comm.) 163 |
Christian Jobin |
Matapédia—Matane | Jean-Yves Roy 17,878 |
Marc Bélanger 9,653 |
Vahid Fortin-Vidah 1,972 |
Jean-Guy Côté 1,581 |
Nicolas Deville 585 |
Jean-Yves Roy | |
Rimouski—Témiscouata | Louise Thibault 22,215 |
Côme Roy 9,161 |
Denis Quimper 3,445 |
Guy Caron 2,717 |
Marjolaine Delaunière 1,008 |
Suzanne Tremblay1 | |
Rivière-du-Loup—Montmagny | Paul Crête 25,327 |
Isabelle Mignault 13,124 |
Marc-André Drolet 4,040 |
Frédérick Garon 876 |
André Clermont 962 |
Paul Crête | |
merged district | |||||||
Gilbert Normand2 |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
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This region used to be traditionally Liberal, except for Roberval which has voted for the Social Credit Party. The Liberal dominance in this area ended in 1984 as Brian Mulroney, who is from this area was able to gather nationalist Quebec support, and sweep this region in 1984 and 1988. With the advent of the natioanlist Bloc Québécois in 1993, nationalist support left the tories, and this area became a traditional Bloc Québécois stronghold. This is true except for the Chicoutimi area which has voted federalist with André Harvey running as a Progressive Conservative and winning in 1997, and running as a Liberal and winning in 2000. This election is expected to have similar results, with the BQ winning nearly all the seats. The NDP is running star candidate Pierre Ducasse in Manicouagan, but he is not expected to win.
Notes: |
••••• | 2004 |
••••••• | 2000 | |
••••••• | 1997 | |
••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••• | 1988 | |
••••••• | 1984 | |
••••••• | 1980 | |
••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Charlevoix—Montmorency | David Poirier 25,451 |
Lisette Lepage 8,598 |
Guy-Léonard Tremblay 5,259 |
Steeve Hudon 1,055 |
Yves Jourdain 1,422 |
Michel Guimond | |
Chicoutimi—Le Fjord | Robert Bouchard 20,650 |
André Harvey 19,387 |
Alcide Boudreault 2,385 |
Éric Dubois 1,699 |
Paul Tremblay 1,038 |
André Harvey | |
Jonquière—Alma | Sébastien Gagnon 25,193 |
Daniel Giguère 13,355 |
Gilles Lavoie 2,217 |
François Picard 1,561 |
Jean-Sébastien Busque 679 |
Jocelyne Girard-Bujold (Ind.) 2,737 Michel Perron (Comm.) 121 |
Sébastien Gagnon |
merged district | |||||||
Jocelyne Girard-Bujold1 | |||||||
Manicouagan | Gérard Asselin 19,040 |
Anthony Detroio 8,097 |
Pierre Paradis 1,601 |
Pierre Ducasse 3,361 |
Les Parsons 444 |
Gérard Asselin | |
merged district | |||||||
Ghislain Fournier2 | |||||||
Roberval | Michel Gauthier 20,655 |
Michel Malette 8,064 |
Ghislain Lavoie 3,011 |
Isabelle Tremblay 1,777 |
Marc-André Gauthier 1,260 |
Michel Gauthier |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
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Quebec City is a traditional Liberal region, but that ended in 1984. The Progressive Conservatives using nationalist support swept here in 1984 and 1988. This nationalist support went to the Bloc Québécois in 1993, making Quebec City a Bloc stronghold. In the 2000 election, however the Liberals were able to gain ground here, winning half the seats in the eastern part of the city, and in the west. However, with the BQ doing well in the polls, it is expected they will win most, if not all seats here, like they did in 1997 and 1993.
Notes: |
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•••• | 2000 | |
•••• | 1997 | |
•••• | 1993 | |
•••• | 1988 | |
•••• | 1984 | |
•••• | 1980 | |
•••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Beauport | Christian Simard 22,989 |
Dennis Dawson 11,866 |
Stéphane Asselin 7,388 |
Xavier Trégan 1,896 |
Jeannine T. Desharnais 1,577 |
Nicolas Frichot (Mar.) 585 |
new district |
Charlesbourg | Richard Marceau 23,886 |
Jean-Marie Laliberté 11,911 |
Bertrand Proulx 7,306 |
François Villeneuve 1,623 |
Marilou Moisan-Domm 1,188 |
Benjamin Kasapoglu (Mar.) 376 |
Richard Marceau |
Louis-Hébert | Roger Clavet 24,071 |
Hélène Scherrer 18,999 |
Clermont Gauthier 7,512 |
Robert Turcotte 3,112 |
Jean-Pierre Guay 2,137 |
Hélène Scherrer | |
Louis-Saint-Laurent | Bernard Cleary 17,248 |
Michel Fragasso 10,025 |
Josée Verner 13,967 |
Christopher Bojanowski 1,369 |
Yonnel Bonaventure 1,243 |
Jean-Guy Carignan (Ind.) 563 Henri Gauvin (Ind.) 332 Dominique Théberge (Comm.) 119 |
Jean Guy Carignan1 |
Québec | Christiane Gagnon 24,373 |
Jean-Phillipe Côté 12,982 |
Pierre Gaudreault 5,330 |
Jean-Marie Fiset 2,670 |
Antonine Yaccarini 2,046 |
Jean Bédard (M-L) 223 Pierre-Etienne Paradis (Mar.) 512 |
Christiane Gagnon |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
---|---|---|
This area is one that traditionally votes for the Bloc Québécois. In fact, all the seats have gone BQ in the last two elections except for Saint-Maurice (in both) and Portneuf in 2000, which both went Liberal; and former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien ran in Saint-Maurice. It is expected that the Bloc Québécois may be able to sweep this region. Before the rise of Mulroney in 1984, this area was traditionally Liberal, except for the Joliette area which is traditionally Conservative (only riding to vote Conservative, or anything other than Liberal in Quebec in 1980), and Lotbinière which voted Social Credit in 1979. Mulroney's Conservatives swept the area in 1988, and 1984 (except for Chrétien's seat).
Notes: |
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••••••••• | 1997 | |
•••••••• | 1993 | |
•••••••• | 1988 | |
•••••••• | 1984 | |
•••••••• | 1980 | |
•••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Berthier—Maskinongé | Guy André 29,432 |
Laurier Thibault 11,198 |
Ann Julie Fortier 5,535 |
Denis McKinnon 1,653 |
Eric Labrecque 1,314 |
new district | |
Joliette | Pierre Paquette 30,661 |
Jean-François Coderre 10,975 |
Daniel Bouchard 3,107 |
Jacques Trudeau 1,755 |
Wendy Gorchinsky 1,147 |
Marco Geoffroy (Mar.) 701 |
Pierre Paquette |
Lotbinière—Chutes-de-la-Chaudière | Odina Desrochers 20,245 |
Anicet Gagné 9,445 |
Jean Landry 10,628 |
Jean Bernatchez 2,091 |
Rama Borne MacDonald 1,615 |
Odina Desrochers | |
Montcalm | Roger Gaudet 34,383 |
Daniel Brazeau 7,915 |
Michel Paulette 2,831 |
François Rivest 1,531 |
Serge Bellemare 1,606 |
Roger Gaudet | |
Portneuf | Guy Côté 18,471 |
Claude Duplain 11,863 |
Howard Bruce 9,251 |
Jean-François Breton 1,540 |
Pierre Poulin 1,925 |
Claude Duplain | |
Repentigny | Benoît Sauvageau 35,907 |
Lévis Brien 9,353 |
Allen Mackenzie 2,447 |
André Cardinal 1,526 |
Jean-François Léveque 1,482 |
François Boudreau (Mar.) 539 |
Benoît Sauvageau |
Richelieu | Louis Plamondon 31,497 |
Ghislaine Provencher 11,045 |
Daniel Proulx 3,726 |
Charles Bussières 1,017 |
Jean-Pierre Bonenfant 839 |
Daniel Blackburn (Mar.) 580 |
Louis Plamondon |
Saint-Maurice—Champlain | Marcel Gagnon 25,918 |
Marie-Eve Bilodeau 14,320 |
Martial Toupin 4,129 |
Pierre J.C. Allard 1,104 |
Pierre Audette 855 |
Paul Giroux (Mar.) 547 |
(vacant)1 |
merged district | |||||||
Marcel Gagnon | |||||||
Trois-Rivières | Paule Brunelle 26,240 |
Jean-Éric Guindon 12,703 |
Jean-Guy Mercier 4,381 |
Marc Tessier 1,635 |
Linda Lavoie 1,476 |
Yves Rocheleau2 |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
---|---|---|
The Eastern Townships are a somewhat federalist area of Quebec. In 1988 and 1984 this area was nearly swept by the Progressive Conservatives under Brian Mulroney, winning all but one seat in 1988 (Shefford) and two in 1984 (Shefford and Richmond-Wolfe). Previously, the tories only had one riding won in either 1979 or 1980, and that was in Missisquoi in 1979. The Social Credit party also won a seat here in 1979, in Beauce. By the following election in 1993, Mulroney had left office and support for the Tories all across Quebec moved to the Bloc Québécois. Locally, the Bloc won all but two seats; the exceptions were in Beauce, which was won by former Conservative Gilles Bernier who ran as an independent, and in Sherbrooke, where Jean Charest was one of only two PC candidates to win in all of Canada. By 1997, he was PC leader and local candidates running on his coattails did well, resulting in a split between the Progressive Conservatives (four seats) the Bloc Québécois (three seats) and the Liberals (two seats). However in 1998, Charest moved to provincial politics as leader of the Quebec Liberal Party (which is independent of the federal Liberals, despite the similarity of names), and without him local support for the PCs declined. By the 2000 election, two of the PC members, David Price and Diane St-Jacques, had left the party and joined the federal Liberals. André Bachand remained with the PCs in 2000 and was re-elected, but declined to join the newly merged Conservative Party of Canada and is retiring from politics in 2004. Traditional Bloc support in this region is concentrated in the northwest part, and in the Frontenac-Megantic region. It is expected that the Liberals will likely edge out the Bloc here by one or two seats, and the Conservatives will not be a factor.
Notes: |
••••••••• | 2004 |
••••••••• | 2000 | |
••••••••• | 1997 | |
••••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••••• | 1988 | |
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••••••••• | 1980 | |
••••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Beauce | Jean-François Barbe 17,168 |
Claude Drouin 19,592 |
Alain Guay 8,091 |
Philippe Giguère 1,443 |
Michel Binette 1,054 |
Claude Drouin | |
Brome—Missisquoi | Christian Ouellet 17,537 |
Denis Paradis 18,609 |
Peter Stastny 4,888 |
Piper Huggins 1,177 |
Louise Martineau 2,011 |
Denis Paradis | |
Compton—Stanstead | France Bonsant 20,450 |
David Price 15,752 |
Gary Caldwell 4,589 |
Martin Baller 1,451 |
Laurier Busque 1,546 |
David Price | |
Drummond | Pauline Picard 23,670 |
Roger Gougeon 9,591 |
Lyne Boisvert 7,123 |
Blake Evans 745 |
Louis Lacroix 921 |
Pauline Picard | |
Mégantic—L'Érable | Marc Boulianne 19,264 |
Gérard Binet 15,778 |
Yves Mailly 4,916 |
Alexandre Côté 1,608 |
Bruno Vézina 1,489 |
Gérard Binet | |
Richmond—Arthabaska | André Bellavance 26,211 |
Christine St-Pierre 12,809 |
Pierre Poissant 4,925 |
Jason Noble 1,540 |
Lucie LaForest 1,699 |
André Bachand1 | |
Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot | Yvan Loubier 29,789 |
Michel Gaudette 10,558 |
Andrée Champagne 5,240 |
Joëlle Chevrier 1,204 |
Bruno Godbout 948 |
Yvan Loubier | |
Shefford | Robert Vincent 21,968 |
Diane St-Jacques 18,725 |
Jacques Parenteau 3,732 |
Sonia Bisson 1,146 |
Francine Brière 1,571 |
Diane St-Jacques | |
Sherbrooke | Serge Cardin 29,323 |
Bruno-Marie Béchard 15,482 |
Réal Leblanc 2,142 |
Philippe Dion 1,463 |
Jeffrey Champagne 1,509 |
Serge Cardin |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
---|---|---|
This area has been traditionally Liberal, until 1984 and 1988 when Mulroney swept every riding in both election. Since then, Montreal's South Shore suburbs have been a battleground between the Liberals and the Bloc Québécois because of the collapse of the Progressive Conservative Party in 1993. The more rural ridings of Saint-Jean, Verchères—Les-Patriotes and Chambly—Borduas are BQ strongholds, although in the later the party is being challenged by a popular incumbent running as an independent candidate. Vaudreuil-Soulanges, west of Montreal, has a significant anglophone population and can be expected to vote Liberal.
Notes: |
•••••••••• | 2004 |
•••••••••• | 2000 | |
•••••••••• | 1997 | |
••••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••••• | 1988 | |
•••••••• | 1984 | |
•••••••• | 1980 | |
•••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Beauharnois—Salaberry | Alain Boire 26,775 |
Serge Marcil 18,293 |
Dominique Bellemare 4,864 |
Ligy Alakkattussery 1,018 |
Rémi Pelletier 1,415 |
Felix Malboeuf (Mar.) 480 |
Serge Marcil |
Brossard—La Prairie | Marcel Lussier 21,596 |
Jacques Saada 24,155 |
Robert Nicolas 3,107 |
Nadia Alexan 2,321 |
Cécile Bissonnette 1,340 |
Yves Le Seigle (M-L) 109 |
Jacques Saada |
Chambly—Borduas | Yves Lessard 33,945 |
Sophie Joncas 12,694 |
Lucien Richard 4,219 |
Daniel Blouin 2,681 |
Benoit Lapointe 2,248 |
Ghislain Lebel1 | |
Châteauguay—Saint-Constant | Denise Poirier-Rivard 29,337 |
Robert Lanctôt 15,384 |
Rosaire Turcot 2,902 |
Mélanie Archambault 1,704 |
Marc-André Gadoury 1,889 |
Robert Lanctôt2 | |
Longueuil | Caroline St-Hilaire 29,473 |
Robert Gladu 12,363 |
Richard Bélisle 2,354 |
Nicole Fournier-Sylvester 2,512 |
Michel Bédard 1,263 |
David Fiset (Mar.) 401 |
Caroline St-Hilaire |
Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert | Carole Lavallée 28,050 |
Marc Savard 15,457 |
Jean-François Mongeau 3,189 |
Marie Henretta 2,253 |
Janis Crawford 1,349 |
David Vachon (Mar.) 596 |
Pierrette Venne3 |
Saint-Jean | Claude Bachand 29,485 |
Michel Fecteau 12,729 |
Joseph Khoury 3,856 |
Jonathan Trépanier 1,687 |
Claude Genest 1,298 |
Claude Bachand | |
Saint-Lambert | Maka Kotto 22,024 |
Yolande Thibeault 16,654 |
Patrick Clune 2,739 |
Monique Garcia 2,130 |
Diane Joubert 1,404 |
Normand Fournier (M-L) 145 |
Yolande Thibeault |
Vaudreuil—Soulanges | Meili Faille 24,675 |
Nick Discepola 21,613 |
Rob Ramage 4,558 |
Bert Markgraf 2,175 |
Julie Baribeau 2,103 |
Charles Soucy (Mar.) 585 |
Nick Discepola |
Verchères—Les-Patriotes | Stéphane Bergeron 33,333 |
Nathalie Tousignant 9,958 |
Francis-Pierre Rémillard 2,750 |
Simon Vallée 1,815 |
Phillipe Morlighem 975 |
Sébastien Drouin (Mar.) 463 |
Stéphane Bergeron |
The eastern end of the Island of Montreal is the city's only solidly sovereigntist area. With the exception of ethnic areas that protrude from Northern Montreal into the East Island's Honoré-Mercier riding, the area is relatively homogenously francophone and lower-income, a recipe for Bloc Québécois dominance since 1993. Prior to the rise of the Bloc, the area backed nationalists running under Mulroney's PC banner. Before 1984 the area was solidly Liberal.
Notes:
1 - Charbonneau not seeking re-election
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
---|---|---|
••••• | 2004 | |
••••• | 2000 | |
••••• | 1997 | |
••••• | 1993 | |
••••• | 1988 | |
•••••• | 1984 | |
•••••• | 1980 | |
•••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Hochelaga | Réal Ménard 27,476 |
Benoit Bouvier 11,712 |
Mario Bernier 1,856 |
David Gagnon 2,510 |
Rolf Bramann 1,361 |
Christine Dandenault (M-L) 112 Pierre Bibeau (Comm.) 190 Antoine Théorêt-Poupart (Mar.) 482 |
Réal Ménard |
Honoré-Mercier | Éric St-Hilaire 19,461 |
Pablo Rodriguez 22,223 |
Gianni Chiazzese 2,902 |
François Pilon 1,973 |
Richard Lahaie 852 |
Hélène Héroux (M-L) 164 Steve Boudrias (Mar.) 626 |
Yvon Charbonneau1 |
La Pointe-de-l'Île | Francine Lalonde 30,713 |
Jean-Claude Gobé 10,593 |
Christian Prévost 1,961 |
André Langevin 1,751 |
André Levert 1,186 |
Francine Lalonde | |
Laurier | Gilles Duceppe 28,728 |
Jean-François Thibault 8,454 |
Pierre Albert 1,224 |
François Gregoire 5,779 |
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell 2,912 |
Ginette Boutet (M-L) 154 Nicky Tanguay (Mar.) 572 |
Gilles Duceppe |
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie | Bernard Bigras 31,224 |
Christian Bolduc 11,572 |
Michel Sauvé 1,561 |
Benoît Beauchamp 3,876 |
François Chevalier 2,145 |
Kenneth Higham (Comm.) 145 |
Bernard Bigras |
Montreal boasts some of the most highly-polarized political geography in Canada: While the Bloc Québécois is strong in the mostly francophone East End, the Western portions of the city have been a Liberal fortress for the past half-century and contains some of the safest Liberal seats in the country. High anglophone populations and relative affluence in some ridings prompt ludicrously high Grit returns; it has been wryly noted that if a mailbox stood for election in seats like Mount Royal it would win simply because it was red. Even in the surge of Brian Mulroney's Conservatives the Liberals won most of the seats. Today, despite the sponsorship scandal rocking Liberal support in Quebec, it would truly require a nightmarish meltdown scenario for the Liberals to lose even a handful of seats here. Incumbents in the area are almost entirely current and former cabinet ministers, including Prime Minister Paul Martin.
Notes:
1 - Lincoln not seeking re-election
2 - Cauchon not seeking re-election
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
---|---|---|
••••••••• | 2004 | |
••••••••• | 2000 | |
••••••••• | 1997 | |
••••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••••• | 1988 | |
••••••••• | 1984 | |
••••••••• | 1980 | |
••••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Jeanne-Le Ber | Thierry St-Cyr 18,694 |
Liza Frulla 18,766 |
Pierre-Albert Sévigny 2,524 |
Anthony Philbin 3,160 |
Jean Claude Mercier 1,864 |
Normand Chouinard (M-L) 148 Cathy Duschene (Mar.) 520 |
Liza Frulla |
Lac-Saint-Louis | Maxime Côté 5,106 |
Francis Scarpaleggia 32,122 |
Jeff Howard 6,082 |
Daniel Quinn 3,789 |
Peter Graham 2,584 |
Patrick Cardinal (Mar.) 578 |
Clifford Lincoln1 |
LaSalle—Émard | Thierry Larrivée 14,001 |
Paul Martin 25,806 |
Nicole Roy-Arcelin 2,271 |
Rebecca Blaikie 1,995 |
Douglas Jack 1,000 |
Marc-Boris St-Maurice (Mar.) 349 Jean-Paul Bédard (M-L) 210 |
Paul Martin |
Mount Royal | Vincent Gagnon 2,636 |
Irwin Cotler 28,670 |
Matthew Fireman 3,271 |
Sebastien Beaudet 1,859 |
Adam Sommerfeld 1,046 |
Diane Johnston (M-L) 94 Adam Greenblatt (Mar.) 308 |
Irwin Cotler |
Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Lachine | Jean-Philippe Chartré 9,736 |
Marlene Jennings 23,552 |
Bill McCullock 4,526 |
Maria Pia Chávez 3,513 |
Jessica Gal 2,214 |
Rachel Hoffman (M-L) 88 Jay Dell (Mar.) 479 Earl Wertheimer (Libert.) 165 |
Marlene Jennings |
Outremont | François Rebello 12,730 |
Jean Lapierre 15,675 |
Marc Rousseau 2,284 |
Omar Aktouf 5,382 |
Shaun Perceval-Maxwell 1,643 |
Linda Sullivan (M-L) 120 Yan Lacombe (Mar.) 452 |
Martin Cauchon2 |
Pierrefonds—Dollard | Marie-Hélène Brunet 7,426 |
Bernard Patry 29,601 |
Andrea Paine 5,010 |
Danielle Lustgarten 2,545 |
Ted Kouretas 1,401 |
Garnet Colly (M-L) 71 Jean-François Labrecque (Mar.) 511 |
Bernard Patry |
Saint-Laurent—Cartierville | William Fayad 7,261 |
Stéphane Dion 28,107 |
Marc Rahmé 2,606 |
Zaid Mahayni 2,630 |
Almaz Aladass 875 |
Fernand Deschamps (M-L) 125 Alex Neron (Mar.) 298 Nilda Vargas (Comm.) 78 Ken Fernandez (CAP) 84 |
Stéphane Dion |
Westmount—Ville-Marie | Louis La Rochelle 5,922 |
Lucienne Robillard 22,337 |
Robert Gervais 4,027 |
Eric Steedman 4,795 |
Brian Sarwer-Foner 2,419 |
Serge Lachapelle (M-L) 103 David John Proctor (Mar.) 396 |
Lucienne Robillard |
The City of Laval has been a battleground between the Liberals and the Bloc Québécois, and either party could win there in this election. The North End of Montreal has significant immigrant populations and generally supports the Liberals, although the BQ captured Ahuntsic and Bourassa in their 1993 near-sweep of the province. This area was traditionally Liberal until Mulroney's rise to power in 1984, when the Liberals lost two seats, and even more so in 1988 when they were reduced to just three seats.
Notes:
1 - Dalphond-Guiral lost nomination
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
---|---|---|
•••••••• | 2004 | |
••••••• | 2000 | |
••••••• | 1997 | |
•••••••• | 1993 | |
•••••••• | 1988 | |
•••••••• | 1984 | |
•••••••• | 1980 | |
•••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Ahuntsic | Maria Mourani 20,020 |
Eleni Bakopanos 21,234 |
Jean E. Fortier 2,544 |
Annick Bergeron 3,013 |
Lynette Tremblay 1,301 |
Marsha Fine (M-L) 102 F.X. De Longchamp (Mar.) 314 |
Eleni Bakopanos |
Alfred-Pellan | Robert Carrier 26,239 |
Carole-Marie Allard 21,116 |
Rosane Raymond 2,703 |
Benjamin Le Bel 1,849 |
Louis-Philippe Verenka 1,132 |
Yves Desbois (Ind.) 204 Régent Millette (Ind.) 89 |
Carole-Marie Allard |
Bourassa | Doris Provencher 15,794 |
Denis Coderre 20,927 |
Frédéric Grenier 2,226 |
Stefano Saykaly 1,661 |
Noémi Lopinto 660 |
Geneviève Royer (M-L) 154 Philippe Gauvin (Mar.) 403 |
Denis Coderre |
Laval | Nicole Demers 24,425 |
Pierre Lafleur 17,639 |
Stéphane d'Amours 3,115 |
Alain Giguère 1,998 |
Damien Pichereau 1,091 |
Pierre Losier-Côté (Mar.) 492 |
new district |
Laval—Les Îles | Micaël Poirier 18,597 |
Raymonde Folco 23,985 |
Jean-Paul Pratte 3,498 |
Paul Michaud 2,202 |
Pierre Véronneau 1,178 |
Polyvios Tsakanikas (M-L) 154 Michel Allard (Mar.) 498 |
Raymonde Folco |
Marc-Aurèle-Fortin | Serge Ménard 30,779 |
Nancy Girard 14,491 |
Marc Bissonnette 3,125 |
Lyse Généreux 1,867 |
Lise Bissonnette 2,012 |
Madeleine Dalphond-Guiral1 | |
Papineau | Martine Carrière 16,424 |
Pierre Pettigrew 16,892 |
Mustaque Sarker 1,961 |
André Frappier 3,603 |
Adam Jastrzebski 1,058 |
Peter Macrisopolous (M-L) 169 André Parizeau (Comm.) 252 Christelle Dusablon-Pelletier (Mar.) 490 Jimmy Garoufalis (Ind.) 250 |
Pierre Pettigrew |
Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel | Paul-Alexis François 8,852 |
Massimo Pacetti 25,884 |
Payam Eslami 2,138 |
Laura Colella 2,422 |
Ricardo Fellicetti 944 |
Stéphane Chénier (M-L) 267 |
Massimo Pacetti |
Profile & Notes | Electoral History | |
---|---|---|
The Ouatouais is one of the most federalist areas of Quebec outside of Montreal because of the large population of civil servants, however once one gets into Northern Quebec and the Laurentides you are in Bloc Québécois Territory. Only in a recent by-election were the Liberals able to get the traditionally Bloquiste riding of Temiscamingue, having previously gained the northern riding of Abitibi—Baie-James—Nunavik in 1997. Abitibi voted Social Credit in 1979. Hull has been the only riding that survived Mulroney's winnings in Quebec, as it went Liberal in 1988 and 1984. Gatineau was the only other Liberal riding in 1988. The Liberals will likely sweep the Outaouais again in 2004, with the Bloc winning in the Laurentides region. The true battleground will be in the north, with the Liberals hoping to hang on to their two seats there.
Notes: |
•••••••••• | 2004 |
••••••••• | 2000 | |
••••••••• | 1997 | |
••••••••• | 1993 | |
••••••••• | 1988 | |
••••••••• | 1984 | |
••••••••• | 1980 | |
••••••••• | 1979 |
Electoral District | Candidates | Incumbent | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BQ |
Liberal |
Cons. |
NDP |
Green |
Other | ||
Abitibi—Témiscamingue | Marc Lemay 25,041 |
Gilbert Barrette 13,457 |
Bernard Hughes Beauchesne 2,425 |
Dennis Shushack 1,472 |
Patrick Rancourt 1,037 |
Gilbert Barrette | |
Argenteuil—Mirabel | Mario Laframboise 28,228 |
Yves Sabourin 13,214 |
David McArthur 3,460 |
Elisabeth Clark 1,493 |
Claude Sabourin 2,510 |
Michael O'Grady (M-L) 69 Laurent Filion (CHP) 202 |
Mario Laframboise |
Gatineau | Richard Nadeau 18,368 |
Françoise Boivin 19,198 |
Gérard Nicolas 3,461 |
Dominique Vaillancourt 2,610 |
Brian Gibb 1,402 |
Gabriel Girard-Bernier (M-L) 125 Stephane Salko (Mar.) 453 |
Mark Assad1 |
Hull—Aylmer | Alain Charette 15,626 |
Marcel Proulx 20,135 |
Pierrette Bellefeuille 3,963 |
Pierre Laliberté 5,709 |
Gail Walker 2,561 |
Christian Legeais (M-L) 98 |
Marcel Proulx |
Laurentides—Labelle | Johanne Deschamps 28,675 |
Dominique Boyer 14,459 |
Guillaume Desjardins 2,887 |
Brendan Naef 1,320 |
Jacques Léger 1,781 |
new district | |
Nunavik—Eeyou | Yvon Lévesque 12,578 |
Guy St-Julien 12,006 |
François Dionne 1,265 |
Pierre Corbeil 1,097 |
Martin Fournier 862 |
Guy St-Julien | |
Pontiac | Hubert Leduc 11,685 |
David Smith 15,358 |
Judith Grant 8,869 |
Gretchen Schwarz 2,317 |
Thierry Vicente 1,673 |
Benoit Legros (M-L) 132 |
Robert Bertrand2 |
Rivière-des-Mille-Îles | Gilles-A. Perron 27,993 |
Yolaine Savignac 11,025 |
Érick Gauthier 3,064 |
Nicolas Du Cap 1,559 |
Marie-Martine Bédard 1,961 |
Gilles-A. Perron | |
Rivière-du-Nord | Monique Guay 29,204 |
Lorraine Auclair 9,509 |
Catherine Brousseau 2,435 |
François Côté 1,290 |
Marcel Poirier 1,129 |
Christian Marcoux (Mar.) 459 |
Monique Guay |
Terrebonne—Blainville | Diane Bourgeois 31,288 |
Pierre Gingras 9,048 |
Patrick Légaré 2,582 |
Normand Beaudet 1,451 |
Martin Drapeau 1,554 |
Diane Bourgeois |