St. Norbert (electoral district)

This article is about the provincial electoral division. For the area of Winnipeg in roughly the same area, see St. Norbert, Manitoba. For other uses, see St. Norbert (disambiguation).
The 2011+ boundaries for St. Norbert highlighted in red.

St. Norbert is a provincial electoral division in the Canadian province of Manitoba.

Historical riding

The original riding of St. Norbert was established at the time of the province's creation in 1870. For the 1870 provincial election, it was divided into two separate ridings: St. Norbert North and St. Norbert South. Subsequently, it was reduced to a single riding.

St. Norbert was a francophone-majority riding. It was eliminated in 1879, at a time when francophone representation in the province was being reduced.

List of provincial representatives (St. Norbert North)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Joseph Lemay Government/French Party 1870 1874

List of provincial representatives (St. Norbert South)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Pierre Delorme Government/French Party 1870 1874

List of provincial representatives (St. Norbert)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Joseph Dubuc Government/French Party 1874 1878
Pierre Delorme Government/French Party 1878 1879
Pierre Delorme Opposition/French Party 1879 1879

Current riding

It was created by redistribution in 1979, and has officially existed since the provincial election of 1981. The riding is located in the southernmost tip of the City of Winnipeg.

St. Norbert is bordered to the east by Seine River, to the south and west by the rural riding of Morris, and to the north by Riel, Fort Garry and Fort Whyte. The riding's character is suburban.

St. Norbert's population in 1996 was 19,184. In 1999, the average family income was $59,444, and the unemployment rate was 8.20%. The riding is ethnically diverse: 5% of the riding's residents are German, 4% are Chinese, 3% are East Indian and 2% are Italian. Six per cent of the riding's residents are francophone. Almost 28% of the riding's residents have a university degree.

The service sector accounts for 16% of St. Norbert's industry, with a further 15% in the educational services.

St. Norbert has historically been a reliable riding for the Progressive Conservative Party, although the NDP managed to win it for the first time in 2003.

List of provincial representatives

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Gerry Mercier PC 1981 1988
John Angus Lib 1988 1990
Marcel Laurendeau PC 1990 2003
Marilyn Brick NDP 2003 2011
Dave Gaudreau NDP 2011 present

Electoral results

Manitoba general election, 2011
Party Candidate Votes%∆%Expenditures
New DemocraticDave Gaudreau 3,966 44.94 −8.80
     Progressive Conservative Karen Velthuys 3,935 44.59 +12.65
LiberalMarcel Laurendeau 883 10.01 −4.30
Total valid votes 8,784
Rejected and declined votes 41
Turnout 8,825 64.25 −1.20
Registered voters 13,736


[1]

Manitoba general election, 2007
Party Candidate Votes%∆%Expenditures
New DemocraticMarilyn Brick 4,044 53.74 +9.08 $18,993.62
     Progressive Conservative Tara Brousseau 2,404 31.94 −5.93 $28,159.72
LiberalWendy Bloomfield 1,077 14.31 +3.58 $19,690.78
Total valid votes 7,525 100.00
Rejected and declined votes 38
Turnout 7,563 65.45
Registered voters 11,555

[2]

Manitoba general election, 2003
Party Candidate Votes%∆%Expenditures
New DemocraticMarilyn Brick 3,355 48.68 +7.99 $12,670.25
     Progressive Conservative Marcel Laurendeau 2,610 37.87 −8.27 $24,397.23
LiberalJocelyn Greenwood 741 10.75 −3.84 $8,473.22
GreenKeith Barber 186 2.70 +2.70 $117.06
Total valid votes 6,892 100.00
Rejected and declined votes 36
Turnout 6,928 58.16
Registered voters 11,911

[3]

Manitoba general election, 1999
Party Candidate Votes%∆%Expenditures
     Progressive Conservative Marcel Laurendeau 4,152 46.14 $26,724.22
New DemocraticMarilyn Brick 3,483 38.69 $10,804.00
LiberalMohinder Dhillon 1,313 14.59 $17,998.46
Total valid votes 8,947 100.00
Rejected and declined votes 52
Turnout 8,999 72.96
Registered voters 12,380

[4]

Previous boundaries

The 1999-2011 boundaries for St. Norbert highlighted in red

References

  1. "2011 results" (PDF). Elections Manitoba. Retrieved 2014-05-12.
  2. "2007 results" (PDF). Elections Manitoba.
  3. "2003 Results" (PDF). Elections Manitoba.
  4. "1999 Results" (PDF). Elections Manitoba.

Coordinates: 49°47′02″N 97°10′48″W / 49.784°N 97.180°W / 49.784; -97.180

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