From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a seat by seat list of candidates in the 2004 Canadian election.
For more information about the election see Canadian federal election, 2004.
[edit] 2004 federal redistribution
Due to the 2001 census, Canada's 301 electoral districts increased to 308 as of April 1, 2004. Boundary changes took effect across the country to even out population redistribution, and seven new districts were formed. Each province has a minimum amount of seats, and therefore it is rare for a province to lose seats in a redistribution. The numbers beside the region names correspond to the map below.
| Province |
Seats |
Avg. Population
per Seat |
| Total |
Created |
Eliminated |
Change |
| 1. Newfoundland and Labrador |
7 |
0 |
0 |
- |
73 276 |
| 2. Nova Scotia |
11 |
0 |
0 |
- |
82 546 |
| 3. Prince Edward Island |
4 |
0 |
0 |
- |
33 824 |
| 4. New Brunswick |
10 |
0 |
0 |
- |
72 950 |
| Quebec |
75 |
4 |
4 |
- |
96 500 |
| |
5. Eastern |
5 |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
|
| 6. Côte-Nord & Saguenay |
5 |
0 |
2 |
-2 |
| 7. Quebec City |
5 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
| 8. Central |
9 |
1 |
1 |
- |
| 9. Eastern Townships |
9 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 10. Montérégie |
10 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 11. Northern Montreal & Laval |
8 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
| 12. Eastern Montreal |
5 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 13. Western Montreal |
9 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 14. Laurentides, Outaouais & North |
10 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
| Ontario |
106 |
8 |
5 |
+3 |
107 642 |
| |
15. Ottawa |
7 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
|
| 16. Eastern |
7 |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
| 17. Central |
11 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
| 18. Southern Durham & York |
9 |
2 |
0 |
+2 |
| 19. Suburban Toronto |
12 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 20. Central Toronto |
10 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 21. Brampton, Mississauga & Oakville |
9 |
2 |
1 |
+1 |
| 22. Hamilton, Burlington & Niagara |
10 |
1 |
2 |
-1 |
| 23. Midwestern |
11 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
| 24. Southwestern |
10 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 25. Northern |
10 |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
| Manitoba |
14 |
1 |
1 |
- |
79 970 |
| |
26. Rural |
6 |
0 |
0 |
- |
|
| 27. Winnipeg |
8 |
1 |
1 |
- |
| Saskatchewan |
14 |
0 |
0 |
- |
69 924 |
| |
28. Northern |
7 |
0 |
0 |
- |
|
| 29. Southern |
7 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| Alberta |
28 |
3 |
1 |
+2 |
106 243 |
| |
30. Rural |
12 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
|
| 31. Edmonton & environs |
8 |
1 |
1 |
- |
| 32. Calgary |
8 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
| British Columbia |
36 |
3 |
1 |
+2 |
108 548 |
| |
33. Interior |
9 |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
|
| 34. Fraser Valley & S. Lower Mainland |
10 |
2 |
0 |
+2 |
| 35. Vancouver & N. Lower Mainland |
11 |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
| 36. Vancouver Island |
6 |
0 |
0 |
- |
| 37. Nunavut |
1 |
0 |
0 |
- |
26 745 |
| 37. Northwest Territories |
1 |
0 |
0 |
- |
37 360 |
| 37. Yukon |
1 |
0 |
0 |
- |
28 675 |

[edit] Candidates and ridings
schematic seat-by-seat results
Cabinet Ministers and party leaders are denoted in bold. Candidates who were automatically granted their party's nomination by their leader are denoted with a dagger (†)
Nominations closed on June 7, 2004. Elections Canada released a final candidate list on June 9.
Party key and abbreviations guide
[edit] Newfoundland and Labrador
- See also Canadian federal election results in Newfoundland and Labrador
edit
| 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 [1] |
| Bonavista—Exploits |
|
Scott Simms
15,970 |
|
Rex Barnes
13,786 |
|
Samuel McLean
2,667 |
|
Ed Sailor White
367 |
|
John Lannon (Ind.)
344 |
|
Rex Barnes [2] |
| 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 Doyle
15,073 |
|
Janine Piller
7,198 |
|
Scott Vokey
791 |
|
|
|
Norman Doyle |
| St. John's South |
|
Siobhan Coady
11,879 |
|
Loyola Hearn
13,330 |
|
Peg Norman
7,989 |
|
Steve Willcott
493 |
|
|
|
Loyola Hearn |
- ^ Efford won seat in 2002 byelection; originally held by Liberal Brian Tobin
- ^ Barnes won seat in 2002 byelection; originally held by Liberal George Baker
[edit] Prince Edward Island
- See also Canadian federal election results in Prince Edward Island
edit
| 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 |
[edit] Nova Scotia
- See also Canadian federal election results in Nova Scotia
edit
| 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 Lill† |
| 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 Brison [3] |
| 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 |
- ^ Brison defected from PC Party in Dec. 2003
[edit] New Brunswick
- See also Canadian federal election results in New Brunswick
edit
| 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 Herron [4] |
| Madawaska—Restigouche |
|
Jean-Claude D'Amours
14,144 |
|
Benoit Violette
7,605 |
|
Rodolphe Martin
8,737 |
|
Jovette Cyr
1,185 |
|
|
|
Jeannot Castonguay† |
| 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 Wayne† |
| Tobique—Mactaquac |
|
Andy Savoy
16,787 |
|
Mike Allen
13,779 |
|
Jason Mapplebeck
2,957 |
|
Scott Jones
1,282 |
|
|
|
Andy Savoy |
- ^ Herron was former PC, sat until dissolution as an independent, then ran as a Liberal
[edit] Quebec
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 Progressive 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. 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. 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 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.
[edit] Eastern Quebec
- See also Canadian federal election results in Eastern Quebec
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Gaspésie—Îles-de-la-Madeleine |
|
Georges Farrah
12,579 |
|
Raynald Blais
21,446 |
|
Guy de Coste
2,636 |
|
Phil Toone
805 |
|
Bob Eichenberger
1,060 |
|
|
|
Georges Farrah |
| Lévis—Bellechasse |
|
Christian Jobin
13,664 |
|
Réal Lapierre
21,930 |
|
Gilles Vézina
9,425 |
|
Louise Foisy
1,910 |
|
Sylvain Castonguay
2,372 |
|
Christophe Vaillancourt (Comm.)
163 |
|
Christian Jobin |
| Matapédia—Matane |
|
Marc Bélanger
9,653 |
|
Jean-Yves Roy
17,878 |
|
Vahid Fortin-Vidah
1,972 |
|
Jean-Guy Côté
1,581 |
|
Nicolas Deville
585 |
|
|
|
Jean-Yves Roy |
| Rimouski—Témiscouata |
|
Côme Roy
9,161 |
|
Louise Thibault
22,215 |
|
Denis Quimper
3,445 |
|
Guy Caron
2,717 |
|
Marjolaine Delaunière
1,008 |
|
|
|
Suzanne Tremblay† |
| Rivière-du-Loup—Montmagny |
|
Isabelle Mignault
13,124 |
|
Paul Crête
25,327 |
|
Marc-André Drolet
4,040 |
|
Frédérick Garon
876 |
|
André Clermont
962 |
|
|
|
Paul Crête |
| merged district |
|
Gilbert Normand† |
[edit] Côte-Nord and Saguenay
- See also Canadian federal election results in the Côte-Nord and Saguenay
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Charlevoix—Montmorency |
|
Lisette Lepage
8,598 |
|
Michel Guimond
25,451 |
|
Guy-Léonard Tremblay
5,259 |
|
Steeve Hudon
1,055 |
|
Yves Jourdain
1,422 |
|
|
|
Michel Guimond |
| Chicoutimi—Le Fjord |
|
André Harvey
19,387 |
|
Robert Bouchard
20,650 |
|
Alcide Boudreault
2,385 |
|
Éric Dubois
1,699 |
|
Paul Tremblay
1,038 |
|
|
|
André Harvey |
| Jonquière—Alma |
|
Daniel Giguère
13,355 |
|
Sébastien Gagnon
25,193 |
|
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-Bujold [5] |
| Manicouagan |
|
Anthony Detroio
8,097 |
|
Gérard Asselin
19,040 |
|
Pierre Paradis
1,601 |
|
Pierre Ducasse
3,361 |
|
Les Parsons
444 |
|
|
|
Gérard Asselin |
| merged district |
|
Ghislain Fournier† |
| Roberval |
|
Michel Malette
8,064 |
|
Michel Gauthier
20,655 |
|
Ghislain Lavoie
3,011 |
|
Isabelle Tremblay
1,777 |
|
Marc-André Gauthier
1,260 |
|
|
|
Michel Gauthier |
- ^ Girard-Bujold lost nomination battle
[edit] Quebec City
- See also Canadian federal election results in Quebec City
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Beauport |
|
Dennis Dawson
11,866 |
|
Christian Simard
22,989 |
|
Stéphane Asselin
7,388 |
|
Xavier Trégan
1,896 |
|
Jeannine T. Desharnais
1,577 |
|
Nicolas Frichot (Mar.)
585 |
new district |
| Charlesbourg |
|
Jean-Marie Laliberté
11,911 |
|
Richard Marceau
23,886 |
|
Bertrand Proulx
7,306 |
|
François Villeneuve
1,623 |
|
Marilou Moisan-Domm
1,188 |
|
Benjamin Kasapoglu (Mar.)
376 |
|
Richard Marceau |
| Louis-Hébert |
|
Hélène Scherrer
18,999 |
|
Roger Clavet
24,071 |
|
Clermont Gauthier
7,512 |
|
Robert Turcotte
3,112 |
|
Jean-Pierre Guay
2,137 |
|
|
|
Hélène Scherrer |
| Louis-Saint-Laurent |
|
Michel Fragasso
10,025 |
|
Bernard Cleary
17,248 |
|
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 Carignan [6] |
| Québec |
|
Jean-Phillipe Côté
12,982 |
|
Christiane Gagnon
24,373 |
|
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 |
- ^ Carignan is former Liberal
[edit] Central Quebec
- See also Canadian federal election results in Central Quebec
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Berthier—Maskinongé |
|
Laurier Thibault
11,198 |
|
Guy André
29,432 |
|
Ann Julie Fortier
5,535 |
|
Denis McKinnon
1,653 |
|
Eric Labrecque
1,314 |
|
|
new district |
| Joliette |
|
Jean-François Coderre
10,975 |
|
Pierre Paquette
30,661 |
|
Daniel Bouchard
3,107 |
|
Jacques Trudeau
1,755 |
|
Wendy Gorchinsky
1,147 |
|
Marco Geoffroy (Mar.)
701 |
|
Pierre Paquette |
Lotbinière—
Chutes-de-la-Chaudière |
|
Anicet Gagné
9,445 |
|
Odina Desrochers
20,245 |
|
Jean Landry
10,628 |
|
Jean Bernatchez
2,091 |
|
Rama Borne MacDonald
1,615 |
|
|
|
Odina Desrochers |
| Montcalm |
|
Daniel Brazeau
7,915 |
|
Roger Gaudet
34,383 |
|
Michel Paulette
2,831 |
|
François Rivest
1,531 |
|
Serge Bellemare
1,606 |
|
|
|
Roger Gaudet |
| Portneuf |
|
Claude Duplain
11,863 |
|
Guy Côté
18,471 |
|
Howard Bruce
9,251 |
|
Jean-François Breton
1,540 |
|
Pierre Poulin
1,925 |
|
|
|
Claude Duplain |
| Repentigny |
|
Lévis Brien
9,353 |
|
Benoît Sauvageau
35,907 |
|
Allen Mackenzie
2,447 |
|
André Cardinal
1,526 |
|
Jean-François Léveque
1,482 |
|
François Boudreau (Mar.)
539 |
|
Benoît Sauvageau |
| Richelieu |
|
Ghislaine Provencher
11,045 |
|
Louis Plamondon
31,497 |
|
Daniel Proulx
3,726 |
|
Charles Bussières
1,017 |
|
Jean-Pierre Bonenfant
839 |
|
Daniel Blackburn (Mar.)
580 |
|
Louis Plamondon |
| Saint-Maurice—Champlain |
|
Marie-Eve Bilodeau
14,320 |
|
Marcel Gagnon
25,918 |
|
Martial Toupin
4,129 |
|
Pierre J.C. Allard
1,104 |
|
Pierre Audette
855 |
|
Paul Giroux (Mar.)
547 |
|
(vacant) [7] |
| merged district |
|
Marcel Gagnon |
| Trois-Rivières |
|
Jean-Éric Guindon
12,703 |
|
Paule Brunelle
26,240 |
|
Jean-Guy Mercier
4,381 |
|
Marc Tessier
1,635 |
|
Linda Lavoie
1,476 |
|
|
|
Yves Rocheleau† |
- ^ formerly held by Liberal Jean Chrétien
[edit] Eastern Townships
- See also Canadian federal election results in the Eastern Townships
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Beauce |
|
Claude Drouin
19,592 |
|
Jean-François Barbe
17,168 |
|
Alain Guay
8,091 |
|
Philippe Giguère
1,443 |
|
Michel Binette
1,054 |
|
|
|
Claude Drouin |
| Brome—Missisquoi |
|
Denis Paradis
18,609 |
|
Christian Ouellet
17,537 |
|
Peter Stastny
4,888 |
|
Piper Huggins
1,177 |
|
Louise Martineau
2,011 |
|
|
|
Denis Paradis |
| Compton—Stanstead |
|
David Price
15,752 |
|
France Bonsant
20,450 |
|
Gary Caldwell
4,589 |
|
Martin Baller
1,451 |
|
Laurier Busque
1,546 |
|
|
|
David Price |
| Drummond |
|
Roger Gougeon
9,591 |
|
Pauline Picard
23,670 |
|
Lyne Boisvert
7,123 |
|
Blake Evans
745 |
|
Louis Lacroix
921 |
|
|
|
Pauline Picard |
| Mégantic—L'Érable |
|
Gérard Binet
15,778 |
|
Marc Boulianne
19,264 |
|
Yves Mailly
4,916 |
|
Alexandre Côté
1,608 |
|
Bruno Vézina
1,489 |
|
|
|
Gérard Binet |
| Richmond—Arthabaska |
|
Christine St-Pierre
12,809 |
|
André Bellavance
26,211 |
|
Pierre Poissant
4,925 |
|
Jason Noble
1,540 |
|
Lucie LaForest
1,699 |
|
|
|
André Bachand† [8] |
| Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot |
|
Michel Gaudette
10,558 |
|
Yvan Loubier
29,789 |
|
Andrée Champagne
5,240 |
|
Joëlle Chevrier
1,204 |
|
Bruno Godbout
948 |
|
|
|
Yvan Loubier |
| Shefford |
|
Diane St-Jacques
18,725 |
|
Robert Vincent
21,968 |
|
Jacques Parenteau
3,732 |
|
Sonia Bisson
1,146 |
|
Francine Brière
1,571 |
|
|
|
Diane St-Jacques |
| Sherbrooke |
|
Bruno-Marie Béchard
15,482 |
|
Serge Cardin
29,323 |
|
Réal Leblanc
2,142 |
|
Philippe Dion
1,463 |
|
Jeffrey Champagne
1,509 |
|
|
|
Serge Cardin |
- ^ Bachand was former PC
[edit] Montérégie
- See also Canadian federal election results in Montérégie
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Beauharnois—Salaberry |
|
Serge Marcil
18,293 |
|
Alain Boire
26,775 |
|
Dominique Bellemare
4,864 |
|
Ligy Alakkattussery
1,018 |
|
Rémi Pelletier
1,415 |
|
Felix Malboeuf (Mar.)
480 |
|
Serge Marcil |
| Brossard—La Prairie |
|
Jacques Saada
24,155 |
|
Marcel Lussier
21,596 |
|
Robert Nicolas
3,107 |
|
Nadia Alexan
2,321 |
|
Cécile Bissonnette
1,340 |
|
Yves Le Seigle (M-L)
109 |
|
Jacques Saada |
| Chambly—Borduas |
|
Sophie Joncas
12,694 |
|
Yves Lessard
33,945 |
|
Lucien Richard
4,219 |
|
Daniel Blouin
2,681 |
|
Benoit Lapointe
2,248 |
|
|
|
Ghislain Lebel† [9] |
| Châteauguay—Saint-Constant |
|
Robert Lanctôt
15,384 |
|
Denise Poirier-Rivard
29,337 |
|
Rosaire Turcot
2,902 |
|
Mélanie Archambault
1,704 |
|
Marc-André Gadoury
1,889 |
|
|
|
Robert Lanctôt [10] |
| Longueuil |
|
Robert Gladu
12,363 |
|
Caroline St-Hilaire
29,473 |
|
Richard Bélisle
2,354 |
|
Nicole Fournier-Sylvester
2,512 |
|
Michel Bédard
1,263 |
|
David Fiset (Mar.)
401 |
|
Caroline St-Hilaire |
| Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert |
|
Marc Savard
15,457 |
|
Carole Lavallée
28,050 |
|
Jean-François Mongeau
3,189 |
|
Marie Henretta
2,253 |
|
Janis Crawford
1,349 |
|
David Vachon (Mar.)
596 |
|
Pierrette Venne† [11] |
| Saint-Jean |
|
Michel Fecteau
12,729 |
|
Claude Bachand
29,485 |
|
Joseph Khoury
3,856 |
|
Jonathan Trépanier
1,687 |
|
Claude Genest
1,298 |
|
|
|
Claude Bachand |
| Saint-Lambert |
|
Yolande Thibeault
16,654 |
|
Maka Kotto
22,024 |
|
Patrick Clune
2,739 |
|
Monique Garcia
2,130 |
|
Diane Joubert
1,404 |
|
Normand Fournier (M-L)
145 |
|
Yolande Thibeault |
| Vaudreuil-Soulanges |
|
Nick Discepola
21,613 |
|
Meili Faille
24,675 |
|
Rob Ramage
4,558 |
|
Bert Markgraf
2,175 |
|
Julie Baribeau
2,103 |
|
Charles Soucy (Mar.)
585 |
|
Nick Discepola |
| Verchères—Les-Patriotes |
|
Nathalie Tousignant
9,958 |
|
Stéphane Bergeron
33,333 |
|
Francis-Pierre Rémillard
2,750 |
|
Simon Vallée
1,815 |
|
Phillipe Morlighem
975 |
|
Sébastien Drouin (Mar.)
463 |
|
Stéphane Bergeron |
- - ^ Lebel is former Bloc Québécois
- - ^ Lanctôt defected from the Bloc Québécois in Dec. 2003
- - ^ Venne is former Bloc Québécois
[edit] Eastern Montreal
- See also Canadian federal election results in Eastern Montreal
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Hochelaga |
|
Benoit Bouvier
11,712 |
|
Réal Ménard
27,476 |
|
Mario Bernier
1,856 |
|
David Gagnon
2,510 |
|
Rolf Bramann
1,361 |
|
Antoine Théorêt-Poupart (Mar.)
482
Pierre Bibeau (Comm.)
190
Christine Dandenault (M-L)
112 |
|
Réal Ménard |
| Honoré-Mercier |
|
Pablo Rodriguez
22,223 |
|
Éric St-Hilaire
19,461 |
|
Gianni Chiazzese
2,902 |
|
François Pilon
1,973 |
|
Richard Lahaie
852 |
|
Steve Boudrias (Mar.)
626
Hélène Héroux (M-L)
164 |
|
Yvon Charbonneau† |
| La Pointe-de-l'Île |
|
Jean-Claude Gobé
10,593 |
|
Francine Lalonde
30,713 |
|
Christian Prévost
1,961 |
|
André Langevin
1,751 |
|
André Levert
1,186 |
|
|
|
Francine Lalonde |
| Laurier |
|
Jean-François Thibault
8,454 |
|
Gilles Duceppe
28,728 |
|
Pierre Albert
1,224 |
|
François Grégoire
5,779 |
|
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell
2,912 |
|
Nicky Tanguay (Mar.)
572
Ginette Boutet (M-L)
154 |
|
Gilles Duceppe |
| Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie |
|
Christian Bolduc
11,572 |
|
Bernard Bigras
31,224 |
|
Michel Sauvé
1,561 |
|
Benoît Beauchamp
3,876 |
|
François Chevalier
2,145 |
|
Kenneth Higham (Comm.)
145 |
|
Bernard Bigras |
[edit] Western Montreal
- See also Canadian federal election results in Western Montreal
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Jeanne-Le Ber |
|
Liza Frulla
18,766 |
|
Thierry St-Cyr
18,694 |
|
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 |
|
Francis Scarpaleggia
32,122 |
|
Maxime Côté
5,106 |
|
Jeff Howard
6,082 |
|
Daniel Quinn
3,789 |
|
Peter Graham
2,584 |
|
Patrick Cardinal (Mar.)
578 |
|
Clifford Lincoln† |
| LaSalle—Émard |
|
Paul Martin
25,806 |
|
Thierry Larrivée
14,001 |
|
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 |
|
Irwin Cotler
28,670 |
|
Vincent Gagnon
2,636 |
|
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 |
|
Marlene Jennings
23,552 |
|
Jean-Philippe Chartré
9,736 |
|
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 |
|
Jean Lapierre
15,675 |
|
François Rebello
12,730 |
|
Marc Rousseau
2,284 |
|
Omar Aktouf
5,382 |
|
Shaun Perceval-Maxwell
1,643 |
|
Linda Sullivan (M-L)
120
Yan Lacombe (Mar.)
452 |
|
Martin Cauchon† |
| Pierrefonds—Dollard |
|
Bernard Patry
29,601 |
|
Marie-Hélène Brunet
7,426 |
|
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 |
|
Stéphane Dion
28,107 |
|
William Fayad
7,261 |
|
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 |
|
Lucienne Robillard
22,337 |
|
Louis La Rochelle
5,922 |
|
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 |
[edit] Northern Montreal and Laval
- See also Canadian federal election results in Northern Montreal and Laval
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Ahuntsic |
|
Eleni Bakopanos
21,234 |
|
Maria Mourani
20,020 |
|
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 |
|
Carole-Marie Allard
21,116 |
|
Robert Carrier
26,239 |
|
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 |
|
Denis Coderre
20,927 |
|
Doris Provencher
15,794 |
|
Frédéric Grenier
2,226 |
|
Stefano Saykaly
1,661 |
|
Noémi Lopinto
660 |
|
Geneviève Royer (M-L)
154
Philippe Gauvin (Mar.)
403 |
|
Denis Coderre |
| Laval |
|
Pierre Lafleur
17,639 |
|
Nicole Demers
24,425 |
|
Stéphane d'Amours
3,115 |
|
Alain Giguère
1,998 |
|
Damien Pichereau
1,091 |
|
Pierre Losier-Côté (Mar.)
492 |
new district |
| Laval—Les Îles |
|
Raymonde Folco
23,985 |
|
Micaël Poirier
18,597 |
|
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 |
|
Nancy Girard
14,491 |
|
Serge Ménard
30,779 |
|
Marc Bissonnette
3,125 |
|
Lyse Généreux
1,867 |
|
Lise Bissonnette
2,012 |
|
|
|
Madeleine Dalphond-Guiral [12] |
| Papineau |
|
Pierre Pettigrew
16,892 |
|
Martine Carrière
16,424 |
|
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 |
|
Massimo Pacetti
25,884 |
|
Paul-Alexis François
8,852 |
|
Payam Eslami
2,138 |
|
Laura Colella
2,422 |
|
Ricardo Fellicetti
944 |
|
Stéphane Chénier (M-L)
267 |
|
Massimo Pacetti |
- ^ Dalphond-Guiral lost nomination.
[edit] Laurentides, Outaouais and Northern Quebec
- See also Canadian federal election results in the Laurentides, Outaouais and Northern Quebec
edit
| Electoral district |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
BQ |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Abitibi—Témiscamingue |
|
Gilbert Barrette
13,457 |
|
Marc Lemay
25,041 |
|
Bernard Hughes Beauchesne
2,425 |
|
Dennis Shushack
1,472 |
|
Patrick Rancourt
1,037 |
|
|
|
Gilbert Barrette |
| Argenteuil—Mirabel |
|
Yves Sabourin
13,214 |
|
Mario Laframboise
28,228 |
|
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 |
|
Françoise Boivin
19,198 |
|
Richard Nadeau
18,368 |
|
Gérard Nicolas
3,461 |
|
Dominique Vaillancourt
2,610 |
|
Brian Gibb
1,402 |
|
Gabriel Girard-Bernier (M-L)
125
Stephane Salko (Mar.)
453 |
|
Mark Assad† |
| Hull—Aylmer |
|
Marcel Proulx
20,135 |
|
Alain Charette
15,626 |
|
Pierrette Bellefeuille
3,963 |
|
Pierre Laliberté
5,709 |
|
Gail Walker
2,561 |
|
Christian Legeais (M-L)
98 |
|
Marcel Proulx |
| Laurentides—Labelle |
|
Dominique Boyer
14,459 |
|
Johanne Deschamps
28,675 |
|
Guillaume Desjardins
2,887 |
|
Brendan Naef
1,320 |
|
Jacques Léger
1,781 |
|
|
new district |
| Nunavik—Eeyou |
|
Guy St-Julien
12,006 |
|
Yvon Lévesque
12,578 |
|
François Dionne
1,265 |
|
Pierre Corbeil
1,097 |
|
Martin Fournier
862 |
|
|
|
Guy St-Julien |
| Pontiac |
|
David Smith
15,358 |
|
Hubert Leduc
11,685 |
|
Judith Grant
8,869 |
|
Gretchen Schwarz
2,317 |
|
Thierry Vicente
1,673 |
|
Benoit Legros (M-L)
132 |
|
Robert Bertrand [13] |
| Rivière-des-Mille-Îles |
|
Yolaine Savignac
11,025 |
|
Gilles-A. Perron
27,993 |
|
Érick Gauthier
3,064 |
|
Nicolas Du Cap
1,559 |
|
Marie-Martine Bédard
1,961 |
|
|
|
Gilles-A. Perron |
| Rivière-du-Nord |
|
Lorraine Auclair
9,509 |
|
Monique Guay
29,204 |
|
Catherine Brousseau
2,435 |
|
François Côté
1,290 |
|
Marcel Poirier
1,129 |
|
Christian Marcoux (Mar.)
459 |
|
Monique Guay |
| Terrebonne—Blainville |
|
Pierre Gingras
9,048 |
|
Diane Bourgeois
31,288 |
|
Patrick Légaré
2,582 |
|
Normand Beaudet
1,451 |
|
Martin Drapeau
1,554 |
|
|
|
Diane Bourgeois |
- ^ - Bertrand lost nomination
[edit] Ontario
Ontario was predicted to be the battle ground of this election. Most pundits believed that this is where the election was lost for the Conservatives. Ontario is home to more than one third of all of Canada's ridings. In the last three elections, right wing vote splitting has resulted in just six riding losses for the Liberals, compared to 299 riding wins. However, the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservatives have merged, and they should win many seats in Ontario, especially in rural ridings in midwestern Ontario, Central-eastern Ontario, and Central Ontario. The NDP has some support in various pockets in Ontario in the past, but has only won one riding in the last three elections, and one more in a by-election, both in Windsor. However, the NDP was expected to do well not only in Windsor, but in Hamilton, Downtown Toronto, Ottawa Centre, and possibly even in Northern Ontario.
[edit] Ottawa
- See also Canadian federal election results in Ottawa
edit
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Carleton—Lanark |
|
Dan Wicklum
22,185 |
|
Gordon O'Connor
32,664 |
|
Rick Prashaw
6,758 |
|
Stuart Langstaff
3,665 |
|
|
new district |
| Nepean—Carleton |
|
David Pratt
26,684 |
|
Pierre Poilievre
30,420 |
|
Phil Brown
6,072 |
|
Chris Walker
2,886 |
|
Brad Powers (Mar.)
561 |
|
David Pratt |
| Ottawa Centre |
|
Richard Mahoney
19,478 |
|
Mike Murphy
11,933 |
|
Ed Broadbent
25,734 |
|
David Chernushenko
4,730 |
|
Michael Foster (Mar.)
455
Louis Lang (M-L)
67
Stuart Ryan (Comm.)
90
Robert Gauthier (Ind.)
121
Carla Marie Dancey (CAP)
76 |
|
(vacant)[14] |
| Ottawa—Orléans |
|
Marc Godbout
26,383 |
|
Walter Robinson
23,655 |
|
Crystal Leblanc
5,905 |
|
Dan Biocchi
2,699 |
|
|
|
Eugène Bellemare† |
| Ottawa South |
|
David McGuinty
25,956 |
|
Alan Riddell
20,622 |
|
Monia Mazigh
8,080 |
|
John Ford
3,398 |
|
Brad Thomson (PC)
375
John Akpata (MP)
495
Saroj Bains (M-L)
79
Raymond Aubin (Ind.)
225 |
|
John Paul Manley† |
| Ottawa—Vanier |
|
Mauril Bélanger
25,952 |
|
Kevin Friday
12,769 |
|
Ric Dagenais
9,787 |
|
Raphaël Thierrin
3,628 |
|
Françoise Roy (M-L)
85
Carol Taylor (MP)
558 |
|
Mauril Bélanger |
| Ottawa West—Nepean |
|
Marlene Catterall
23,971 |
|
Sean Casey
22,591 |
|
Marlene Rivier
7,449 |
|
Neil Adair
2,748 |
|
Alexandre Legeais (M-L)
68
Russell Barth (MP)
430
Mary-Sue Haliburton (CAP)
121 |
|
Marlene Catterall |
- ^ Previously held by Liberal Mac Harb
[edit] Eastern Ontario
- See also Canadian federal election results in Eastern Ontario
edit
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
Glengarry—
Prescott—Russell |
|
Don Boudria
23,921 |
|
Alain Lalonde
18,729 |
|
Martin Cauvier
4,238 |
|
Roy Fjarlie
2,634 |
|
Tim Bloedow (CHP)
464 |
|
Don Boudria |
| Kingston and the Islands |
|
Peter Milliken
28,544 |
|
Blair MacLean
12,582 |
|
Rob Hutchison
8,964 |
|
Janina Fisher Balfour
3,339 |
|
Don Rogers (CAP)
179
Terry Marshall (CHP)
481
Karl Eric Walker (Ind.)
100
Rosie The Clown Elston (Ind.)
237 |
|
Peter Milliken |
Lanark—Frontenac—
Lennox and Addington |
|
Larry McCormick
17,507 |
|
Scott Reid
27,566 |
|
Ross Sutherland
7,418 |
|
John Baranyi
2,736 |
|
Bill Vankoughnet (Ind.)
820
George Kolaczynski (Mar.)
479 |
|
Larry McCormick |
| merged district |
|
Scott Reid |
| Leeds—Grenville |
|
Joe Jordan
16,967 |
|
Gord Brown
26,002 |
|
Steve Armstrong
5,834 |
|
Chris Bradshaw
2,722 |
|
|
|
Joe Jordan |
| Prince Edward—Hastings |
|
Bruce Knutson
20,042 |
|
Daryl Kramp
22,598 |
|
Dan Douglas
8,105 |
|
Tom Lawson
2,130 |
|
Joseph Sahadat (Ind.)
468 |
|
Lyle Vanclief† |
Renfrew—Nipissing—
Pembroke |
|
Rob Jamieson
14,798 |
|
Cheryl Gallant
27,494 |
|
Sue McSheffrey
5,720 |
|
Gord McLeod
1,191 |
|
Stanley Sambey (Mar.)
714 |
|
Cheryl Gallant |
Stormont—Dundas—
South Glengarry |
|
Bob Kilger
17,779 |
|
Guy Lauzon
21,678 |
|
Elaine MacDonald
5,387 |
|
Tom Manley
3,491 |
|
|
|
Bob Kilger |
[edit] Central Ontario
- See also Canadian federal election results in Central Ontario
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Barrie |
|
Aileen Carroll
21,233 |
|
Patrick Brown
19,938 |
|
Peter Bursztyn
5,312 |
|
Erich Jacoby-Hawkins
3,288 |
|
|
|
Aileen Carroll |
| Clarington—Scugog—Uxbridge |
|
Tim Lang
19,548 |
|
Bev Oda
20,813 |
|
Bruce Rogers
7,721 |
|
Virginia Ervin
2,085 |
|
Durk Bruinsma (CHP)
915 |
|
Alex Shepherd 1 |
| Dufferin—Caledon |
|
Murray Calder
17,557 |
|
David Tilson
19,270 |
|
Rita Landry
3,798 |
|
Ted Alexander
3,947 |
|
Ursula Ellis (CHP)
443 |
|
Murray Calder |
| Grey—Bruce—Owen Sound |
|
Ovid L. Jackson
17,824 |
|
Larry Miller
22,411 |
|
Sebastian Ostertag
6,516 |
|
Alex Drossos
2,076 |
|
Steven Taylor (CHP)
982 |
|
Ovid L. Jackson |
| Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock |
|
John O'Reilly
19,294 |
|
Barry Devolin
24,731 |
|
Gil McElroy
8,427 |
|
Tim Holland
2,637 |
|
Peter Vogel (CHP)
493
Charles Olito (Ind.)
330 |
|
John O'Reilly |
| Newmarket—Aurora |
|
Martha Hall Findlay
21,129 |
|
Belinda Stronach
21,818 |
|
Ed Chudak
5,111 |
|
Daryl Wyatt
2,298 |
|
Dorian Baxter (PC)
1,079 |
|
new district |
| Northumberland—Quinte West |
|
Paul Macklin
22,989 |
|
Doug Galt
22,676 |
|
Russ Christianson
9,007 |
|
Steve Haylestrom
3,016 |
|
|
|
Paul Macklin |
| Peterborough |
|
Peter Adams
25,099 |
|
James Jackson
18,393 |
|
Linda Slavin
10,957 |
|
Brent Wood
3,182 |
|
|
|
Peter Adams |
| Simcoe—Grey |
|
Paul Bonwick
22,396 |
|
Helena Guergis
22,496 |
|
Colin Mackinnon
5,532 |
|
Peter Ellis
2,668 |
|
Peter Vander Zaag (CHP)
2,285 |
|
Paul Bonwick |
| Simcoe North |
|
Paul DeVillers
23,664 |
|
Peter Stock
20,570 |
|
Jen Hill
6,162 |
|
Mary Lou Kirby
3,486 |
|
Adrian Kooger (CHP)
544
Ian Woods (CAP)
145 |
|
Paul DeVillers |
| York—Simcoe |
|
Kate Wilson
16,763 |
|
Peter Van Loan
21,343 |
|
Sylvia Gerl
5,314 |
|
Bob Burrows
2,576 |
|
Vicki Gunn (CHP)
588
Stephen Sircelj (PC)
670 |
|
Karen Kraft Sloan ² |
[edit] Southern Durham and York
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
| This sprawl]ing and rapidly-growing suburban area to the north and east of the City of Toronto encompasses the eastern portion of what Canadian political watchers in the early nineties dubbed the "905 belt"—a swath of middle class suburban voters roughly corresponding to the same boundaries of the 905 Area Code that can be readily tipped from the Liberal to the Conservative column. 905's buy-in on the provincial level to Mike Harris's Common Sense Revolution secured him two conservative majority governments, while its rejection of the Tories in 2002 paved the way for Dalton McGuinty's landslide. 905 solidly supported the Chrétien Liberals, but Conservatives hope that the absence of vote-splitting and rising national fortunes can lead to substantial pickups on election night.
Notes:
1 - Grose lost nomination
2 - Caplan not seeking re-election
|
••••••••• |
2004 |
| ••••••• |
2000 |
| ••••••• |
1997 |
| •••• |
1993 |
| •••• |
1988 |
| ••• |
1984 |
| ••• |
1980 |
| ••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Ajax—Pickering |
Mark Holland
21,706 |
René Soetens
14,666 |
Kevin Modeste
5,286 |
Karen MacDonald
1,951 |
|
new district |
| Markham—Unionville |
John McCallum
30,442 |
Joe Li
10,325 |
Janice Hagan
3,993 |
Ed Wong
1,148 |
|
John McCallum |
| Oak Ridges—Markham |
Lui Temelkovski
31,964 |
Bob Callow
20,712 |
Pamela Courtot
5,430 |
Bernadette Manning
2,406 |
Jim Conrad (PC)
820
Maurice Whittle (CHP)
458 |
new district |
| Oshawa |
Louise Parkes
14,510 |
Colin Carrie
15,815 |
Sid Ryan
15,352 |
Liisa Whalley
1,850 |
Tim Sullivan (M-L)
91 |
Ivan Grose1 |
| Pickering—Scarborough East |
Dan McTeague
27,312 |
Tim Dobson
13,417 |
Gary Dale
5,392 |
Matthew Pollesel
1,809 |
|
Dan McTeague |
| Richmond Hill |
Bryon Wilfert
27,102 |
Peter Merrifield
11,530 |
Nella Cotrupi
4,495 |
Tim Rudkins
2,144 |
Ellena Lam (PC)
1,074 |
Bryon Wilfert |
| Thornhill |
Susan Kadis
28,709 |
Josh Cooper
18,125 |
Rick Morelli
3,671 |
Lloyd Helferty
1,622 |
Simion Iron (Ind.)
233
Benjamin Fitzerman (Ind.)
241 |
Elinor Caplan2 |
| Vaughan |
Maurizio Bevilacqua
31,430 |
Joe Spina
11,821 |
Octavia Beckles
4,371 |
Russell Korus
1,722 |
Paolo Fabrizio (Libert.)
388
Walter Aolari (CAP)
192 |
Maurizio Bevilacqua |
| Whitby—Oshawa |
Judi Longfield
25,649 |
Ian MacNeil
20,531 |
Maret Sadem-Thompson
8,002 |
Michael MacDonald
2,759 |
|
Judi Longfield |
[edit] Central Toronto
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
| Since 1993, Central Toronto has been a bastion of Liberal support. It is far more competitive in the 2004 election, however, largely because new NDP leader Jack Layton is a former Toronto city councillor who has reoriented the NDP towards drawing support in the urban centres. Most of the ridings are remain safe Liberal seats, with only four or five seats vulnerable to the New Democrats and Conservatives.
Notes:
1 - Caccia not seeking re-election
|
•••••••••• |
2004 |
| •••••••••• |
2000 |
| •••••••••• |
1997 |
| •••••••••• |
1993 |
| •••••••••• |
1988 |
| ••••••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Beaches—East York |
Maria Minna
22,494 |
Nick Nikopoulos
6,603 |
Peter Tabuns
15,156 |
Peter Davison
2,127 |
Roger Carter (M-L)
46
Daniel Dufresne (Mar.)
365
Edward Slota (Ind.)
80
Miguel Figueroa (Comm.)
62 |
Maria Minna |
| Davenport |
Mario Silva
16,773 |
Theresa Rodrigues
3,077 |
Rui Pires
11,292 |
Mark O'Brien
1,384 |
Sarah Thompson (M-L)
79
Elmer Gale (Mar.)
251
John Riddell (CAP)
97
Johan Boyden (Comm.)
137 |
Charles Caccia1 |
| Don Valley West |
John Godfrey
30,615 |
David Turnbull
14,495 |
David Thomas
4,393 |
Serge Abbat
1,703 |
|
John Godfrey |
| Eglinton—Lawrence |
Joe Volpe
28,360 |
Bernie Tanz
11,792 |
Max Silverman
4,886 |
Shel Goldstein
1,924 |
Corrinne Prévost (CAP)
115 |
Joe Volpe |
| Parkdale—High Park |
Sarmite Bulte
19,727 |
Jurij Klufas
7,221 |
Peggy Nash
16,201 |
Niel Spiegel
3,249 |
Lorne Gershuny (M-L)
130
Terry Parker (Mar.)
384 |
Sarmite Bulte |
| St. Paul's |
Carolyn Bennett
32,171 |
Barry Cline
11,226 |
Norm Tobias
8,667 |
Peter Elgie
3,031 |
|
Carolyn Bennett |
| Toronto Centre |
Bill Graham
30,336 |
Megan Harris
7,936 |
Michael Shapcott
12,747 |
Gabriel Draven
2,097 |
Philip Fernandez (M-L)
65
Dan Goldstick (Comm.)
106
Kevin Peck (CAP)
63
Jay Wagner (Mar.)
313 |
Bill Graham |
| Toronto—Danforth |
Dennis Mills
19,803 |
Loftus Cuddy
2,975 |
Jack Layton
22,198 |
Jim Harris
2,575 |
Scott Yee (Mar.)
265
Marcell Rodden (M-L)
84 |
Dennis Mills |
| Trinity—Spadina |
Tony Ianno
23,202 |
David Watters
4,605 |
Olivia Chow
22,397 |
Mark Viitala
2,259 |
Asif Hossain (PC)
531
Nick Lin (M-L)
102
Daniel Knezetic (Ind.)
89
Tristan Downe-Dewdney (CAP)
91 |
Tony Ianno |
| York South—Weston |
Alan Tonks
20,537 |
Stephen Halicki
5,133 |
Paul Ferreira
7,281 |
Jessica Fracassi
1,199 |
Shirley Hawley (Comm.)
175 |
Alan Tonks |
[edit] Suburban Toronto
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
| Suburban Toronto ridings have collectively racked up the largest Liberal numbers in the country in recent years, with ridings like Scarborough—Rouge River delivering upwards of 80% of the vote to the Chrétien Liberals in 2000. The region, however, went uniformly blue during Brian Mulroney's 1984 sweep; four years earlier its changing whims almost single-handedly prevented Joe Clark from re-forming a government. Falling Liberal polling numbers might put this area in play for the first time in fifteen years, although star candidate Ken Dryden is expected win the safe seat of York Centre. The NDP is highly unlikely to win any seats, but may play the spoiler to Liberal victories.
Notes:
1 - Collenette not seeking re-election.
2 - formerly held by Allan Rock.
3 - Eggleton not seeking re-election.
|
•••••••••••• |
2004 |
| •••••••••••• |
2000 |
| •••••••••••• |
1997 |
| •••••••••••• |
1993 |
| •••••••••••• |
1988 |
| •••••••••••• |
1984 |
| •••••••••••• |
1980 |
| •••••••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Don Valley East |
Yasmin Ratansi
21,864 |
David Johnson
11,206 |
Valerie Mah
5,287 |
Dan King
1,172 |
Ryan Kidd (CHP)
351
Christopher Black (Comm.)
149 |
David Collenette1 |
| Etobicoke Centre |
Borys Wrzesnewskyj
30,441 |
Lida Preyma
14,829 |
John Richmond
5,174 |
Margo Pearson
1,676 |
France Tremblay (M-L)
112 |
(vacant)2 |
| Etobicoke—Lakeshore |
Jean Augustine
24,909 |
John Capobianco
15,159 |
Margaret Anne McHugh
7,179 |
John Huculiak
2,201 |
Janice Murray (M-L)
129 |
Jean Augustine |
| Etobicoke North |
Roy Cullen
19,450 |
Rupinder Nannar
5,737 |
Cesar Martello
3,761 |
Mir Kamal
605 |
Anna Di Carlo (M-L)
195
George Szebik (Ind.)
309
William Ubbens (CHP)
661 |
Roy Cullen |
| Scarborough—Agincourt |
Jim Karygiannis
26,400 |
Andrew Faust
8,649 |
D'arcy Palmer
4,182 |
Wayne Yeechong
919 |
Tony Karadimas (PC)
1,048 |
Jim Karygiannis |
| Scarborough Centre |
John Cannis
20,740 |
John Mihtis
8,515 |
Greg Gogan
6,156 |
Greg Bonser
1,045 |
Dorothy Sauras (Comm.)
152 |
John Cannis |
| Scarborough—Guildwood |
John McKay
20,950 |
Tom Varesh
8,277 |
Sheila White
5,885 |
Paul Charbonneau
1,106 |
Brenda Thompson (CAP)
200 |
John McKay |
| Scarborough—Rouge River |
Derek Lee
22,564 |
Tony Backhurst
5,184 |
Fauzia Khan
3,635 |
Kathryn Holloway
610 |
Raymond Cho (Ind.)
6,962 |
Derek Lee |
| Scarborough Southwest |
Tom Wappel
18,776 |
Heather Jewell
9,028 |
Dan Harris
8,471 |
Peter Van Dalen
1,520 |
Elizabeth Rowley (Comm.)
168 |
Tom Wappel |
| Willowdale |
Jim Peterson
30,855 |
Jovan Boseovski
11,615 |
Yvonne Bobb
4,812 |
Sharolyn Vettese
1,844 |
Ardavan Behrouzi (PC)
883
Bernadette Michael (Ind.)
253 |
Jim Peterson |
| York Centre |
Ken Dryden†
21,520 |
Michael Mostyn
10,318 |
Peter Flaherty
5,376 |
Constantine Kritsonis
1,240 |
Max Royz (Ind.)
824 |
Art Eggleton3 |
| York West |
Judy Sgro
17,903 |
Leslie Soobrian
3,120 |
Sandra Romano Anthony
4,228 |
Tim McKellar
824 |
Joseph Grubb (CHP)
1,580 |
Judy Sgro |
[edit] Brampton, Mississauga and Oakville
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
| This area is part of the rapidly growing 905 belt, where the Conservatives are hoping for a breakthrough, as it is a traditionally Conservative area. Until their collapse in 1993, the Conservatives only lost two ridings in this area between 1979 and 1988. In the riding of Brampton-Springdale, the Liberal riding association is campaigning for the NDP, to protest Paul Martin's appointment of candidate Ruby Dhalla. The original candidate was known to be a supporter of John Manley in last year's Liberal leadership race. Running against incumbent Colleen Beaumier in Brampton West is former Ontario cabinet minister and federal Conservative leadership candidate Tony Clement.
Notes:
1 - Hundal replaced previous Conservative candidate Gurjit Grewal after a past conviction for assault came to light.
2 - Assadourian not seeking re-election.
3 - Mahoney lost nomination.
|
••••••••• |
2004 |
| •••••••• |
2000 |
| •••••••• |
1997 |
| ••••••• |
1993 |
| ••••••• |
1988 |
| ••• |
1984 |
| ••• |
1980 |
| ••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Bramalea—Gore—Malton |
Gurbax S. Malhi
20,394 |
Raminder Gill
12,594 |
Fernando Miranda
6,113 |
Sharleen McDowall
1,832 |
Frank Chilelli (M-L)
237 |
Gurbax S. Malhi |
| Brampton—Springdale |
Ruby Dhalla†
19,385 |
Sam Hundal1
11,182 |
Kathy Pounder
8,038 |
Nick Hudson
1,927 |
Gurdev Singh Mattu (Comm.)
86 |
Sarkis Assadourian2 |
| Brampton West |
Colleen Beaumier
21,254 |
Tony Clement
18,768 |
Chris Moise
4,920 |
Sanjeev Goel
1,603 |
Tom Bose (Ind.)
371 |
Colleen Beaumier |
| Mississauga—Brampton South |
Navdeep Singh Bains
24,753 |
Parvinder Sandhu
10,433 |
Larry Taylor
6,411 |
Paul Simas
1,525 |
David Gershuny (M-L)
185 |
new district |
| Mississauga East—Cooksville |
Albina Guarnieri
22,435 |
Riina DeFeria
10,299 |
Jim Gill
4,619 |
Jason Hinchcliffe
1,167 |
Pierre Chénier (M-L)
154
Sally Wong (CHP)
778
Andrew Seitz (Ind.)
114 |
Albina Guarnieri |
| Mississauga—Erindale |
Carolyn Parrish
28,246 |
Bob Dechert
16,600 |
Simon Black
5,104 |
Jeff Brownridge
1,855 |
David Greig (M-L)
145 |
Carolyn Parrish |
| merged district |
| Steve Mahoney3 |
| Mississauga South |
Paul Szabo
24,628 |
Phil Green
16,027 |
Michael James Culkin
5,004 |
Neeraj Jain
1,899 |
Dagmar Sullivan (M-L)
107 |
Paul Szabo |
| Mississauga—Streetsville |
Wajid Khan
22,768 |
Nina Tangri
14,287 |
Manjinder Rai
4,266 |
Otto Casanova
2,415 |
Peter Creighton (PC)
1,293 |
new district |
| Oakville |
Bonnie Brown
28,729 |
Rick Byers
19,524 |
Alison Myrden
4,027 |
Tania Orton
2,861 |
Zeshan Shahbaz (CAP)
95 |
Bonnie Brown |
[edit] Hamilton, Burlington and Niagara
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
| This region has been traditionally Conservative, however the Liberal Party swept the region, along with most of the rest in Ontario, in the last three elections. However, most Liberal victories outside Hamilton proper can be attributed to vote-splitting between the two right-wing parties. Now that they have merged, the Conservatives are targeting several ridings in the area in this election. In Hamilton, the New Democrats is looking for major gains as well. They held the seat of Hamilton Mountain twice. Traditionally, Liberal support has been concentrated in Niagara Falls, Welland and in Hamilton. The Liberal membership in at least one Hamilton riding is heavily divided, with disgruntled former MP Sheila Copps rumoured to be running for the NDP or as an independent before she announced she was quitting politics.
Notes:
1 - Bryden defected from Liberals in Feb. '04; lost Conservative nomination.
2 - Reed not seeking re-election.
3 - Copps lost nomination.
4 - Pillitteri not seeking re-election.
5 - Tirabassi lost nomination.
|
•••••••••• |
2004 |
| ••••••••••• |
2000 |
| ••••••••••• |
1997 |
| ••••••••••• |
1993 |
| ••••••••••• |
1988 |
| ••••••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale |
Russ Powers
21,935 |
David Sweet
19,135 |
Gordon Guyatt
11,557 |
David Januczkowski
2,636 |
|
John Bryden1 |
| Burlington |
Paddy Torsney
27,423 |
Mike Wallace
23,389 |
David Laird
6,581 |
Angela Reid
3,169 |
John Herman Wubs (CHP)
429 |
Paddy Torsney |
| Halton |
Gary Carr
27,362 |
Dean Martin
21,704 |
Anwar Naqvi
4,642 |
Frank Marchetti
2,889 |
|
Julian Reed2 |
| Hamilton Centre |
Stan Keyes
14,948 |
Leon O'Connor
6,714 |
David Christopherson
20,321 |
Anne Marie Pavlov
1,422 |
Stephen Downey (CHP)
520
Jamilé Ghaddar (M-L)
91
Michael Baldasaro (Ind.)
345 |
Stan Keyes |
| Hamilton East—Stoney Creek |
Tony Valeri
18,417 |
Fred Eisenberger
10,888 |
Tony DePaulo
17,490 |
Richard Safka
1,446 |
Bob Mann (CHP)
166
Sam Cino (Ind.)
393 |
Tony Valeri |
| merged district |
| Sheila Copps3 |
| Hamilton Mountain |
Beth Phinney
18,548 |
Tom Jackson
15,590 |
Chris Charlton
17,552 |
Jo Pavlov
1,378 |
Paul Lane (M-L)
214 |
Beth Phinney |
| Niagara Falls |
Victor Pietrangelo
18,745 |
Rob Nicholson
19,882 |
Wayne Gates
10,680 |
Ted Mousseau
2,071 |
|
Gerry Pillitteri4 |
| Niagara West—Glanbrook |
Debbie Zimmerman
20,210 |
Dean Allison
20,874 |
David Heatley
7,681 |
Tom Ferguson
1,761 |
David Bylsma (CHP)
1,107
Phil Rose (CAP)
179 |
new district |
| St. Catharines |
Walt Lastewka
21,277 |
Leo Bonomi
18,261 |
Ted Mouradian
10,135 |
Jim Fannon
1,927 |
Elaine Couto (M-L)
61
Linda Klassen (CHP)
751
Jane Paxton (CAP)
204 |
Walt Lastewka |
| Welland |
John Maloney
19,642 |
Mel Grunstein
12,997 |
Jody Di Bartolomeo
14,623 |
Ryan McLaughlin
1,454 |
Ron Walker (M-L)
113
Irma Ruiter (CHP)
735 |
John Maloney |
| merged district |
| Tony Tirabassi5 |
[edit] Midwestern Ontario
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
This area is traditionally conservative, except for the riding of Brant which has not voted Conservative since 1958. Brant is where the NDP did will with popular MP Derek Blackburn from 1971-1993. However, the NDP have been unable to duplicate this success in this area, and are unlikely to do so. The Conservatives won every other seat except for three seats in 1979, 1980, 1984, and 1988 sweeping the area (except for Brant) in 1984 and 1979. The three seats that went Liberal were Guelph and Kitchener (1980) and Haldimand-Norfolk (1988). Since the collapse of the Conservatives, and vote splitting the Liberals swept this area in 1993, 1997 and 2000. However, with a united right, this is unlikely to be duplicated a fourth time.
Notes:
1 - Stewart not seeking re-election
2 - Finlay not seeking re-election
|
••••••••••• |
2004 |
| •••••••••• |
2000 |
| •••••••••• |
1997 |
| ••••••••• |
1993 |
| ••••••••• |
1988 |
| ••••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Brant |
Lloyd St. Amand
20,455 |
Gregory Martin
17,792 |
Lynn Bowering
11,826 |
Helen-Anne Embry
2,738 |
John Turmel (Ind.)
373
Barra Gots (CHP)
570 |
Jane Stewart1 |
| Cambridge |
Janko Peric
18,899 |
Gary Goodyear
19,123 |
Gary Price
10,392 |
Gareth White
2,506 |
John Oprea (Ind.)
134
John Gots (CHP)
395
Alex Gryc (Ind.)
114 |
Janko Peric |
| Guelph |
Brenda Chamberlain
23,442 |
Jon Dearden
13,721 |
Phil Allt
10,527 |
Mike Nagy
3,866 |
Manuel Couto (M-L)
66
Peter Ellis (CHP)
634
Lyne Rivard (Mar.)
291 |
Brenda Chamberlain |
| Haldimand—Norfolk |
Bob Speller
19,336 |
Diane Finley
20,981 |
Carrie Sinkowski
7,143 |
Colin Jones
1,703 |
Steven Elgersma (CHP)
617 |
Bob Speller |
| Huron—Bruce |
Paul Steckle
25,538 |
Barbara Fisher
15,930 |
Grant Robertson
6,707 |
Dave Vasey
1,518 |
Glen Smith (Mar.)
638
Dave Joslin (CHP)
958 |
Paul Steckle |
| Kitchener Centre |
Karen Redman
21,264 |
Thomas Ichim
12,412 |
Richard Walsh-Bowers
8,717 |
Karol Vesely
2,450 |
Mark Corbiere (Ind.)
277 |
Karen Redman |
| Kitchener—Conestoga |
Lynn Myers
17,819 |
Frank Luellau
14,903 |
Len Carter
6,623 |
Kris Stapleton
2,793 |
|
Lynn Myers |
| Kitchener—Waterloo |
Andrew Telegdi
28,015 |
Steven Strauss
17,155 |
Edwin Laryea
9,267 |
Pauline Richards
3,277 |
Frank Ellis (CHP)
379
Ciprian Mihalcea (Ind.)
124 |
Andrew Telegdi |
| Oxford |
Murray Coutler
14,011 |
David Mackenzie
20,606 |
Zoé Dorcas Kunschner
6,673 |
Irene Tietz
1,951 |
Kaye Sargent (Libert.)
226
Alex Kreider (CAP)
108
James Bender (Mar.)
794
Leslie Bartley (CHP)
1,534 |
John Finlay2 |
| Perth—Wellington |
Brian Innes
15,032 |
Gary Schellenberger
18,879 |
Robert Roth
7,027 |
John Cowling
2,770 |
Irma Devries (CHP)
1,273 |
Gary Schellenberger |
| Wellington—Halton Hills |
Bruce Hood
19,173 |
Mike Chong
21,479 |
Noel Duignan
5,974 |
Brent Bouteiller
2,725 |
Pat Woode (CHP)
826 |
new district |
[edit] Southwestern Ontario
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Southwestern Ontario is traditionally a very Liberal region of Ontario, but is divided between urban and rural. The Liberals do well in the cities of Windsor and London, and Conservatives do well in the rural areas of Kent County, Essex County, Lambton County, Elgin County, and Middlesex County. The NDP also has done well in the past, and currently in Windsor and London, where unions are strong. The NDP was elected in both Windsor-Walkerville and London-Fanshawe in 1984 and 1988, and hold both Windsor seats currently. The Liberas swept all but the riding of Elgin in 1980, the Conservatives swept all but the two Windsor ridings in 1984, and one London riding. The Liberals swept every single riding here in 1993 and 1997, and all but the riding of Windsor-St. Clair in 2000.
|
•••••••••• |
2004 |
| •••••••••• |
2000 |
| •••••••••• |
1997 |
| ••••••••••• |
1993 |
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1988 |
| ••••••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Chatham-Kent—Essex |
Jerry Pickard
17,435 |
Dave Van Kesteren
17,028 |
Kathleen Kevany
7,538 |
Rod Hetherington
1,845 |
Margaret Mondaca (M-L)
150 |
Jerry Pickard |
| Elgin—Middlesex—London |
Gar Knutson
15,860 |
Joe Preston
20,333 |
Tim McCallum
6,763 |
Julie-Ann Stodolny
2,033 |
Ken DeVries (CHP)
1,246
Will Arlow (CAP)
146 |
Gar Knutson |
| Essex |
Susan Whelan
17,926 |
Jeff Watson
18,755 |
David Tremblay
12,519 |
Paul Forman
1,981 |
Robert Cruise (M-L)
105 |
Susan Whelan |
| London—Fanshawe |
Pat O'Brien
15,664 |
John Mazzilli
10,811 |
Irene Mathyssen
12,511 |
Ed Moore
1,634 |
Derrall Bellaire (PC)
453
Cameron Switzer (M-L)
65 |
Pat O'Brien |
| London North Centre |
Joe Fontana
21,472 |
Tim Gatten
13,677 |
Joe Swan
12,034 |
Bronagh Morgan
2,376 |
Rod Morley (PC)
220
Gustavo Granados-Ocon (M-L)
67 |
Joe Fontana |
| London West |
Sue Barnes
25,061 |
Mike Menear
17,335 |
Gina Barber
9,522 |
Rebecca Bromwich
2,611 |
Steve Hunter (PC)
511
Margaret Villamizar (M-L)
67 |
Sue Barnes |
| Middlesex—Kent—Lambton |
Rose-Marie Ur
19,452 |
Bev Shipley
19,288 |
Kevin Blake
7,376 |
Allan McKeown
1,834 |
Allan James (CHP)
1,015 |
Rose-Marie Ur |
| Sarnia—Lambton |
Roger Gallaway
19,932 |
Marcel Beaubien
14,500 |
Greg Agar
7,764 |
Anthony Cramer
2,548 |
Dave Core (Ind.)
749
John Elliot (Ind.)
229
Gary De Boer (CHP)
1,819 |
Roger Gallaway |
| Windsor—Tecumseh |
Rick Limoges
16,219 |
Rick Fuschi
9,827 |
Joe Comartin
20,037 |
Élizabeth Powles
1,613 |
Laura Chesnik (M-L)
182 |
Joe Comartin |
| Windsor West |
Richard Pollock
13,831 |
Jordan Katz
8,348 |
Brian Masse
20,297 |
Rob Spring
1,545 |
Enver Villamizar (M-L)
134 |
Brian Masse |
[edit] Northern Ontario
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Northern Ontario is traditionally a very Liberal area in Ontario, but with historically strong showings by the NDP. The Conservatives have only won a combined total of 9 seats in Northern Ontario since 1979, 4 of which in the very Conservative Parry Sound Muskoka. The NDP has consistently done well here, finishing either first or second, even if it means not winning seats. They are especially strong in Thunder Bay-Atikokan, Nickel Belt, and Sault Ste. Marie, but have also won seats in Kenora-Rainy River, Thunder Bay-Nipigon, and Timmins Chapleau. The only bad showing by the Liberals since 1979 came in 1984, where they still managed 3 of 12 seats winning in Algoma, Sudbury, and Cochrane despite a national Conservative landslide.
Notes:
1 - Nault not seeking re-election
2 - Wood not seeking re-election
3 - Dromisky not seeking re-election
4 - Bélair and Serré not seeking re-election
|
••••••••• |
2004 |
| •••••••••• |
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1993 |
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1988 |
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1984 |
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1980 |
| •••••••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Algoma—Manitoulin—Kapuskasing |
Brent St. Denis
14,276 |
Blaine Armstrong
8,093 |
Carol Hughes
11,051 |
Lindsay Killen
1,449 |
|
Brent St. Denis |
| Kenora |
Roger Valley
8,563 |
Bill Brown
6,598 |
Susan Barclay
7,577 |
Carl Chaboyer
898 |
|
Bob Nault1 |
| Nickel Belt |
Raymond Bonin
17,188 |
Michel Dupont
7,628 |
Claude Gravelle
13,980 |
Steve Lafleur
1,031 |
Don Lavallee (Ind.)
217
Steve Rutchinski (M-L)
51
Michel Ethier (Mar.)
430 |
Raymond Bonin |
| Nipissing—Timiskaming |
Anthony Rota
18,254 |
Al McDonald
16,001 |
Dave Fluri
7,354 |
Les Wilcox
1,329 |
Ross MacLean (CAP)
204 |
Bob Wood2 |
| Parry Sound—Muskoka |
Andy Mitchell
19,271 |
Keith Montgomery
15,970 |
Jo-Anne Boulding
5,171 |
Glen Hodgson
3,524 |
|
Andy Mitchell |
| Sault Ste. Marie |
Carmen F. Provenzano
15,760 |
Cameron Ross
9,969 |
Tony Martin
16,512 |
Julie Emmerson
814 |
Mike Taffarel (M-L)
67 |
Carmen F. Provenzano |
| Sudbury |
Diane Marleau
18,914 |
Stephen Butcher
9,008 |
Gerry McIntaggart
12,781 |
Luke Norton
1,999 |
David Starbuck (M-L)
100 |
Diane Marleau |
| Thunder Bay—Rainy River |
Ken Boshcoff
14,290 |
David Leskowski
9,559 |
John Rafferty
10,781 |
Russ Aegard
856 |
Johannes Scheibler (CHP)
267
Doug Thompson (Mar.)
547 |
Stan Dromisky3 |
| Thunder Bay—Superior North |
Joe Comuzzi
15,022 |
Beverly Sarafin
7,394 |
Bruce Hyer
10,230 |
Carl Rose
1,614 |
Denis Carrière (Mar.)
645 |
Joe Comuzzi |
| Timmins—James Bay |
Ray Chénier
13,525 |
Andrew Van Oosten
5,682 |
Charlie Angus
14,138 |
Marsha Kriss
767 |
|
Réginald Bélair4 |
| merged district |
| Ben Serré4 |
[edit] Manitoba
Manitoba is traditionally split between the NDP, the Liberals, and the Conservatives. This is especially true in the city of Winnipeg where most Manitobans live. However, due to vote splitting in recent elections, neither the Progressive Conservatives or the Canadian Alliance/Reform Party have been able to win in Winnipeg. In rural Manitoba, the Liberals are usually shut out of elections (exception in 1993). Conservative support is normally in the more populous south, with NDP support in the sparsely populated north, which usually only means one seat.
[edit] Rural Manitoba
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Rural Manitoba is traditionally very Conservative, sith some NDP leanings. Vote splitting only effected this area in 1993, when the Liberals nearly swept the region, winning all but one seat. In 1997 they could keep one. The Progressive Conservatives did their best here, out of all of western Canada, winning the riding of Brandon-Souris in both 1997 and 2000. The NDP's strength lies in the riding of Churchill, in northern Manitoba where they have consistently won in.
Notes:
1 - Borostik not seeking re-election
2 - Hilstrom not seeking re-election
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2004 |
| •••••• |
2000 |
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1997 |
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1988 |
| ••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Brandon—Souris |
Murray Downing
8,522 |
Merv Tweed
18,209 |
Mike Abbey
6,740 |
David Kattenburg
1,264 |
Colin Atkins (CHP)
351
Lisa Gallagher (Comm.)
118 |
Rick Borotsik1 |
| Churchill |
Ron Evans
7,604 |
Bill Archer
2,999 |
Bev Desjarlais
8,612 |
Dave Nickarz
612 |
|
Bev Desjarlais |
| Dauphin—Swan River |
Donald Dewar
6,809 |
Inky Mark
18,025 |
Walter Kolisnyk
7,341 |
Lindy Clubb
673 |
David Andres (CHP)
560 |
Inky Mark |
| Portage—Lisgar |
Don Kuhl
6,174 |
Brian Pallister
22,939 |
Daren Van Den Bussche
3,251 |
Marc Payette
856 |
David Reimer (CHP)
1,458
Allister Cucksey (Comm.)
117 |
Brian Pallister |
| Provencher |
Peter Epp
8,975 |
Vic Toews
22,694 |
Sarah Zaharia
3,244 |
Janine Gibson
1,100 |
|
Vic Toews |
| Selkirk—Interlake |
Bruce Benson
9,059 |
James Bezan
18,727 |
Duane Nicol
10,516 |
Trevor Farley
982 |
Anthony Barendregt (CHP)
353 |
Howard Hilstrom2 |
[edit] Winnipeg
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Winnipeg has traditionally been a three-way race between the NDP, the Conservatives and the Liberals. That ended in 1993, and since then nor the Progressive Conservatives or the Alliance/Reform Party have been able to win a seat here. Now that they are merged, their prospects look good to return Winnipeg once again into a three way race.
Notes:
1 - formerly held by John Harvard
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| ••••••• |
1988 |
| ••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Charleswood—St. James |
Glen Murray
17,954 |
Steven Fletcher
18,688 |
Peter Carney
4,283 |
Andrew Basham
880 |
Dan Zupansky (Mar.)
337
Beatriz Alas (Comm.)
49 |
(vacant)1 |
| Elmwood—Transcona |
Tanya Parks
4,923 |
Bryan McLeod
7,644 |
Bill Blaikie
15,221 |
Elijah Gair
719 |
Gavin Whittaker (Mar.)
311
Robert Scott (CHP)
386
Paul Sidon (Comm.)
74 |
Bill Blaikie |
| Kildonan—St. Paul |
Terry Duguid
13,304 |
Joy Smith
13,582 |
Lorene Mahoney
8,202 |
Jacob Giesbrecht
756 |
Katharine Reimer (CHP)
278
Rebecca Whittaker (Mar.)
290 |
new district |
| Saint Boniface |
Raymond Simard
17,989 |
Ken Cooper
11,956 |
Mathieu Allard
6,954 |
Daniel Backé
925 |
Jeannine Moquin-Perry (CHP)
378
Chris Buors (Mar.)
317
Gérard Guay (Comm.)
77 |
Raymond Simard |
| Winnipeg Centre |
David Northcott
9,285 |
Robert Eng
3,631 |
Pat Martin
12,149 |
Robin Faye
1,151 |
John Siedleski (Mar.)
346
Douglas Schweitzer (Ind.)
92
Anna-Celestrya Carr (Comm.)
114 |
Pat Martin |
| Winnipeg North |
Rey Pagtakhan
9,491 |
Kris Stevenson
3,186 |
Judy Wasylycia-Leis
12,507 |
Alon Weinberg
531 |
Eric Truijen (CHP)
141
Darrell Rankin (Comm.)
111 |
Rey Pagtakhan |
| merged district |
| Judy Wasylycia-Leis |
| Winnipeg South |
Reg Alcock
19,270 |
Rod Bruinooge
12,770 |
Catherine Green
4,217 |
Ron Cameron
1,003 |
Jane MacDiarmid (CHP)
296 |
Reg Alcock |
| Winnipeg South Centre |
Anita Neville
18,138 |
Raj Joshi
10,516 |
James Allum
8,270 |
Ian Scott
1,508 |
Andy Caisse (Mar.)
293
Magnus Thompson (CAP)
114
Andrew Dalgliesh (Comm.)
81 |
Anita Neville |
[edit] Saskatchewan
In terms of party lines, Saskatchewan is not divided up between north and south but by urban and rural. Traditionally, Saskatchewan has been a two-way race between the Conservatives, and later the Reform/Alliance and the NDP. Recent vote splitting has allowed the Liberals to come through and win a few seats in this polarized province. Urban Saskatchewan has tended to vote NDP and rural Saskatchewan has tended to vote Conservative. This is especially true in provincial politics, where riding boundaries more reflect the urban/rural divide. Both Saskatoon and Regina, Saskatchewans largest cities are split into 4 ridings each. All eight of these ridings are generally split evenly between rural and urban. Northern Saskatchewan has in the past been the stand alone region of rural Saskatchewan, usually voting for the NDP.
[edit] Southern Saskatchewan
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Southern Saskatchewan is traditionally split between the NDP and the Conservatives. In 1993, the Reform Party came along, and stole most Conservative votes, but also made room for the Liberals to win seats here, and make the area a 3 way race.
Notes:
1 - Spencer is former CA
2 - Devine's Conservative nomination blocked
3 - Bailey not seeking re-election
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1988 |
| ••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Cypress Hills—Grasslands |
Bill Caton
5,547 |
David L. Anderson
18,010 |
Jeff Potts
4,901 |
Bev Currie
1,243 |
|
David L. Anderson |
| Palliser |
John Williams
8,244 |
Dave Batters
11,909 |
Dick Proctor
11,785 |
Brian Rands
829 |
Harold Stephan (CHP)
451 |
Dick Proctor |
| Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre |
Gary Anderson
10,167 |
Tom Lukiwski
10,289 |
Moe Kovatch
8,300 |
Fiorindo Agi
716 |
Larry Spencer (Ind.)
1,506 |
Larry Spencer1 |
| Regina—Qu'Appelle |
Allyce Herle
7,793 |
Andrew Scheer
10,012 |
Lorne Nystrom
9,151 |
Deanna Robilliard
639 |
Mary Nelson (CHP)
293
Lorne Widger (Ind.)
106 |
Lorne Nystrom |
| Souris—Moose Mountain |
Lonny McKague
6,001 |
Ed Komarnicki
11,306 |
Robert Stringer
4,202 |
Sigfredo Gonzalez
|
Grant Devine2 (Ind.)
8,399
Robert Jacobson (CHP)
191 |
Roy H. Bailey3 |
| Wascana |
Ralph Goodale
20,567 |
Doug Cryer
8,709 |
Erin Weir
5,771 |
Darcy Robilliard
928 |
|
Ralph Goodale |
| Yorkton—Melville |
Ted Quewezance
4,697 |
Gary Breitkreuz
19,940 |
Don Olson
5,890 |
Ralph Pilchner
630 |
David Sawkiw (Ind.)
524 |
Gary Breitkreuz |
[edit] Northern Saskatchewan
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Northern Saskatchewan has also been a traditional two-way race between the NDP and the Conservatives. The NDP with their strongest support in the riding of Churchill River. However, the most recent 2000 election saw this riding pass to the Liberals. More recent elections have seen the Reform/Canadian Alliance do extremely well here, and are expected to do just as well, or even better as the new Conservative Party.
Notes:
1 - Laliberte did not seek Liberal nomination
2 - Pankiw is former CA
3 - Chris Axworthy is a former New Democrats MP and provincial cabinet minister
|
••••••• |
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| ••••••• |
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| ••••••• |
1988 |
| ••••••• |
1984 |
| ••••••• |
1980 |
| ••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Battlefords—Lloydminster |
Del Price
4,617 |
Gerry Ritz
15,441 |
Shawn McKee
5,367 |
Kelsey Pearson
766 |
Diane Stephan (CHP)
316 |
Gerry Ritz |
| Blackstrap |
Tiffany Paulsen
11,815 |
Lynne Yelich
15,608 |
Don Kossick
8,862 |
Lynn Oliphant
1,168 |
Clayton Sundberg (CHP)
177 |
Lynne Yelich |
| Churchill River |
Al Ducharme
5,815 |
Jeremy Harrison
7,279 |
Earl Cook
3,910 |
Marcella Gall
539 |
Rick Laliberte (Ind.)
1,923 |
Rick Laliberte1 |
| Prince Albert |
Patrick Jahn
6,929 |
Brian Fitzpatrick
13,576 |
Don Hovdebo
7,221 |
Marc Loiselle
987 |
|
Brian Fitzpatrick |
| Saskatoon—Humboldt |
Patrick Wolfe
9,009 |
Brad Trost
9,444 |
Nettie Wiebe
9,027 |
Ron Schriml
680 |
Jim Pankiw (Ind.)
7,076
Larry Zarysky (Ind.)
71 |
Jim Pankiw2 |
| Saskatoon—Rosetown—Biggar |
Myron Luczka
4,171 |
Carol Skelton
11,875 |
Dennis Gruending
9,597 |
Rick Barsky
841 |
|
Carol Skelton |
| Saskatoon—Wanuskewin |
Chris Axworthy3
10,553 |
Maurice Vellacott
15,109 |
Priscilla Settee
5,770 |
David Greenfield
960 |
|
Maurice Vellacott |
[edit] Alberta
Alberta is unarguably the most Conservative province in Canada. You need only look at the results of the ridings here in the last century to prove this. Alberta has long been a Progressive Conservative province, but with the collapse of the party in 1993, Albertans went to the Reform Party of Canada (later the Canadian Alliance) for their vote. Edmonton seems to be the only exception to this. The Liberals have won in Edmonton six times since 1993, and the NDP has won in Edmonton as well.
[edit] Rural Alberta
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
| This region is unarguably the most Conservative region in Canada. One may only have to look at the election results from the last 70 years to prove it. The Progressive Conservative Party of Canada did not lose a single seat in rural Alberta from 1972 until the party's collapse of 1993. Instead a new right wing party, the Reform Party of Canada took over and swept rural Alberta in the next two elections. They did the same under the Canadian Alliance banner in 2000. It is unlikely any other party will win here in 2004.
Notes:
1 - Hill not seeking re-election
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1988 |
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1984 |
| •••••••••• |
1980 |
| •••••••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Athabasca |
Doug Faulkner
7,134 |
Brian Jean
17,802 |
Robert Cree
3,103 |
Ian Hopfe
1,538 |
|
new district |
| Crowfoot |
Adam Campbell
3,615 |
Kevin Sorenson
37,649 |
Ellen Parker
3,241 |
Arnold Baker
1,795 |
Max Cornelssen (Mar.)
639 |
Kevin Sorenson |
| Lethbridge |
Ken Nicol
10,250 |
Rick Casson
29,765 |
Melanee Thomas
4,623 |
Erin Matthews
1,262 |
Dustin Sobie (Mar.)
553
Ken Vanden Broek (CHP)
1,079 |
Rick Casson |
| Macleod |
Chris Shade
5,214 |
Ted Menzies
32,232 |
Joyce Thomas
2,802 |
Laurie Fadeeff
2,865 |
|
Grant Hill1 |
| Medicine Hat |
Bill Cocks
4,331 |
Monte Solberg
30,241 |
Betty Stroh
3,643 |
Kevin Dodd
1,498 |
|
Monte Solberg |
| Peace River |
Lyle Carlstrom
8,200 |
Charlie Penson
28,158 |
Susan Thompson
4,804 |
Benjamin Pettit
2,073 |
|
Charlie Penson |
| Red Deer |
Luke Kurata
5,294 |
Bob Mills
33,510 |
Jeff Sloychuk
3,500 |
Garfield Marks
2,142 |
Teena Cormack (CAP)
353 |
Bob Mills |
| Vegreville—Wainwright |
Duff Stewart
5,390 |
Leon Benoit
33,800 |
Len Legault
3,793 |
Jim Kenney
2,976 |
|
Leon Benoit |
| Westlock—St. Paul |
Joe Dion
7,619 |
Dave Chatters
26,433 |
Peggy Kirkeby
3,480 |
John McDonald
2,036 |
|
Dave Chatters |
| Wetaskiwin |
Rick Bonnett
5,088 |
Dale Johnston
31,404 |
Tim Robson
3,090 |
Tom Lampman
2,642 |
Brent McKelvie (CAP)
410 |
Dale Johnston |
| Wild Rose |
Judy Stewart
5,971 |
Myron Thompson
33,337 |
Jeff Horvath
4,009 |
Chris Foote
3,904 |
|
Myron Thompson |
| Yellowhead |
Peter Crossley
4,441 |
Rob Merrifield
26,503 |
Noel Lapierre
4,429 |
Eric Stieglitz
2,534 |
Jacob Strydhorst (CHP)
721 |
Rob Merrifield |
[edit] Edmonton and environs
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Edmonton is the most left wing area of Alberta, but this doesn't say much. Much like the rest of Alberta, Edmonton usually always votes for the leading right wing party of the day. This is the one area of Alberta where the Liberals have been able to win anything in recent years, winning two seats in both 1997 and 2000, and four seats in 1993. The NDP have also won a seat in Edmonton, doing so in 1988. The two Liberal incumbents are both in close races, and the new Conservative Party of Canada could possibly sweep Edmonton, and therefore all of Alberta.
Notes:
1 - Grey not seeking re-election
|
•••••••• |
2004 |
| •••••••• |
2000 |
| •••••••• |
1997 |
| •••••••• |
1993 |
| •••••••• |
1988 |
| •••••• |
1984 |
| •••••• |
1980 |
| •••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Edmonton—Beaumont |
David Kilgour
17,555 |
Tim Uppal
17,421 |
Paul Reikie
3,975 |
Michael Garfinkle
1,911 |
Naomi Rankin (Comm.)
135 |
David Kilgour |
| Edmonton Centre |
Anne McLellan
22,560 |
Laurie Hawn
21,839 |
Meghan McMaster
4,836 |
David Parker
2,584 |
Peggy Morton (M-L)
78
Sean Tisdall (PC)
456
Lyle Kenny (Mar.)
509
John Baloun (Ind.)
221 |
Anne McLellan |
| Edmonton East |
John Bethel†
14,250 |
Peter Goldring
20,224 |
Janina Strudwick
6,464 |
Harlan Light
2,471 |
Ed Spronk (CHP)
538 |
Peter Goldring |
| Edmonton—Leduc |
Bruce King
14,269 |
James Rajotte
26,791 |
Doug McLachlan
4,581 |
Bruce Sinclair
3,029 |
|
James Rajotte |
| Edmonton—St. Albert |
Moe Saeed
12,359 |
John Williams
29,508 |
Mike Melymick
5,927 |
Conrad Bitangcol
3,387 |
|
John Williams |
| |
merged district |
| |
Deborah Grey1 |
| Edmonton—Sherwood Park |
Maureen Towns
11,519 |
Ken Epp
27,222 |
Chris Harwood
5,155 |
Margaret Marean
3,146 |
|
Ken Epp |
| Edmonton—Spruce Grove |
Neil Mather
12,912 |
Rona Ambrose
30,497 |
Hayley Phillips
4,508 |
Jerry Paschen
2,572 |
|
new district |
| Edmonton—Strathcona |
Debby Carlson
14,057 |
Rahim Jaffer
19,089 |
Malcolm Azania
11,535 |
Cameron Wakefield
3,146 |
Kevan Hunter (M-L)
103
Dave Dowling (Mar.)
519 |
Rahim Jaffer |
[edit] Calgary
| Profile & Notes |
Electoral History |
|
Calgary, the largest city in Alberta is just as Conservative as rural Alberta. The Progressive Conservatives swept Calgary until 1993, then it was the Reform Party in 1993 and 1997, then the Canadian Alliance in 2000. The one abnormal seat was when Progressive Conservative Party leader Joe Clark won the riding of Calgary Centre in 2000. It is expected the Conservatives will once again sweep Calgary in 2004.
Notes:
1 - Joe Clark, former Progressive Conservative leader and prime minister, not seeking re-election
|
•••••••• |
2004 |
| ••••••• |
2000 |
| ••••••• |
1997 |
| •••••• |
1993 |
| •••••• |
1988 |
| ••••• |
1984 |
| ••••• |
1980 |
| ••••• |
1979 |
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
Incumbent |
Liberal |
Conservative |
New Democrats |
Green |
Other |
| Calgary East |
James Maxim
7,621 |
Deepak Obhrai
21,897 |
Elizabeth Thomas
3,535 |
Dean Christie
2,529 |
Jason Devine (Comm.)
245 |
Deepak Obhrai |
| Calgary North Centre |
Cathy McClusky
11,093 |
Jim Prentice
28,143 |
John Chan
6,298 |
Mark MacGillivray
5,840 |
Michael Falconar (Ind.)
380
Margaret Peggy Askin (M-L)
184 |
new district |
| Calgary Northeast |
Dale Muti†
8,672 |
Art Hanger
21,924 |
Giorgio Cattabeni
2,682 |
Morgan DuFord
1,658 |
Steve Garland (CAP)
291 |
Art Hanger |
| Calgary—Nose Hill |
Ted Haney
11,051 |
Diane Ablonczy
31,088 |
Vinay Dey
3,250 |
Richard Larson
2,898 |
|
Diane Ablonczy |
| Calgary South Centre |
Julia Turnbull†
15,305 |
Lee Richardson
26,192 |
Keith Purdy
4,350 |
Phillip Liesemer
5,080 |
Trevor Grover (CAP)
274 |
Joe Clark1 |
| Calgary Southeast |
Jim Tanner
8,488 |
Jason Kenney
36,843 |
Brian Pincott
3,419 |
George Read
3,142 |
|
Jason Kenney |
| Calgary Southwest |
Avalon Roberts
9,501 |
Stephen Harper
35,297 |
Daria Fox
2,884 |
Darcy Kraus
3,210 |
Larry Heather (CHP)
229
Mark de Pelham (Mar.)
516 |
Stephen Harper |
| Calgary West |
Justin Thompson
16,402 |
Rob Anders
31,322 |
Tim Patterson
3,632 |
Danielle Roberts
4,274 |
André Vachon (M-L)
87
James Kohut (CAP)
315 |
Rob Anders |
[edit] British Columbia

British Columbia is what many pundits consider to be the complete opposite of a bellwether region. British Columbia has a history of voting against the government. This has meant the NDP in the 1980s and the Reform/Canadian Alliance in the 1990s. More recently, regional trends have started to appear in B.C. The interior votes very Conservative, as the Canadian Alliance swept this area in 2000. B.C. has in the past been a province that would swing from one extreme to the other going for the right wing Social Credit to the left wing NDP in the past, in not only federal elections but provincial elections. The NDP also does well in British Columbia, or at least has in the past. Recently, they have been reduced to seats in the Vancouver area. There is hope that they will return to more traditional NDP seats on Vancouver Island, and in the interior. The Liberals have also won a few seats in B.C. recently, an area they have traditionally done very poor. Their strengths are in Victoria and in Vancouver.
[edit] Interior B.C.
- See also Canadian federal election results in the British Columbia Interior
edit
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Cariboo—Prince George |
|
Gurbux Saini
8,397 |
|
Dick Harris
19,721 |
|
Rick Smith
11,183 |
|
Doug Gook
1,798 |
|
Bev Collins (CAP)
408
Carol Lee Chapman (M-L)
79
Mike Orr (Ind.)
478
Jeff Paetkau (Libert.)
148 |
|
Dick Harris |
| merged district |
|
Philip Mayfield† |
| Kamloops—Thompson |
|
John O'Fee
14,434 |
|
Betty Hinton
20,611 |
|
Brian Carroll
13,379 |
|
Grant Fraser
2,213 |
|
Arjun Singh (Ind.)
440 |
|
Betty Hinton |
| Kelowna |
|
Vern Nielsen
14,109 |
|
Werner Schmidt
25,553 |
|
Starleigh Grass
8,954 |
|
Kevin Ade
3,903 |
|
Huguette Plourde (Mar.)
447
Michael Cassidyne-Hook (CAP)
271 |
|
Werner Schmidt |
| Kootenay—Columbia |
|
Ross Priest
7,351 |
|
Jim Abbott
21,336 |
|
Brent Bush
9,772 |
|
Carmen Gustafson
2,558 |
|
|
|
Jim Abbott |
| North Okanagan—Shuswap |
|
Will Hansma
11,636 |
|
Darrel Stinson
24,014 |
|
Alice Brown
12,528 |
|
Erin Nelson
2,333 |
|
Claire Foss (CAP)
257
Blair Longley (Mar.)
492
Gordon Campbell (Ind.)
401
K. No. Daniels (Ind.)
104 |
|
Darrel Stinson |
| Okanagan—Coquihalla |
|
Vanessa Sutton
11,212 |
|
Stockwell Day
24,220 |
|
Joyce Procure
9,509 |
|
Harry Naegal
2,896 |
|
Lelannd Haver (CAP)
259
Jack Peach (Mar.)
548 |
|
Stockwell Day |
| Prince George—Peace River |
|
Arleene Thorpe
4,988 |
|
Jay Hill
21,281 |
|
Mike Hunter
7,501 |
|
Hilary Crowley
2,073 |
|
Tara Rimstad (M-L)
101
Harley Harasym (CAP)
301 |
|
Jay Hill |
| Skeena—Bulkley Valley |
|
Miles Richardson
7,965 |
|
Andy Burton
12,434 |
|
Nathan Cullen
13,706 |
|
Roger Benham
1,225 |
|
Rod Taylor (CHP)
1,408
Frank Martin (M-L)
161 |
|
Andy Burton |
| Southern Interior |
|
Doug Stanley
8,310 |
|
Jim Gouk
16,940 |
|
Alex Atamanenko
16,260 |
|
Scott Leyland
3,663 |
|
Robert Schuster (Ind.)
591
Brian Sproule (M-L)
39
Karine Cyr (Mar.)
391
Farlie Paynter (CAP)
87 |
|
Jim Gouk |
[edit] Fraser Valley and Southern Lower Mainland
- See also Canadian federal election results in the Fraser Valley and Southern Lower Mainland
edit
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Abbotsford |
|
Mohindar Gill
9,617 |
|
Randy White
29,587 |
|
Scott Fast
6,575 |
|
Karl Hann
1,389 |
|
Harold Ludwig (CHP)
585
David MacKay (M-L)
51
Tim Felger (Mar.)
404 |
|
Randy White |
| Chilliwack—Fraser Canyon |
|
Bob Besner
8,249 |
|
Chuck Strahl
24,096 |
|
Rollie Keith
9,244 |
|
Aisha Coghlan
1,449 |
|
Ron Gray (CHP)
1,156
Dorothy-Jean O'Donnell (M-L)
95
Norm Siefken (Mar.)
603 |
|
Chuck Strahl |
| Delta—Richmond East |
|
Shelley Leonhardt
15,515 |
|
John M. Cummins
21,308 |
|
Itrath Syed
6,838 |
|
Dana L. Miller
3,066 |
|
|
|
John M. Cummins |
| Dewdney—Alouette |
|
Blanche Juneau
10,500 |
|
Randy Kamp
18,490 |
|
Mike Bocking
15,693 |
|
Tammy Lea Meyer
2,535 |
|
Scott Etches (Ind.)
798 |
|
Grant McNally† |
| Fleetwood—Port Kells |
|
Gulzar Cheema
11,568 |
|
Nina Grewal
14,052 |
|
Barry Bell
10,976 |
|
David Walters
2,484 |
|
Joseph Theriault (M-L)
167 |
new district |
| Langley |
|
Kim Richter
12,649 |
|
Mark Warawa
24,390 |
|
Dean Morrison
8,568 |
|
Patrick Meyer
3,108 |
|
Mel Kositsky (Ind.)
2,422 |
new district |
| Newton—North Delta |
|
Sukh Dhaliwal
13,009 |
|
Gurmant Grewal
13,529 |
|
Nancy Clegg
12,037 |
|
John Hague
2,555 |
|
Nazir Rizvi (Comm.)
98 |
|
Gurmant Grewal |
| Richmond |
|
Raymond Chan
18,204 |
|
Alice Wong
14,457 |
|
Dale Jackaman
6,142 |
|
Stephen Kronstein
1,743 |
|
Allan Warnke (CAP)
376 |
|
Joe Peschisolido [15] |
| South Surrey—White Rock—Cloverdale |
|
Judy Higginbotham
19,611 |
|
Russ Hiebert
22,760 |
|
Pummy Kaur
7,663 |
|
Romeo De La Pena
3,032 |
|
Pat Taylor (CAP)
272 |
|
Val Meredith [16] |
| Surrey North |
|
Dan Sheel
5,413 |
|
Jasbir Singh Cheema
4,340 |
|
Jim Karpoff
8,312 |
|
Sunny Athwal
658 |
|
Gerhard Herwig (CHP)
460
Roy Whyte (CAP)
85
Joyce Holmes (Comm.)
93 |
|
Chuck Cadman [17] |
- ^ Meredith lost nomination.
- ^ Pechisolido lost nomination.
- ^ Cadman formerly a Conservative, lost nomination, became Ind. in April 2004.
[edit] Vancouver and Northern Lower Mainland
- See also Canadian federal election results in Vancouver and the Northern Lower Mainland
edit
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Burnaby—Douglas |
|
Bill Cunningham [18]
14,748 |
|
George Drazenovic
12,531 |
|
Bill Siksay
15,682 |
|
Shawn Hunsdale
1,687 |
|
Adam Desaulniers (Libert.)
291
Frank Cerminara (Ind.)
282
Hanne Gidora (Comm.)
122 |
|
Svend Robinson † |
| Burnaby—New Westminster |
|
Mary Pynenburg
13,732 |
|
Mike Redmond
11,821 |
|
Peter Julian
14,061 |
|
Rev Kunz
1,606 |
|
Dana Green (CAP)
312
Péter Horváth (Comm.)
166 |
new district |
| New Westminster—Coquitlam |
|
Dave Haggard
13,080 |
|
Paul Forseth
15,693 |
|
Steve McClurg
15,580 |
|
Carli Travers
2,684 |
|
Jack Hummelman (CHP)
700 |
|
Paul Forseth |
| North Vancouver |
|
Don Bell
22,619 |
|
Ted White
20,548 |
|
John Nelson
8,967 |
|
Peggy Stortz
4,114 |
|
Mike Hill (M-L)
77
Andres Barker (CAP)
181 |
|
Ted White |
| Port Moody—Westwood—Port Coquitlam |
|
Kwangyul Peck
12,445 |
|
James Moore
18,664 |
|
Charley King
12,023 |
|
Richard Voigt
1,971 |
|
George Gidora (Comm.)
94
Pat Goff (CAP)
111
Lewis Dahlby (Libert.)
276 |
|
James Moore |
| Vancouver Centre |
|
Hedy Fry
21,280 |
|
Gary Mitchell
10,139 |
|
Kennedy Stewart
17,050 |
|
Robbie Mattu
3,580 |
|
Kimball Carriou (Comm.)
96
Alexander Frei (CAP)
101
John Clarke (Libert.)
304
Joe Pal (CHP)
243 |
|
Hedy Fry |
| Vancouver East |
|
Shirley Chan [19]
10,768 |
|
Harvey Grigg
4,153 |
|
Libby Davies
23,452 |
|
Ron Plowright
2,365 |
|
Louis Lesosky (Ind.)
147
Gloria Kieler (CHP)
250
Marc Boyer (Mar.)
399 |
|
Libby Davies |
| Vancouver Kingsway |
|
David Emerson [20]
17,267 |
|
Jesse Johl
7,037 |
|
Ian Waddell
15,916 |
|
Tracey Mann
1,521 |
|
Jacob Rempel (CAP)
142
Donna Petersen (M-L)
94
Jason Mann (Comm.)
172
Jeannie Kwan (Ind.)
548 |
|
Sophia Leung † |
| Vancouver Quadra |
|
Stephen Owen
29,187 |
|
Stephen Rogers
14,648 |
|
David Askew
8,348 |
|
Doug Warkentin
3,118 |
|
Donovan Young (M-L)
48
Katrina Chowne (Libert.)
151
Connie Fogal (CAP)
165 |
|
Stephen Owen |
| Vancouver South |
|
Ujjal Dosanjh [21]
18,196 |
|
Victor Soo Chan
10,426 |
|
Bev Meslo
10,038 |
|
Doug Perry
1,465 |
|
Charles Boylan (M-L)
119
Frank Wagner (CHP)
339
H. Sandhu (Ind.)
98
Joe Sixpack Horrocks (CAP)
90
Stephen von Sychowski (Comm.)
105 |
|
Herb Dhaliwal † |
| West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast |
|
Blair Wilson
19,685 |
|
John Reynolds
21,372 |
|
Nicholas Simons
13,156 |
|
Andrea Goldsmith
5,887 |
|
Anne Jamieson (M-L)
123
Marc Bombois (CAP)
321 |
|
John Reynolds |
- ^ Cunningham directly appointed as nominee by party leader.
- ^ Chan directly appointed as nominee by party leader.
- ^ Emerson directly appointed as nominee by party leader.
- ^ Dosanjh directly appointed as nominee by party leader.
[edit] Vancouver Island
- See also Canadian federal election results in Vancouver Island
edit
| Electoral District |
Candidates |
|
Incumbent |
| |
Liberal |
|
Conservative |
|
NDP |
|
Green |
|
Other |
| Esquimalt—Juan de Fuca |
|
Keith Martin
19,389 |
|
John Koury
13,271 |
|
Randall Garrison
16,821 |
|
Jane Sterk
5,078 |
|
Jen Fisher-Bradley (Ind.)
229
Shawn Giles (CAP)
141 |
|
Keith Martin [22] |
| Nanaimo—Alberni |
|
Hira Chopra
11,770 |
|
James Lunney
23,158 |
|
Scott Fraser
19,152 |
|
David Wright
4,357 |
|
Diana Lifton (CAP)
201
Barbara Biley (M-L)
80
Michael Mann (Mar.)
560 |
|
James Lunney |
| Nanaimo—Cowichan |
|
Lloyd MacIlquham
9,257 |
|
David Quist
18,928 |
|
Jean Crowder
25,243 |
|
Harold Henn
3,822 |
|
Brunie Brunie (Ind.)
229
Jeffrey Warr (Ind.)
270 |
|
Reed Elley † |
| Saanich—Gulf Islands |
|
David Mulroney
17,082 |
|
Gary Lunn
22,050 |
|
Jennifer Burgis
13,763 |
|
Andrew Lewis
10,662 |
|
Mary Moreau (Ind.)
214 |
|
Gary Lunn |
| Vancouver Island North |
|
Noor Ahmed
11,352 |
|
John Duncan
18,733 |
|
Catherine Bell
18,250 |
|
Pam Munroe
4,456 |
|
Jack East (M-L)
111 |
|
John Duncan |
| Victoria |
|
David Anderson
20,398 |
|
Logan Wenham
12,708 |
|
David Turner
18,093 |
|
Ariel Lade
6,807 |
|
Derek Skinner (CAP)
206 |
|
David Anderson |
- ^ Martin formerly Conservative, became Independent, ran for re-election as Liberal
[edit] Nunavut
edit
[edit] Northwest Territories
edit
edit
[edit] Sources
See also: list of Canada's electoral districts