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Burlington (provincial electoral district)

Coordinates: 43°20′55″N 79°47′25″W / 43.3487°N 79.7903°W / 43.3487; -79.7903
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Burlington
Ontario electoral district
Burlington in relation to other Greater Toronto Area electoral districts
Provincial electoral district
LegislatureLegislative Assembly of Ontario
MPP
 
 
 
Jane McKenna
Progressive Conservative
District created1999
First contested1999
Last contested2018
Demographics
Population (2006)118,310
Electors (2007)88,385
Area (km²)79
Pop. density (per km²)1,497.6
Census division(s)Halton
Census subdivision(s)Burlington

Burlington is a provincial electoral district in southwestern Ontario, Canada. It elects one member to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.

It was created in 1999 from parts of Burlington South, Halton Centre, and a small part of South Oakville.

When the riding was created, it included the city of Burlington east of a line following the Queen Elizabeth Way to Highway 403 to King Road and south of a line following Dundas Street to the 403 to Upper Middle Road to Walkers Line.

In 2007, the boundaries were altered so that the riding included all of Burlington south of a line following Dundas Street to Guelph Line to Upper Middle Road to Walker Line to the QEW.

Members of Provincial Parliament

Burlington
Assembly Years Member Party
Riding created from Burlington South, Halton Centre and Oakville South
37th  1999–2003     Cam Jackson Progressive Conservative
38th  2003–2007
 2007–2007 Joyce Savoline
39th  2007–2011
40th  2011–2014 Jane McKenna
41st  2014–2018     Eleanor McMahon Liberal
42nd  2018–present     Jane McKenna Progressive Conservative

Election results

2018 general election

2018 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Jane McKenna 25,502 40.44 +3.46
New Democratic Andrew Drummond 18,062 28.64 +14.29
Liberal Eleanor McMahon 15,515 24.60 −18.81
Green Vince Fiorito 2,828 4.48 +0.34
Libertarian Jim Gilchrist 530 0.84 +0.17
None of the Above Nadine Bentham 471 0.75
Consensus Ontario Peter Rusin 154 0.24
Total valid votes 100.0  
Progressive Conservative gain from Liberal Swing -
Source: Elections Ontario[1]

2014

2014 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Eleanor McMahon 23,573 43.41 +7.34
Progressive Conservative Jane McKenna 20,086 36.98 -3.43
New Democratic Jan Mowbray 7,792 14.35 -4.52
Green Meredith Cross 2,250 4.14 +1.87
Libertarian Charles Zach 363 0.67 -0.62
Freedom Andrew Brannan 245 0.45 +0.14
Total valid votes 54,309 100.0  
Liberal gain from Progressive Conservative Swing +5.38
Source: Elections Ontario[2]

2011

2011 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Jane McKenna 20,061 40.41 -0.90
Liberal Karmel Sakran 17,909 36.07 -1.74
New Democratic Peggy Russell 9,370 18.87 +7.87
Green Alex Brown 1,129 2.27 -6.85
Libertarian Anthony Giles 639 1.29
Family Coalition Tim O'Brien 380 0.77 +0.01
Freedom Andrew Brannan 156 0.31
Total valid votes 49,644 100.00
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 231 0.46
Turnout 49,875 54.83
Eligible voters 90,964
Progressive Conservative hold Swing +0.42
Source: Elections Ontario[3]

2007 general

2007 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Joyce Savoline 21,517 41.31 -7.67
Liberal Marianne Meed Ward 19,693 37.81 -3.36
New Democratic Cory Judson 5,731 11.00 +5.24
Green Tim Wilson 4,750 9.12 +5.89
Family Coalition Mark Gamez 395 0.76
Total valid votes 52,086 100.00

2007 by-election

Following Cam Jackson's resignation to run for mayor of Burlington, the riding was left with a vacant seat at Queen's Park. Consequently, a by-election was called by Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty on January 10, 2007, to be held on February 8, 2007.[4] Joan Lougheed, who was defeated by Jackson for the mayor's post, was nominated as the Ontario Liberal Party candidate on January 4, 2007.[5] Former Halton Regional Chair Joyce Savoline became the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario candidate, after narrowly defeating former Miss Canada Blair Lancaster at their nomination meeting.[6] On January 12, 2007, Brantford school teacher and community activist Cory Judson defeated former Halton District School Board trustee David Abbott for the Ontario New Democratic Party candidacy.[7] On January 25, 2007, Frank de Jong was named the Ontario Green Party candidate.

Template:Wikinews2

Ontario provincial by-election, January 12, 2007 by-election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Joyce Savoline 11,143 48.98 +2.83
Liberal Joan Lougheed 9,365 41.17 -1.01
New Democratic Cory Judson 1,310 5.76 -2.46
Green Frank de Jong 734 3.23 +0.90
Freedom Barry Spruce 106 0.47
Independent John Turmel 90 0.40
Total valid votes 22,748 100.00

2003

2003 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Cam Jackson 21,506 46.15 -16.59
Liberal Mark Fuller 19,654 42.18 +11.47
New Democratic David Carter Laird 3,832 8.22 +3.54
Green Julie Gordon 1,086 2.33 +1.40
Family Coalition Vic Corvaro 523 1.12
Total valid votes 46,601 100.00

1999

1999 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Conservative Cam Jackson 29,055 62.74
Liberal Linda Glover 14,220 30.71
New Democratic Danny Dunleavy 2,167 4.68
Green Bruce Smith 432 0.93
Independent Anne Marsden 289 0.62
Natural Law Regina Law 144 0.31
Total valid votes 46,307 100.00

2007 electoral reform referendum

Ontario electoral reform referendum, 2007
Side Votes %
First Past the Post 33,067 65.7
Mixed member proportional 17,267 34.7
Total valid votes 50,334 100.0

References

  1. ^ "Candidate Search". Elections Ontario. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Official return from the records, 011 Burlington" (PDF). Elections Ontario. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-06-02. Retrieved 27 June 2015. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Elections Ontario (2011). "Official return from the records / Rapport des registres officiels - Burlington" (PDF). Retrieved 3 June 2014.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ YR News[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ CHML.com Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Halton Search[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Hamiton Spectator[permanent dead link]

Sources

43°20′55″N 79°47′25″W / 43.3487°N 79.7903°W / 43.3487; -79.7903