Montarville

This article is about the federal riding. For other uses, see Montarville (disambiguation).
Montarville
Quebec electoral district
Federal electoral district
Legislature House of Commons
MP
 
 
 

Michel Picard
Liberal

District created 2013
First contested 2015
District webpage profile, map
Demographics
Population (2011)[1] 95,095
Electors (2015) 75,181
Area (km²)[1] 158
Pop. density (per km²) 601.9
Census divisions Longueuil, Marguerite-D'Youville, La Vallée-du-Richelieu
Census subdivisions Longueuil (part), Saint-Basile-le-Grand, Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville, Sainte-Julie

Montarville is a federal electoral district in the Montérégie region of Quebec.

Montarville was created by the 2012 federal electoral boundaries redistribution and was legally defined in the 2013 representation order. It came into effect upon the call of the 42nd Canadian federal election, scheduled for 19 October 2015.[2] It was created out of parts of the electoral districts of Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert, Verchères—Les Patriotes and Chambly—Borduas.[3]

Profile

As in most ridings that succumbed to the Orange Crush, the 2011 results for the new riding of Montarville showed that NDP support was strong throughout. The BQ message sold better in Sainte-Julie and in the portion of Longueuil included in the new riding than it did in Saint-Bruno, with Sainte-Julie being the greatest concentration of support for them. The Liberals' strength comes mainly from the city of Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville, where they did fairly well in comparison to other parts of the riding. Conservative support, which was pretty low, had no real concrete base, being spread evenly across the riding.

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following Members of Parliament:

Parliament Years Member Party
Montarville
Riding created from Chambly—Borduas,
Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert and Verchères—Les Patriotes
42nd  2015–Present     Michel Picard Liberal

Election results

Canadian federal election, 2015
Party Candidate Votes%∆%Expenditures
LiberalMichel Picard 18,848 32.54 +20.03
Bloc QuébécoisCatherine Fournier 16,460 28.42 -0.66
New DemocraticDjaouida Sellah 14,296 24.68 -19.85
ConservativeStéphane Duranleau 6,284 10.85 +1.25
GreenOlivier Adam 1,388 2.40 -0.05
LibertarianClaude Leclair 641 1.11
Total valid votes/Expense limit 57,917100.00 $207,758.92
Total rejected ballots 8811.50
Turnout 58,79877.86
Eligible voters 75,521
Liberal gain from New Democratic Swing +19.94
Source: Elections Canada[4][5]
2011 federal election redistributed results[6]
Party Vote %
  New Democratic 23,227 44.53
  Bloc Québécois 15,166 29.08
  Liberal 6,524 12.51
  Conservative 5,007 9.60
  Green 1,278 2.45
  Others 959 1.84

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/8/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.