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Canadian federal election results in Eastern Montreal

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Electoral history
YearResults
2021
2019
2015
2011
2008
2006
2004
2000
1997
1993
1988
1984
1980
1979
1974
1972
1968
1965
1963
1962
1958
1957
1953
1949
1945
1940
1935
1930
1926
1925

Canadian federal elections have provided the following results in Eastern Montreal.

Regional profile

The eastern end of the Island of Montreal was the birthplace of the sovereigntist movement, and remained a sovereigntist stronghold for four decades. During this time, whenever the Parti Québécois won provincially, the entire eastern half of the island was coated light blue. Federally, it was the Bloc Québécois's power base from 1993 to 2011, partly due to its leftist bent. With the exception of ethnic areas that protrude from Northern Montreal into the East Island's Honoré-Mercier riding, where Liberal support is strong, the area is relatively homogeneously Francophone and lower-income, a recipe for Bloc dominance. Prior to the rise of the Bloc, the region voted solidly Liberal for decades before being swept up in the Brian Mulroney tide, electing Quebec nationalists under the Progressive Conservative banner. The Conservative Party of Canada has never approached this level of support, and eastern Montreal is currently the weakest region in Canada for the Tories. In 2011, the federalist NDP swept every seat in this region amid the surge of popular support in the province and the concurrent Bloc meltdown, in all but one case by well over 6,000 votes. The NDP surge even cost longtime Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe his seat in Laurier-Sainte-Marie.

The NDP largely held its gains in 2015, losing Honoré-Mercier to the Liberals and La Pointe-de-l'Île—long reckoned as the most strongly sovereigntist riding in Quebec—to the Bloc. However, Duceppe came up well short in his bid to retake his old riding. In 2019, however, the NDP was cut down to just one riding in eastern Montreal, with the Bloc holding onto La Pointe-de-l'Île and the Liberals taking the other three.

Votes by party throughout time

Election Liberal Conservative New Democratic Bloc Québécois Green PC Reform /
Alliance
Others
1979 143,504
63.6%
12,062
5.3%
No candidate 26,108
11.6%
44,015
19.5%
1980 139,703
71.5%
19,492
10.0%
No candidate 15,791
8.1%
20,352
10.4%
1984 101,692
40.1%
28,336
11.2%
720
0.3%
108,910
42.9%
14,220
5.6%
1988 73,696
31.1%
43,512
18.4%
4,838
2.0%
103,741
43.8%
11,218
4.7%
1993 70,938
28.6%
4,917
2.0%
139,534
56.3%
1,050
0.4%
18,013
7.3%
No candidate 13,344
5.4%
1997 81,664
33.3%
6,166
2.5%
113,000
46.1%
1,167
0.5%
39,023
15.9%
No candidate 4,202
1.7%
2000 87,196
37.8%
5,409
2.3%
107,547
46.6%
5,457
2.5%
9,352
4.1%
7,115
3.9%
8,143
3.5%
2004 64,554
27.1%
9,504
4.0%
15,889
6.7%
137,602
57.7%
8,456
3.5%
Merged into
Conservative Party
2,445
1.0%
2006 48,763
19.7%
29,968
12.1%
24,915
10.1%
128,926
52.1%
12,802
5.2%
1,886
0.8%
2008 56,936
23.5%
23,126
9.6%
34,340
14.2%
113,999
47.1%
10,791
4.5%
2,647
1.1%
2011 33,970
13.8%
16,874
6.9%
113,749
46.2%
67,596
30.3%
4,689
1.9%
2,375
1.0%
2015 85,528
31.6%
18,941
7.0%
88,890
32.9%
67,596
25.0%
7,285
2.7%
2,260
0.8%
2019 101,331
37.2%
14,082
5.2%
60,666
22.3%
80,163
29.4%
12,665
4.6%
3,642
1.3%
2021 93,437
37.9%
14,433
5.8%
59,602
24.1%
67,697
27.4%
3,999
1.6%
7,691
3.1%
Vote share by party
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
Number of votes by partyElection statistics in Eastern Montreal
  Liberal   Conservative   New Democratic   Bloc Québécois   Green   Alliance (defunct)   Progressive Conservative (defunct)

Detailed results

2021

Main article: 2021 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

All incumbents MP were reelected.

Party rankings

No change in position for the four main parties. The People's Party arrives before the Green Party in 2 of the 3 ridings where both parties had candidates.

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th
Liberal 3 2 0 0 0 0
Bloc Québécois 1 2 2 0 0 0
New Democratic 1 1 2 1 0 0
Conservative 0 0 1 4 0 0
People's 0 0 0 0 3 1
Green 0 0 0 0 2 2

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
Liberal Conservative BQ NDP Green PPC Marxist-Leninist Other
Hochelaga Soraya Martinez Ferrada
18,197
38.14%
Aime Calle Cabrera
2,221
4.66%
Simon Marchand
15,089
31.63%
Catheryn Roy-Goyette
9,723
20.38%
Zachary Lavarenne
965
2.02%
Marc-André Doucet-Beauchamp
1,081
2.27%
Christine Dandenault
84
0.18%
Michelle Paquette (Comm.)
108 0.23%
Soraya Martinez Ferrada
Alan Smithee (Rhino.)
238 0.50%
Honoré-Mercier Pablo Rodriguez
29,033
59.97%
Guy Croteau
5,086
10.51%
Charlotte Lévesque-Marin
7,908
16.34%
Paulina Ayala
3,537
7.31%
Bianca Deltorto-Russell
734
1.52%
Lucilia Miranda
2,023
4.18%
Yves Le Seigle
88
0.18%
Pablo Rodríguez
La Pointe-de-l'Île Jonas Fadeu
16,508
32.32%
Massimo Anania
3,427
6.71%
Mario Beaulieu
23,835
46.66%
Alexandre Vallerand
4,954
9.70%
Jonathan Desclin
1,399
2.74%
Genevieve Royer
159
0.31%
Agnès Falquet (FPC)
577 1.13%
Mario Beaulieu
Charles Phillippe Gervais (PIQ)
221 0.43%
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Steven Guilbeault
16,961
37.96%
Ronan Reich
1,500
3.36%
Marie-Eve-Lyne Michel
9,114
20.40%
Nimâ Machouf
14,680
32.86%
Jean-Michel Lavarenne
992
2.22%
Daniel Tanguay
758
1.70%
Serge Lachapelle
70
0.16%
Cyril Julien (Ind.)
74 0.17%
Steven Guilbeault
Kimberly Lamontagne (Animal)
199 0.45%
Julie Morin (FPC)
233 0.52%
Adrien Welsh (Comm.)
95 0.21%
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie Nancy Drolet
12,738
23.17%
Surelys Perez Hernandez
2,199
4.00%
Shophika Vaithyanathasarma
11,751
21.37%
Alexandre Boulerice
26,708
48.57%
Franco Fiori
1,308
2.38%
Gisèle Desrochers
284
0.52%
Alexandre Boulerice

2019

Main article: 2019 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 2015 Gain from (loss to) 2019
Lib. Bloc NDP
New Democratic 3 0 –2 0 0 1
Bloc Québécois 1 0 0 0 0 1
Liberal 1 0 0 +2 0 3

Party rankings

The Liberal improve their position, winning a majority of the ridings for the first time since 1980. The Bloc overtakes the NDP as the second main party in the region with more second place. The Conservatives obtain a 3rd place in Honoré-Mercier ahead of the NDP who obtains its first 4th place since 2008.

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Liberal 3 2 0 0 0
Bloc Québécois 1 2 2 0 0
New Democratic 1 1 2 1 0
Conservative 0 0 1 4 0
Green 0 0 0 0 4

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
Liberal Conservative BQ NDP Green PPC Marxist-Leninist Other
Hochelaga Soraya Martinez Ferrada
18,008
33.95%
Christine Marcoux
2,381
4.49%
Simon Marchand
17,680
33.34%
Catheryn Roy-Goyette
11,451
21.59%
Robert D. Morais
2,618
4.94%
Stepan Balatsko
377
0.71%
Christine Dandenault
101
0.19%
Chinook Blais-Leduc (Rhino.)
314
0.59%
JP Fortin (Comm.)
107
0.20%
Marjolaine Boutin-Sweet
Honoré-Mercier Pablo Rodriguez
29,543
58.66%
Guy Croteau
4,808
9.55%
Jacques Binette
9,979
19.81%
Chu Anh Pham
4,130
8.20%
Domenico Cusmano
1,373
2.73%
Patrick St-Onge
459
0.91%
Yves Le Seigle
71
0.14%
Pablo Rodríguez
La Pointe-de-l'Île Jonathan Plamondon
16,898
30.4%
Robert Coutu
3,984
7.2%
Mario Beaulieu
26,010
46.8%
Ève Péclet
6,057
10.9%
Franco Fiori
1,910
3.4%
Randy Manseau
388
0.7%
Geneviève Royer
88
0.2%
Jacinthe Lafrenaye (PIQ)
199
0.4%
Mario Beaulieu
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Steven Guilbeault
22,306
41.77%
Lise des Greniers
1,504
2.82%
Michel Duchesne
12,188
22.82%
Nimâ Machouf
13,453
25.19%
Jamil Azzaoui
3,225
6.04%
Christine Bui
320
0.60%
Serge Lachapelle
98
0.18%
Archie Morals (Rhino.)
208
0.39%
Adrien Welsh (Comm.)
67
0.13%
Dimitri Mourkes (Ind.)
42
0.08%
Hélène Laverdière
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie Geneviève Hinse
14,576
24.21%
Johanna Sarfati
1,405
2.33%
Claude André
14,306
23.76%
Alexandre Boulerice
25,575
42.48%
Jean Désy
3,539
5.88%
Bobby Pellerin
293
0.49%
Gisèle Desrochers
80
0.13%
Jos Guitare Lavoie (Rhino.)
346
0.57%
Normand Raymond (Comm.)
86
0.14%
Alexandre Boulerice

2015

Main article: 2015 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 2011 Gain from (loss to) 2015
Lib. Bloc NDP
New Democratic 5 0 –1 0 –1 3
Bloc Québécois 0 0 0 +1 0 1
Liberal 0 0 0 +1 0 1

Party rankings

The election is much more competitive than previously, with multiple 2nd and 3rd place ranking for both the NDP, the Liberals and the Bloc. The Conservatives are 4th in all 5 ridings as they did in 2011.

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
New Democratic 3 1 1 0 0
Liberal 1 2 2 0 0
Bloc Québécois 1 2 2 0 0
Conservative 0 0 0 5 0
Green 0 0 0 0 5

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
Conservative NDP Liberal BQ Green Marxist-Leninist Rhinoceros Other
Hochelaga
(judicial recount)
Alexandre Dang
3,555
6.85%
Marjolaine Boutin-Sweet
16,034
30.89%
Marwah Rizqy
15,534
29.93%
Simon Marchand
14,389
27.72%
Anne-Marie Saint-Cerny
1,654
3.19%
Christine Dandenault
148
0.29%
Nicolas Lemay
411
0.79%
Marianne Breton Fontaine (Comm.)
179
0.34%
Marjolaine Boutin-Sweet
Honoré-Mercier Guy Croteau
6,226
12.05%
Paulina Ayala
8,478
16.41%
Pablo Rodriguez
29,211
56.55%
Audrey Beauséjour
6,680
12.93%
Angela Budilean
814
1.58%
Yves Le Seigle
81
0.16%
Dayana Dejean (SD)
168
0.33%
Paulina Ayala
La Pointe-de-l'Île Guy Morissette
4,408
7.98%
Ève Péclet
14,777
26.76%
Marie-Chantale Simard
15,777
28.57%
Mario Beaulieu
18,545
33.58%
David J. Cox
1,130
2.05%
Geneviève Royer
96
0.17%
Ben 97 Benoit
358
0.65%
Jean-François Larose (SD)
135
0.24%
Ève Péclet
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Daniel Gaudreau
2,242
4.10%
Hélène Laverdière
20,929
38.27%
Christine Poirier
12,938
23.66%
Gilles Duceppe
15,699
28.71%
Cyrille Giraud
1,904
3.48%
Serge Lachapelle
103
0.19%
Stéphane Beaulieu (Libert.)
604 1.10%
Hélène Laverdière
Julien Bernatchez (Ind.)
160 0.29%
Pierre Fontaine (Comm.)
102 0.19%
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie Jeremy Dohan
2,510
4.30%
Alexandre Boulerice
28,672
49.15%
Nadine Medawar
12,068
20.69%
Claude André
12,283
21.06%
Sameer Muldeen
1,783
3.06%
Stéphane Chénier
171
0.29%
Laurent Aglat
495
0.85%
Peter d'Entremont (Libert.)
353
0.61%
Alexandre Boulerice

2011

Main article: 2011 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 2008 Gain from (loss to) 2011
Lib. Bloc NDP
Bloc Québécois 4 0 0 0 –4 0
Liberal 1 0 0 0 –1 0
New Democratic 0 +1 0 +3 0 5

Party rankings

The NDP surge results in a sweep of the region, with the Bloc and Liberals arriving in 2nd place in their former ridings.

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
New Democratic 5 0 0 0 0
Bloc Québécois 0 4 1 0 0
Liberal 0 1 4 0 0
Conservative 0 0 0 5 0
Green 0 0 0 0 5

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
BQ Conservative Liberal NDP Green Marxist-Leninist Rhinoceros Other
Hochelaga Daniel Paillé
14,451
31.20%
Audrey Castonguay
3,126
6.75%
Gilbert Thibodeau
5,064
10.93%
Marjolaine Boutin-Sweet
22,314
48.17%
Yaneisy Delgado Dihigo
798
1.72%
Christine Dandenault
143
0.31%
Hugo Samson Veillette (Rhino)
246
0.53%
Marianne Breton Fontaine (Comm.)
180
0.39%
Daniel Paillé
Honoré-Mercier Martin Laroche
8,935
18.52%
Gérard Labelle
5,992
12.42%
Pablo Rodriguez
14,641
30.35%
Paulina Ayala
17,545
36.37%
Gaëtan Bérard
770
1.60%
Jean-Paul Bédard
170
0.35%
Valery Chevrefils-Latulippe
181
0.38%
Pablo Rodriguez
La Pointe-de-l'Île Ginette Beaudry
15,475
32.48%
Mathieu Drolet
3,664
7.69%
Olivier L. Coulombe
4,369
9.17%
Ève Péclet
23,033
48.34%
David J. Cox
898
1.88%
Claude Brunelle
213
0.45%
Francine Lalonde
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Gilles Duceppe
17,991
35.90%
Charles K. Langford
1,764
3.52%
Philippe Allard
4,976
9.93%
Hélène Laverdière
23,373
46.64%
Olivier Adam
1,324
2.64%
Serge Lachapelle
77
0.15%
François Yo Gourd
398
0.79%
Sylvain Archambault (Comm.)
137 0.27%
Gilles Duceppe
Dimitri Mourkes (Ind.)
73 0.15%
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie Bernard Bigras
17,702
32.85%
Sébastien Forté
2,328
4.32%
Kettly Beauregard
4,920
9.13%
Alexandre Boulerice
27,484
51.00%
Sameer Muldeen
899
1.67%
Stéphane Chénier
140
0.26%
Jean-Patrick Berthiaume 417
0.77%
Bernard Bigras

2008

Main article: 2008 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 2006 Gain from (loss to) 2008
Lib. Bloc
Bloc Québécois 4 0 0 4
Liberal 1 0 0 1

Party rankings

The Liberal vote strengthened since the 2006 election with a 2nd place achieved in all 4 ridings where the Bloc won (very much like in 2000 and 2004). The NDP overtakes the Conservatives for the main third party whereas the Green again arrives in 4th place, ahead of the Conservatives, in Laurier—Sainte-Marie.

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Bloc Québécois 4 1 0 0 0
Liberal 1 4 0 0 0
New Democratic 0 0 4 1 0
Conservative 0 0 1 3 1
Green 0 0 0 1 4

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
BQ Conservative Liberal NDP Green Marxist-Leninist Rhinoceros Other
Hochelaga Réal Ménard
22,720
49.73%
Luc Labbé
4,201
9.20%
Diane Dicaire
9,442
20.67%
Jean-Claude Rocheleau
6,600
14.45%
Philippe Larochelle
1,946
4.26%
Christine Dandenault
177
0.39%
Simon Landry
230
0.50%
Marianne Breton-Fontaine (Comm.)
184 0.40%
Réal Ménard
Blair T. Longley (Mar.)
183 0.40%
Honoré-Mercier Gérard Labelle
13,871
28.12%
Rodrigo Alfaro
7,549
15.30%
Pablo Rodriguez
21,544
43.67%
François Pilon
4,986
10.11%
Gaëtan Bérard
1,380
2.80%
Pablo Rodriguez
La Pointe-de-l'Île Francine Lalonde
25,976
56.09%
Hubert Pichet
5,179
11.18%
Oumy Sarr
7,403
15.99%
Isabelle Maguire
5,975
12.90%
Domita Cundari
1,340
2.89%
Claude Brunelle
177
0.38%
Ben 97 Benoit
261
0.56%
Francine Lalonde
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Gilles Duceppe
24,103
50.24%
Charles K. Langford
2,320
4.84%
Sébastien Caron
8,798
18.34%
François Grégoire
8,209
17.11%
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell
3,801
7.92%
Serge Lachapelle
118
0.25%
François Yo Gourd
447
0.93%
Daniel "F4J" Laforest (Ind.)
93 0.19%
Gilles Duceppe
Samie Pagé-Quirion (Comm.)
86 0.18%
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie Bernard Bigras
27,260
52.00%
Sylvie Boulianne
3,876
7.39%
Marjorie Théodore
9,785
18.67%
Alexandre Boulerice
8,522
16.26%
Vincent Larochelle
2,406
4.59%
Stéphane Chénier
170
0.32%
Jean-Patrick Berthiaume
319
0.61%
Michel Dugré (NA)
83
0.16%
Bernard Bigras

2006

Main article: 2006 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 2004 Gain from (loss to) 2006
Lib. Bloc
Bloc Québécois 4 0 0 4
Liberal 1 0 0 1

Party rankings

Both the NDP and the Conservatives improves their results with a second place for both, achieved respectively in Laurier—Sainte-Marie in La Pointe-de-l'Île, albeit well behind the Bloc in both cases. They were able to overtake the Liberal Party who arrived third in both ridings. The Green Party arrived fourth, ahead of the Conservatives, in Laurier—Sainte-Marie.

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Bloc Québécois 4 1 0 0 0
Liberal 1 2 2 0 0
Conservative 0 1 2 1 1
New Democratic 0 1 1 3 0
Green 0 0 0 1 4

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
BQ Liberal Conservative NDP Green Marijuana Marxist-Leninist Other
Hochelaga Réal Ménard
25,570
55.58%
Vicky Harvey
7,932
17.24%
Audrey Castonguay
5,617
12.21%
David-Roger Gagnon
4,101
8.91%
Rolf Bramann
2,235
4.86%
Blair T. Longley
332
0.72%
Christine Dandenault
220
0.48%
Réal Ménard
Honoré-Mercier Gérard Labelle
17,879
34.83%
Pablo Rodriguez
19,622
38.23%
Angelo M. Marino
8,952
17.44%
François Pilon
3,191
6.22%
Sylvain Castonguay
1,502
2.93%
Hélène Héroux
183
0.36%
Pablo Rodriguez
La Pointe-de-l'Île Francine Lalonde
29,368
60.46%
Marie-Migniaud Dominique
6,855
14.11%
Christian Prévost
7,402
15.24%
Nicolas Tremblay
3,407
7.01%
Benjamin Rankin
1,544
3.18%
Francine Lalonde
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Gilles Duceppe
26,773
54.69%
Soeung Tang
6,095
12.45%
Carlos De Sousa
3,124
6.38%
François Grégoire
8,165
16.68%
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell
4,064
8.30%
Nicky Tanguay
338
0.69%
Ginette Boutet
137
0.28%
Jocelyne Leduc (Ind.)
157 0.32%
Gilles Duceppe
Laurier
Evelyn Elizabeth Ruiz (Comm.)
100 0.20%
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie Bernard Bigras
29,336
55.99%
Suzanne Harvey
8,259
15.76%
Michel Sauvé
4,873
9.30%
Chantal Reeves
6,051
11.55%
Marc-André Gadoury
3,457
6.60%
Hugô St-Onge
419
0.80%
Bernard Bigras

2004

Main article: 2004 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 2000 Gain from (loss to) 2004
Lib. Bloc
Bloc Québécois 4 0 0 4
Liberal 1 0 0 1

Party rankings

The NDP greatly improves its results with three 3rd places, being the main third party in the region, behind the Bloc and the Liberals. The Green overtakes the Conservatives in two ridings (Laurier and Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie).

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Bloc Québécois 4 1 0 0 0
Liberal 1 4 0 0 0
New Democratic 0 0 3 2 0
Conservative 0 0 2 1 2
Green 0 0 0 2 3

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
Liberal BQ Conservative NDP Green Marijuana Marxist-Leninist Communist
Hochelaga Benoit Bouvier
11,712
25.63%
Réal Ménard
27,476
60.12%
Mario Bernier
1,856
4.06%
David Gagnon
2,510
5.49%
Rolf Bramann
1,361
2.98%
Antoine Théorêt-Poupart
482
1.05%
Christine Dandenault
112
0.25%
Pierre Bibeau
190
0.42%
Réal Ménard
Hochelaga—Maisonneuve
Honoré-Mercier Pablo Rodriguez
22,223
46.10%
Éric St-Hilaire
19,461
40.37%
Gianni Chiazzese
2,902
6.02%
François Pilon
1,973
4.09%
Richard Lahaie
852
1.77%
Steve Boudrias
626
1.30%
Hélène Héroux
164
0.34%
Yvon Charbonneau
Anjou—Rivières-des-Prairies
La Pointe-de-l'Île Jean-Claude Gobé
10,593
22.93%
Francine Lalonde
30,713
66.47%
Christian Prevost
1,961
4.24%
André Langevin
1,751
3.79%
Andre Levert
1,186
2.57%
Francine Lalonde
Mercier
Laurier Jean-François Thibault
8,454
17.68%
Gilles Duceppe
28,728
60.07%
Pierre Albert
1,224
2.56%
François Gregoire
5,779
12.08%
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell
2,912
6.09%
Nicky Tanguay
572
1.20%
Ginette Boutet
154
0.32%
Gilles Duceppe
Laurier—Sainte-Marie
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie Christian Bolduc
11,572
22.90%
Bernard Bigras
31,224
61.80%
Michel Sauvé
1,561
3.09%
Benoît Beauchamp
3,876
7.67%
François Chevalier
2,145
4.25%
Kenneth Higham
145
0.29%
Bernard Bigras
Rosemont—Petite-Patrie

Maps

  1. Hochelaga
  2. Honoré-Mercier
  3. La Pointe-de-l'Île
  4. Laurier
  5. Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie
  • Key map Key map
  • Bloc Québécois Bloc Québécois
  • Conservative Party of Canada Conservative Party of Canada
  • Green Party of Canada Green Party of Canada
  • Liberal Party of Canada Liberal Party of Canada
  • New Democratic Party New Democratic Party

2000

Main article: 2000 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 1997 Gain from (loss to) 2000
Lib. Bloc
Bloc Québécois 4 0 0 4
Liberal 1 0 0 1

Party rankings

The NDP reaches a low point in the region with only a 5th place in Laurier—Sainte-Marie, its best results. It obtains a 7th place in Mercier, behind all the other major federal parties and the Green and Marijuana parties. The Green Party fares quite well and scores two 3rd places despite only running in 3 of the 5 ridings in the region.

Parties 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th
Bloc Québécois 4 1 0 0 0 0 0
Liberal 1 4 0 0 0 0 0
Progressive Conservative 0 0 3 0 1 1 0
Green 0 0 2 0 1 0 0
Alliance 0 0 0 3 0 0 2
Marijuana 0 0 0 2 2 1 0
New Democratic 0 0 0 0 1 3 1

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
BQ Liberal Canadian Alliance NDP PC Green Marijuana Other
Anjou—Rivière-des-Prairies Jacques Dagenais
14,755
30.35%
Yvon Charbonneau
28,134
57.86%
Gianni Chiazzese
2,005
4.12%
Bruce Whelan
624
1.28%
Michel Tanguay
2,034
4.18%
Normand Néron
918
1.89%
Hélène Héroux (M-L)
151
0.31%
Yvon Charbonneau
Hochelaga—Maisonneuve Réal Ménard
21,250
49.20%
Louis Morena
16,143
37.38%
Stephanie Morency
1,502
3.48%
Milan Mirich
767
1.78%
Benoit Harbec
1,751
4.05%
Alex Néron
1,227
2.84%
Pierre Bibeau (Comm.)
274 0.63%
Christine Dandenault (M-L)
275 0.64%
Réal Ménard
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Gilles Duceppe
23,473
52.79%
Jean Philippe Côté
11,451
25.75%
Stéphane Prud'homme
960
2.16%
Richard Chartier
2,111
4.75%
Jean François Tessier
1,879
4.23%
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell
2,169
4.88%
Marc-Boris St-Maurice
2,156
4.85%
Ginette Boutet (M-L)
269
0.60%
Gilles Duceppe
Mercier Francine Lalonde
24,755
52.87%
Normand Biron
15,416
32.93%
J. Marc-Antoine Delsoin
1,684
3.60%
Nicholas Vikander
480
1.03%
Martin Gelgoot
1,629
3.48%
Richard Savignac
1,813
3.87%
Eric Duquette
937
2.00%
Geneviève Royer (M-L)
104
0.22%
Francine Lalonde
Rosemont—Petite-Patrie Bernard Bigras
23,315
49.13%
Claude Vigneault
16,052
33.83%
Etienne Morin
1,354
2.85%
Noémi Lo Pinto
1,417
2.99%
Marc Bissonnette
2,006
4.23%
Sébastien Chagnon-Jean
1,475
3.11%
Claude Messier (Mar.)
1,486
3.13%
Joanne Pritchard (NA)
114 0.24%
Dorothy Sauras (Comm.)
233 0.49%
Bernard Bigras
Rosemont


1997

Main article: 1997 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 1993 Gain from (loss to) 1997
Lib. Bloc
Bloc Québécois 5 0 –1 4
Liberal 0 +1 0 1

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
BQ Liberal NDP PC Marxist-Leninist Other
Anjou—Rivière-des-Prairies Roger Pomerleau
16,558
Yvon Charbonneau
24,189
Elizabeth Lemay Amabili
752
Jean Corbeil
9,405
Yves Le Seigle
227
Roger Pomerleau
Hochelaga—Maisonneuve Réal Ménard
21,938
Denise Malo
16,308
Milan Mirich
825
Charles Boudreault
7,583
Christine Dandenault
444
Richard Lauzon (NLP)
577
Réal Ménard
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Gilles Duceppe
26,542
David Ly
11,154
François Degardin
2,180
Yanick Deschênes
5,808
Serge Lachapelle
338
François Gourd (Ind.)
1,255
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell (Green)
1,167
Mathieu Ravignat (Ind.)
123
Gilles Duceppe
Mercier Francine Lalonde
24,649
René Bourgeault
14,061
Cathy Milner
772
Eric Champagne
8,500
Hélène Héroux
297
Francine Lalonde
Rosemont Bernard Bigras
23,313
Françoise Guidi
15,952
Fidel Fuentes
1,637
Marc Bissonnette
7,727
Claude Brunelle
447
Vicky Mercier (Ind.)
494
Benoît Tremblay

1993

Main article: 1993 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 1988 Gain from (loss to) 1993
PC Lib. Bloc
Progressive Conservative 4 0 0 0 –4 0
Liberal 1 0 0 0 –1 0
Bloc Québécois 0 +4 0 +1 0 5

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
PC Liberal NDP BQ Commonwealth of Canada Natural Law Other
Anjou—Rivière-des-Prairies Jean Corbeil
7,066
Normand Biron
25,621
Zamba Mandala
956
Roger Pomerleau
26,179
Frantz-Albert Mitton
139
Gilles Raymond
764
Jean Corbeil
Hochelaga—Maisonneuve Allan Koury
3,838
Jules Léger
10,760
Paul Vachon
955
Réal Ménard
26,052
Steve Bélanger
184
Richard Lauzon
576
Christine Dandenault (M-L)
259
Allan Koury
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Yvan Routhier
2,136
Robert Desbiens
9,854
Alain Gravel
1,227
Gilles Duceppe
24,755
Sophie Brassard
124
Pierre Bergeron
643
John Tromp (Green)
1,050
Normand Chouinard (M-L)
210
Michel Dugré (Ind.)
130
Gilles Duceppe
Mercier Gérald Lacoste
2,720
Magda Tadros
11,700
Guy D'Amours
789
Francine Lalonde
34,139
Pierre Aylwin
128
Carole Jacques (Ind.)
8,992
William-John Apostol (Abol.)
207
Carole Jacques
Rosemont Pauline Vincent
2,343
Pierre Bourque
13,003
Roger Lamarr
990
Benoît Tremblay
28,409
Stéphane Levesque
83
Marc Roy
717
Hélène Héroux (M-L)
188
Benoît Tremblay

1988

Main article: 1988 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 1984 Gain from (loss to) 1988
PC Lib.
Progressive Conservative 4 0 0 4
Liberal 2 0 0 1

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
PC Liberal NDP Green Communist Rhinoceros Commonwealth of Canada Other
Anjou—Rivière-des-Prairies Jean Corbeil
27,451
Vincent Arciresi
17,421
Vincent Marchione
6,687
Mario Paul
1,217
Catherine Commandeur (Ind.)
483
Michel Gravel
Gamelin
Hochelaga—Maisonneuve Allan Koury
16,246
Serge Laprade
14,168
Gaétan Nadeau
8,583
Marius Henry
800
Montserrat Escola
114
Marie Chou Chou Chouinard
1,196
Sylvain Labelle
122
Christiane Robidoux (Ind.)
159
Édouard Desrosiers
Laurier—Sainte-Marie Charles-André Hamelin
12,113
Jean-Claude Malépart
15,956
François Beaulne
8,828
Philippe Champagne
1,438
Marianne Roy
175
Sonia Chatouille Coté
2,121
Daniel Gonzales
79
Hélène Héroux (Ind.)
130
David Berger
Laurier
Merged districts
Jean-Claude Malépart
Montreal—Sainte-Marie
Mercier Carole Jacques
30,804
Luc Chouinard
12,942
André Cordeau
10,251
André Cloutier
309
Jean-Claude Stardust Gouin
1,617
Denise Saint-Louis
137
Jean-Pierre Ginchereau (Ind.)
197
Carole Jacques
Montreal—Mercier
Rosemont Benoît Tremblay
17,127
Jacques Guilbault
13,209
Giuseppe Sciortino
9,163
Sylvain Auclair
1,383
Gaétan Trudel
151
Christian Nettoyeur Jolicoeur
1,656
Christiane Deland-Gervais
120
Suzanne Blais-Grenier (Ind.)
2,060
Dollard Desjardins (Social Credit)
148
Arnold August (Ind.)
122
Léo Larocque (Ind.)
122
Suzanne Blais-Grenier

1984

Main article: 1984 Canadian federal election

Seats won/lost by party

Party 1980 Gain from (loss to) 1984
PC Lib.
Liberal 6 0 –4 2
Progressive Conservative 0 +4 0 4

Results by riding

edit
Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
PC Liberal NDP Rhinoceros Parti nationaliste Commonwealth of Canada Other
Gamelin Michel Gravel
20,870
Lise Thibault
17,491
Carl Cyr
4,730
Jean-Claude Stardust Gouin
1,659
Henriette Martin
1,313
Roger Leclerc
96
Rolf Bramann (Green)
720
Arthur Portelance
Hochelaga—Maisonneuve Édouard Desrosiers
13,244
Serge Joyal
12,201
Marie-Ange Gagnon-Sirois
3,596
Richard A. Sirois
1,847
Réal Ménard
1,089
Daniel Gonzales
63
Gaetan Trudel (Comm.)
99
Serge Joyal
Laurier Roland Gagné
7,720
David Berger
9,302
Jean-Pierre Juneau
4,595
François Yo Gourd
3,247
Jean Saint-Amour
906
Brian O'Keefe
130
Robert Silverman (Green)
751
Gilles Côté (Social Credit)
194
Jean Langevin (PCC)
53
David Berger
Montreal—Mercier Carole Jacques
25,071
Céline Hervieux-Payette
19,335
Robert Ferland
4,925
Raymond les oreilles Pollender
2,038
Gérald Giguère
2,557
Michel Destroismaisons
154
Céline Hervieux-Payette
Montreal—Sainte-Marie François Richard
10,668
Jean-Claude Malépart
13,668
Lauraine Vaillancourt
3,525
André Vaillancourt
990
Ghislain Coté
69
Jean-Claude Malépart
Sainte-Marie
Rosemont Suzanne Blais-Grenier
15,782
Antonio Sciascia
14,477
Roger J.W.D. Lamarre
4,054
Francine Rose Lime Lacasse
1,587
Denis Castonguay
1,008
André Malboeuf
64
Claude Demers (Comm.)
161
Lucien Lapointe (Social Credit)
143
Dollard Desjardins (Ind.)
101
Claude-André Lachance

Notes

  1. Elected as independent candidate in the 1990 by-election. The seat was previously held by Liberal Jean-Claude Malépart who died in office in November 1989. Duceppe sat with the Bloc québécois for the remaining of the Parliament.
  2. Did not seek reelection.
  3. Elected as Progressive Conservative in 1988. Left the PC caucus in 1990 and joined the Bloc later that year.
  4. The riding of Saint-Léonard—Anjou was dissolved into Saint-Léonard, presented in Northern Montreal results

References

Canadian federal election results by region
Western Canada
Ontario
Quebec
Atlantic Canada
Northern Canada
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