Gloucester (provincial electoral district)
Gloucester was a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada from the 1828 election of the 9th New Brunswick Legislature. It mirrored Gloucester County, and used a bloc voting system to elect candidates. It was abolished with the 1973 electoral redistribution, divided up into five first past the post districts: Caraquet, Nepisiguit-Chaleur, Nigadoo-Chaleur, Shippagan-les-Îles and Tracadie.
Members of the Legislative Assembly
Election results
New Brunswick provincial by-election, 18 September 1972 |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % | Elected |
|
Progressive Conservative | Lorenzo Morais | 13,685 | 53.88 | Y |
|
Liberal | Richard Savoie | 11,714 | 46.12 | |
Total valid votes |
25,399 | 100.0 |
Total rejected ballots |
620 | 2.38 |
Turnout |
26,019 | 81.16 |
Source: Elections New Brunswick[7] |
New Brunswick general election, 1970 |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % | Elected |
|
Liberal | Omer Boudreau | 11,333 | 49.47 | Y |
|
Liberal | André Robichaud | 11,055 | 48.25 | Y |
|
Liberal | Bernard A. Jean | 10,892 | 47.54 | Y |
|
Liberal | Adjutor Ferguson | 10,877 | 47.48 | Y |
|
Liberal | Frank Branch | 10,552 | 46.06 | Y |
|
Progressive Conservative | Camille Losier | 5,175 | 22.59 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | Calixte Chiasson | 5,132 | 22.40 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | Roland Boudreau | 4,538 | 19.81 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | Odilon Boudreau | 4,272 | 18.65 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | William Young | 4,211 | 18.38 | |
|
Independent | André Dumont | 646 | 2.82 | |
Total valid votes |
22,910 | 100.0 |
Source: Elections New Brunswick[8] |
New Brunswick general election, 1967 |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % | Elected |
|
Liberal | Omer Boudreau | 12,350 | 61.16 | Y |
|
Liberal | Adjutor Ferguson | 12,048 | 59.66 | Y |
|
Liberal | Gérard Haché | 11,900 | 58.93 | Y |
|
Liberal | Bernard A. Jean | 11,890 | 58.88 | Y |
|
Liberal | Ernest Richard | 11,281 | 55.86 | Y |
|
Progressive Conservative | Gerard Arseneau | 6,539 | 32.38 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | Roland Boudreau | 6,505 | 32.21 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | Percy Cormier | 6,310 | 31.25 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | Bertie Ferguson | 6,297 | 31.18 | |
|
Progressive Conservative | Antonin Friolet | 4,211 | 20.85 | |
Total valid votes[en 1] |
20,194 | 100.0 |
Source: Elections New Brunswick[9] |
- ↑ Estimate taken from the amount of votes from general polls, 19,720, and adding in the highest number of Liberal and Progressive Conservative votes from each of the advanced polls, as no total number of votes was available for these.
References
- ↑ resigned to accept appointment as Justice of the Peace
- ↑ resigned to accept appointment
- 1 2 elected to federal seat
- ↑ resigned to accept appointment as judge
- 1 2 died in office
- ↑ resigned
- ↑ Twenty-eighth General Election, November 18, 1974 , Report of the Chief Electoral Officer. Elections New Brunswick. Retrieved 21 February 2011.
- ↑ Twenty-seventh General Election, October 26, 1970, Report of the Chief Electoral Officer . Elections New Brunswick. Retrieved February 22, 2011.
- ↑ Twenty-sixth General Elections, October 23, 1967, Report of the Chief Electoral Officer. Elections New Brunswick. Retrieved February 22, 2011.
|
---|
|
Capital | |
---|
|
Northern | |
---|
|
River Valley | |
---|
|
South | |
---|
|
Southeast | |
---|
|
Defunct Districts |
|
1974 – 2014 | |
---|
|
Pre-1974 | |
---|
|
|