Mégantic (provincial electoral district)
Mégantic Quebec electoral district |
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Provincial electoral district |
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Legislature |
National Assembly of Quebec |
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MNA |
Ghislain Bolduc Liberal |
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District created |
1867 |
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District abolished |
1972 |
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District re-created |
2011 |
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First contested |
1867 |
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Last contested |
2014 |
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Demographics |
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Population (2011) |
49,055 |
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Electors (2014)[1] |
38,589 |
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Area (km²)[2] |
5,266.8 |
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Pop. density (per km²) |
9.3 |
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Census divisions |
Coaticook (part), Le Granit (part), Le Val-Saint-François (part), Les Appalaches (part) |
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Census subdivisions |
Ascot Corner, Audet, Beaulac-Garthby, Bury, Chartierville, Cookshire-Eaton, Disraeli (parish), Disraeli (city), Dudswell, East Angus, Frontenac, Hampden, Lac-Drolet, Lac-Mégantic, Lambton, La Patrie, Lingwick, Marston, Milan, Nantes, Newport, Notre-Dame-des-Bois, Piopolis, Saint-Augustin-de-Woburn, Sainte-Cécile-de-Whitton, Saint-Isidore-de-Clifton, Sainte-Praxède, Saint-Romain, Saint-Sébastien, Scotstown, Stoke, Stornoway, Stratford, Val-Racine, Weedon, Westbury |
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Mégantic is a provincial electoral district in the Estrie and Chaudière-Appalaches regions of Quebec, Canada.
It was created for the 1867 election (and an electoral district of that name existed earlier in the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada and the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada). It was abolished before the 1973 election and its territory was mostly divided between Lotbinière and Frontenac; a small part also went to Arthabaska. Despite the name, none of the territory of Mégantic went into the newly created Mégantic-Compton. However, Mégantic-Compton was abolished before the 2012 election and its successor electoral district was the recreated Mégantic,[3] which contains most of the former area Mégantic-Compton, as well as parts of Johnson, Richmond, and Frontenac as they existed prior to the 2012 election.
Members of the Legislative Assembly / National Assembly
- George Irvine, Conservative - Liberal (1867–1876)
- Andrew Kennedy, Conservative (1876–1878)
- George Irvine, Liberal (1878–1884)
- John Whyte, Liberal (1884–1886)
- Andrew Stuart Johnson, Conservative (1886–1888)
- William Rhodes, Liberal (1888–1890)
- Andrew Stuart Johnson, Conservative (1890–1892)
- James King, Conservative (1892–1897)
- George Robert Smith, Liberal (1897–1908)
- David Henry Pennington, Conservative (1908–1912)
- Joseph Demers, Liberal (1912–1916)
- Laureat Lapierre, Liberal (1916–1935)
- Tancrède Labbé, Action liberale nationale - Union Nationale (1935–1939)
- Louis Houde, Liberal (1939–1940)
- Tancrède Labbé, Union Nationale (1940–1956)
- Joseph-Émile Fortin, Union Nationale (1957–1960)
- Émilien Maheux, Liberal (1960–1966)
- Marc Bergeron, Union Nationale (1966–1970)
- Bernard Dumont, Ralliement créditiste du Québec (1970–1973)
- did not exist (1973–2012), see Mégantic-Compton
- Ghislain Bolduc, Liberal (2012–present)
Election results
2012 - present
^ Change is from redistributed results. CAQ change is from ADQ.
1867 - 1970
* Result compared to Ralliement national
Quebec provincial by-election, 1957 |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % |
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Union Nationale | Joseph-Émile Fortin | 13,799 | 64.77 |
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Liberal | Pierre-Émilien Maheux | 7,504 | 35.23 |
Total valid votes |
21,303 | 99.11 |
Total rejected ballots |
191 | 0.89 |
Turnout |
21,494 | 84.10 |
Electors on the lists |
25,559 | – |
References
External links
- Information
- Election results
- Maps
Neighbouring electoral districts
Quebec provincial electoral districts |
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Bas-Saint-Laurent and Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine | |
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Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean and Côte-Nord | |
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Capitale-Nationale | |
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Mauricie | |
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Chaudière-Appalaches and Centre-du-Québec | |
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Estrie (Eastern Townships) | |
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Eastern Montérégie | |
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South Shore | |
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East Montreal | |
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West Montreal | |
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Laval | |
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Lanaudière | |
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Laurentides | |
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Outaouais | |
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Abitibi-Témiscamingue and Nord-du-Québec | |
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Eliminated in the 2012 election: | |
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1Côte-du-Sud is split between Bas-Saint-Laurent and Chaudière-Appalaches
2Johnson is split between Centre-du-Québec and Montérégie
See also:
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