Election Name: | 2011 Manitoba general election |
Country: | Manitoba |
Type: | parliamentary |
Ongoing: | no |
Party Colour: | no |
Party Name: | no |
Previous Election: | 2007 Manitoba general election |
Previous Year: | 2007 |
Next Election: | 2016 Manitoba general election |
Next Year: | 2016 |
Seats For Election: | 57 seats of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba 29 seats are needed for a majority |
Opinion Polls: |
|
Turnout: | 55.77% |
Leader1: | Greg Selinger |
Leader Since1: | October 17, 2009 |
Leaders Seat1: | St. Boniface |
Last Election1: | 36 seats, 48.00% |
Seats1: | 37 |
Seat Change1: | 1 |
Popular Vote1: | 199,066 |
Percentage1: | 46.16% |
Swing1: | 1.84% |
Leader2: | Hugh McFadyen |
Leader Since2: | April 29, 2006 |
Leaders Seat2: | Fort Whyte |
Last Election2: | 19 seats, 37.89% |
Seats2: | 19 |
Popular Vote2: | 188,528 |
Percentage2: | 43.71% |
Swing2: | 5.97% |
Leader3: | Jon Gerrard |
Leader Since3: | October 17, 1998 |
Leaders Seat3: | River Heights |
Last Election3: | 2 seats, 12.39% |
Seats3: | 1 |
Seat Change3: | 1 |
Popular Vote3: | 32,420 |
Percentage3: | 7.52% |
Swing3: | 4.60% |
Map Size: | 431px |
Premier | |
Posttitle: | Premier after election |
Before Election: | Greg Selinger |
Before Party: | New Democratic |
After Election: | Greg Selinger |
After Party: | New Democratic |
The 2011 Manitoba general election was held to elect Members of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. It took place on October 4, 2011, due to the new fixed-date election laws. In the outgoing legislature, the New Democratic Party of Manitoba (NDP) held 37 of the 57 seats, the Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba (PC Party) held 19 of the 57 seats and the Liberal Party of Manitoba held one of the 57 seats, after Kevin Lamoureux resigned his seat in the riding of Inkster to run as a Liberal candidate in a federal by-election.[1]
Following the last census, electoral district boundaries were adjusted. There are 57 electoral districts.
Despite being perceived as a tight race in the run-up to voting, with The Globe and Mail expecting it to be the "closest in more than a decade",[2] the NDP won its fourth consecutive term in government, taking 37 seats, an improvement of one from the 2007 election – thus gaining their largest majority ever in the Assembly – whilst the Progressive Conservatives failed to make any gains beyond closing the gap in the popular vote, and not a single incumbent was defeated.[3] The PC leader Hugh McFadyen announced shortly thereafter that he would resign his post. Also facing a disappointing result in the election, Liberal leader Jon Gerrard also announced shortly after the election that he would resign his post once the party crowned a new leader in 2013.[4]
The Green Party and the NDP have chosen new leaders since the last general election.
On August 27, 2009 Premier Gary Doer, after being Premier of Manitoba for ten years announced his resignation as Premier and leader of the NDP. The following day he was appointed Canada's Ambassador to the United States.[5]
Three candidates entered the campaign to replace Doer: Steve Ashton, Greg Selinger and Andrew Swan. On September 28, 2009, Swan bowed out of the race and endorsed Selinger. Some pundits believe this was an attempt to stop Steve Ashton from becoming leader.[6]
Ashton, first seen as a minor candidate, ended up being a heavy-weight and, gaining momentum, scored big victories in some ridings, however it wasn't enough to convince many MLAs or win union endorsement. Selinger won the leadership election on October 17, 2009 with 65.75% of the ballot. His victory was achieved in large part by being backed by unions and the vast majority of the party elite.[7] [8]
2009 New Democratic Party of Manitoba leadership election | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | Percentage | |
Greg Selinger | 1,317 | 65.75% | |
Steve Ashton | 685 | 34.20% | |
Spoiled ballots | 1 | 0.05% | |
Total | 2,003 | 100.00% |
The Green Party elected James Beddome to a two-year term party leader on November 15, 2008, defeating incumbent Andrew Basham and third candidate Shane Nestruck. After his victory, he said that he would work toward running a full slate of candidates in the next provincial election. He was the party's candidate for a by-election in the northeast Winnipeg division of Elmwood in early 2009.
|- style="background:#ccc;"! rowspan="2" colspan="2" style="text-align:left;"|Party! rowspan="2" style="text-align:left;"|Party leader
!rowspan="2"|
Candidates! colspan="4" style="text-align:center;"|Seats! colspan="3" style="text-align:center;"|Popular vote|- style="background:#ccc;"| style="text-align:center;"|2007| style="text-align:center;"|Dissol.| style="text-align:center;"|2011| style="text-align:center;"|% Change| style="text-align:center;"|#| style="text-align:center;"|%| style="text-align:center;"|% Change|align=left|New Democratic|align=left|Greg Selinger|align="right"|57|align="right"|36|align="right"|36|align="right"|37|align="right"|+2.78%|align="right"|199,069|align="right"|46.16|align="right"|−1.84|align=left|Progressive Conservative|align=left|Hugh McFadyen|align="right"|57|align="right"|19|align="right"|18|align="right"|19|align="right"|0.00%|align="right"|188,535|align="right"|43.71|align="right"|+5.97|align=left|Liberal|align=left|Jon Gerrard|align="right"|57|align="right"|2|align="right"|1|align="right"|1|align="right"|−50.00%|align="right"|32,418|align="right"|7.52|align="right"|−4.60|align=left|James Beddome|align="right"|32|align="right"|0|align="right"|0|align="right"|0|align="right"|−|align="right"|10,886|align="right"|2.52|align="right"|+1.18|align=left|Darrell Rankin|align="right"|4|align="right"|0|align="right"|0|align="right"|0|align="right"|−|align="right"|179|align="right"|0.04|align="right"|-0.05| colspan="2" style="text-align:left;"|Independent|align="right"|1|align="right"|0|align="right"|0|align="right"|0|align="right"|−|align="right"|215|align="right"|0.05|align="right"|-0.25| style="text-align:left;" colspan="4"|Vacant|align="right"|2| style="text-align:right;" colspan="5"||-| style="text-align:left;" colspan="3"|Total Valid Votes| style="text-align:right;"|208| style="text-align:right;"|57| style="text-align:right;"|57| style="text-align:right;"|57| style="text-align:right;"|−| style="text-align:right;"|431,302| style="text-align:right;"|55.77%| style="text-align:right;"|-0.98%|}Of 777,054 registered voters, 55.77% or 433,346 cast votes in the election.[9] Although this is slightly lower than the 2007 election, voter turnout in Manitoba has generally declined since the mid-1970s when it reached 78.3% in the 1973 general election.[10] About 78,500 voters took advantage of advance polls, more than any previous election.[11]
The following is a list of the ten ridings most narrowly lost by the indicated party in the 2007 election (by percentage of the vote the indicated party lost by).
New boundaries are in effect for the 2011 election, so some ridings not listed may come into place in the next election with population movements.
New Democratic | Progressive Conservative | |
---|---|---|
|
| |
Liberal | Green | |
|
|
|
|}
Manitoba Hydro planned an alternative hydro-electric transmission line to Bipole I and II routes running through the Interlake region in Manitoba. Initially it planned a more easterly route to the east of Lake Winnipeg. The NDP ignored the expert opinion of Manitoba Hydro and decided to build the line on the west side of the province at a cost of $4.1 billion. Further, the NDP proposed the creation of a large UNESCO environmental heritage site named Pimachiowin Aki. Just days before his retirement as premier, Doer announced that the government would donate $10 million to the trust fund for UNESCO World Heritage site on the east side of Lake Winnipeg.[23] The NDP claimed that an east side Bipole III route would jeopardise the UNESCO site and claimed that a heritage site would benefit First Nations communities more.[24] The NDP proposed a longer, more expensive, alternative route through the west of Manitoba to preserve the environmental integrity of the east side. Subject to the Environmental Impact Statement to be completed in June 2011, the construction of the line will begin in the winter of 2012, one year after the election.[25]
Progressive Conservative leader Hugh McFadyen opposes the western route stating that it would cost $1 billion to $1.75 billion more, it would destroy more trees, 15 out of 16 First Nations believed the Bipole III would be more economically beneficial, and would be more at risk from disasters as the Bipole lines in the Interlake. McFadyen promised that if elected he would cancel the western route, and build it down the east side.[26] McFadyen also supported the UNESCO site on the east side and claims that Bipole III would not jeopardise the World Heritage Site.
Liberal leader Jon Gerrard proposed that instead of building the line down the east or west, Manitoba Hydro should put the cable under Lake Winnipeg as proposed by Dr. John Ryan, retired University of Winnipeg professor in 2008.[27] In the fall of 2010 Gerrard asked Manitoba Hydro CEO Bob Brennan if he had inquired into the Lake Winnipeg route. Brennan said that he had not. Gerrard promised to build the line through Lake Winnipeg if elected.[28]
Polling firm | Last date of polling | Link | NDP | PC | Liberal | Green | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Angus Reid Public Opinion | [29] | 46 | 43 | 8 | 3 | 0 | |
Probe Research Inc | [30] | 46 | 43 | 7 | 4 | ||
Environics | [31] | 42 | 45 | 10 | |||
Viewpoints Research | [32] | 41 | 32 | 5 | |||
Probe Research Inc | [33] | 44 | 44 | 9 | 3 | ||
Probe Research Inc | [34] | 35 | 47 | 14 | 4 | ||
Probe Research Inc | [35] | 38 | 42 | 15 | 5 | ||
Angus Reid Public Opinion | [36] | 37 | 46 | 13 | 4 | 1 | |
Probe Research Inc | [37] | 40 | 42 | 12 | 6 | ||
Angus Reid Public Opinion | [38] | 34 | 49 | 12 | 4 | 1 | |
Viewpoints Research | [39] | 39 | 38 | 14 | 8 | 1 | |
Probe Research Inc | [40] | 41 | 40 | 13 | 6 | ||
Angus Reid Public Opinion | [41] | 36 | 48 | 12 | 3 | 1 | |
Probe Research Inc | [42] | 42 | 39 | 11 | 8 | 0 | |
Angus Reid Public Opinion | [43] | 37 | 44 | 13 | 3 | 3 | |
Probe Research Inc | [44] | 47 | 37 | 11 | 4 | 1 | |
Probe Research Inc | [45] | 45 | 38 | 12 | 5 | ||
Probe Research Inc | 45 | 36 | 14 | 5 | |||
Environics | [46] | 43 | 35 | 22 | |||
Environics | 49 | 37 | 12 | 2 | |||
Probe Research Inc | 46 | 36 | 13 | 5 | |||
Probe Research Inc | 41 | 43 | 10 | 6 | |||
Probe Research Inc | 43 | 39 | 13 | 5 | |||
Probe Research Inc | 46 | 36 | 13 | 5 | |||
Probe Research Inc | 46 | 38 | 13 | 3 | |||
Election 2007 | 48.00% | 37.89% | 12.39% | 1.34% | 0.39% | ||
Polling firm | Last date of polling | Link | Other | ||||
NDP | PC | Liberal | Green |
width=20% | Polling Firm | width=15% | Date of Polling | width=7% | Link | align="center" | Greg Selinger | align="center" | Hugh McFadyen | align="center" | Jon Gerrard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Probe Research Inc | July 3, 2010 | https://web.archive.org/web/20110715113816/http://probe-research.com/documents/100630%20Leadership%20Approval.pdf | 49 | 41 | 35 | ||||||
Disapproval rating | 22 | 26 | 29 |
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Flin Flon|||Clarence Pettersen
1,901 (57.10%)||Darcy Linklater
791 (23.76%)||Thomas Heine
510 (15.31%)||Saara Harvie
110 (3.30%)|||||Gerard Jennissen|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Kewatinook|||Eric Robinson
2,043 (56.79%)||Michael Birch
1,389 (38.61%)||Orville Woodford
49 (1.36%)||Philip Green
94 (2.61%)|||||Eric Robinson|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Swan River|||Ron Kostyshyn
4,280 (55.81%)||Dave Powell
3,078 (40.14%)||Reynald Cook
264 (3.44%)|||||||Rosann Wowchuk|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|The Pas|||Frank Whitehead
2,995 (73.20%)||Alfred McDonald
959 (23.44%)||Girma Tessema
115 (2.81%)|||||||Frank Whitehead|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Thompson|||Steve Ashton
2,586 (68.19%)||Anita Campbell
1,068 (28.16%)||Ken Dillen
120 (3.16%)|||||||Steve Ashton|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Agassiz||Amity Sagness
1,058 (17.13%)|||Stu Briese
4,390 (71.09%)||Gary Sallows
410 (6.64%)||Kate Storey
317 (5.13%)||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Arthur-Virden||Garry Draper
2,274 (30.18%)|||Larry Maguire
4,975 (66.03%)||Murray Cliff
286 (3.80%)|||||||Larry Maguire|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Brandon East|||Drew Caldwell
3,533 (54.77%)||Mike Waddell
2,513 (38.75%)||Shaun Cameron
280 (4.23%)||Vanda Fleury
158 (2.45%)|||||Drew Caldwell|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Brandon West||Jim Murray
4,073 (46.98%)|||Reg Helwer
4,219 (48.66%)||George Buri
378 (4.36%)|||||||Rick Borotsik|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Dauphin|||Stan Struthers
4,470 (54.91%)||Lloyd McKinney
3,351 (41.17%)||Sisay Tessema
123 (1.51%)||Tamela Friesen
196 (2.41%)||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Riding Mountain||Albert Parsons
2,604 (34.26%)|||Leanne Rowat
4,461 (58.69%)||Carl Hyde
270 (3.55%)||Signe Knutson
266 (3.50%)||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Spruce Woods||Cory Szczepanski
1,923 (28.58%)|||Cliff Cullen
4,487 (66.69%)||Trenton Zazalak
318 (4.73%)||
||
||New District|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Emerson||Lorie Fiddler
1,082 (19.76%)|||Cliff Graydon
3,983 (72.72%)||Micheline Belliveau
412 (7.52%)|||||||Cliff Graydon|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Gimli|||Peter Bjornson
5,004 (51.79%)||Jeff Wharton
4,154 (42.99%)||Lawrence Einarsson
195 (2.02%)||Glenda Whiteman
309 (3.20%)|||||Peter Bjornson|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Interlake|||Tom Nevakshonoff
3,359 (50.47%)||Steve Lupky
2,899 (43.56%)||Albert Ratt
184 (2.76%)||||John Zasitko
213 (3.20%)|||Tom Nevakshonoff|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Lakeside||Rosemary Hnatiuk
1,956 (25.71%)|||Ralph Eichler
5,036 (66.20%)||Jerald Funk
246 (3.23%)||Betty Kehler
369 (4.85%)|||||Ralph Eichler|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Midland||Jacqueline Theroux
1,746 (23.64%)|||Blaine Pedersen
5,133 (69.50%)||Leah Jeffers
507 (6.86%)||
||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Morden-Winkler||Aaron McDowell
656 (11.43%)|||Cameron Friesen
4,912 (85.56%)||Daniel Woldeyohanis
173 (3.01%)||
||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Morris||Mohamed Alli
1,480 (19.33%)|||Mavis Taillieu
5,669 (74.06%)||Janelle Mailhot
506 (6.61%)|||||||Mavis Taillieu|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Portage la Prairie||James Kostuchuk
2,689 (39.39%)|||Ian Wishart
3,556 (52.24%)||Michelle Cudmore-Armstrong
571 (8.37%)|||||||David Faurschou|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"| Dawson Trail|||Ron Lemieux
4,284 (52.51%)||Laurent Tetrault
3,554 (43.56%)||Sandra Hoskins
321 (3.93%)||||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Lac du Bonnet||Elana Spence
2,853 (36.74%)|||Wayne Ewasko
4,266 (54.94%)||Charlett Millen
351 (4.52%)||Dan Green
295 (3.80%)|||||Vacant|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|La Verendrye||Maurice Tallaire
1,823 (25.94%)|||Dennis Smook
4,480 (63.75%)||Monica Guetre
372 (5.31%)||Janine Gibson
351 (5.00%)||
|||Ron Lemieux|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Steinbach||Dally Gutierrez
487 (7.62%)|||Kelvin Goertzen
5,469 (85.52%)||Lee Fehler
439 (6.86%)||
|||||Kelvin Goertzen|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"| St. Paul||Cynthia Ryan
3,479 (37.40%)|||Ron Schuler
5,547 (59.63%)||Ludolf Grollé
276 (2.97%)||||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Selkirk|||Greg Dewar
3,882 (56.35%)||David Bell
2,703 (39.24%)||Marilyn Courchene
304 (4.41%)|||||||Greg Dewar|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Burrows|||Melanie Wight
3,063 (59.35%)||Rick Negrych
1,314 (25.58%)||Twyla Motkaluk
629 (12.18%)||Garett Peepeetch
124 (2.29%)||Frank Komarniski (CPC-M)
32 (0.61%)|||Doug Martindale|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Kildonan|||Dave Chomiak
4,808 (59.52%)||Darrell Penner
2,880 (35.65%)||Dimitrius Sagriotis
391 (4.83%)||
|||||Dave Chomiak|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Point Douglas|||Kevin Chief
3,806 (73.50%)||John Vernaus
917 (17.95%)||Mary Lou Bourgeois
257 (4.51%)||Teresa Pun
176 (3.32%)||Darrell Rankin (CPC-M)
38 (0.71%)|||George Hickes|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|St. Johns|||Gord Mackintosh
4,157 (65.93%)||Ray Larkin
1,405 (22.40%)||Trevor Mueller
348 (5.48%)||Alon Weinberg
392 (6.20%)|||||Gord Mackintosh|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|The Maples|||Mohinder Saran
3,894 (51.8%)||Jose Tomas
1,943 (25.9%)||Pablito Sarinas
1,395 (18.57%)||John Redekopp
281 (3.73%)|||||Mohinder Saran|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Tyndall Park|||Ted Marcelino
2,596 (44.93%)||Cris Aglugub
908 (15.79%)||Roldan Sevillano
2,007 (34.94%)||Dean Koshelanyk
237 (4.34%)|
|||New District|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Concordia|||Matt Wiebe
4,008 (62.72%)||Naseer Warraich
1,803 (28.21%)||Isaiah Oyeleru
237 (3.70%)||Ryan Poirier
308 (4.82%)|||||Matt Wiebe|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Elmwood|||Jim Maloway
3,864 (54.14%)||David Hutten
2,399 (33.61%)||Anthony Dratowany
467 (6.54%)||Ray Eskritt
346 (4.84%)|||||Bill Blaikie|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Radisson|||Bidhu Jha
5,033 (54.94%)||Desmond Penner
3,588 (39.17%)||Shirley Robert
506 (5.52%)|||||||Bidhu Jha|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|River East||Kurt Penner
4,512 (43.92%)|||Bonnie Mitchelson
5,247 (51.07%)||Christopher Pelda
188 (1.83%)||Kelly Mitchell
274 (2.66%)|||||Bonnie Mitchelson|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Rossmere|||Erna Braun
5,392 (56.37%)||Kaur Sidhu
3,430 (35.86%)||Rene Belliveau
356 (3.72%)||Evan Maydaniuk
351 (3.67%)|||||Erna Braun|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|St. Boniface|||Greg Selinger
5,914 (68.56%)||Frank Clark
1,537 (17.82%)||Brad Gross
606 (7.02%)||Alain Landry
530 (6.14%)|||||Greg Selinger|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Transcona|||Daryl Reid
4,488 (57.92%)||Craig Stapon
2,668 (34.43%)||Faye McLeod-Jashyn
551 (7.11%)|||||||Daryl Reid|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Assiniboia|||Jim Rondeau
5,093 (58.22%)||Susan Auch
3,258 (37.24%)||Moe Bokhari
194 (2.22%)||Anlina Sheng
203 (2.32%)|||||Jim Rondeau|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Charleswood||Paul Beckta
2,597 (30.05%)|||Myrna Driedger
4,826 (55.84%)||Matthew Ostrove
751 (8.69%)||Dirk Hoeppner
469 (5.83%)|||||Myrna Driedger|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Kirkfield Park|||Sharon Blady
4,900 (46.80%)||Kelly de Groot
4,871 (46.52%)||Syed Bokhari
363 (3.47%)||Alanna Gray
337 (3.22%)|||||Sharon Blady|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|St. James|||Deanne Crothers
4,411 (49.75%)||Scott Gillingham
3,403 (38.38%)||Gerard Allard
679 (7.66%)||Trevor Vandale
374 (4.22%)|||||Bonnie Korzeniowski|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Tuxedo||Dashi Zargani
2,319 (25.35%)|||Heather Stefanson
4,829 (52.79%)||Linda Minuk
1,509 (16.5%)||Donald Benham
491 (5.36%)|||||Heather Stefanson|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Fort Garry-Riverview|||James Allum
5,137 (55.52%)||Ian Rabb
3,054 (33.01%)||Kevin Freedman
663 (7.17%)||Daniel Backé
398 (4.30%)||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Fort Rouge|||Jennifer Howard
4,493 (51.27%)||Sonny Dominique
1,767 (20.16%)||Paul Hesse
2,026 (23.12%)||Stephen Weedon
477 (5.44%)||
|||Jennifer Howard|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Logan|||Flor Marcelino
2,943 (58.91%)||Tyrone Krawetz
838 (16.77%)||Joe Chan
845 (16.91%)||Kristen Andrews
324 (6.49%)||David Tymoshchuk (CPC-M)
46 (0.92%)||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Minto|||Andrew Swan
3,569 (66.26%)||Belinda Squance
830 (15.41%)||Don Woodstock
602 (11.18%)||Harold Dyck
330 (6.13%)||Cheryl-Anne Carr (CPC-M)
55 (1.02%)|||Andrew Swan|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|River Heights||Dan Manning
1,835 (17.76%)||Marty Morantz
3,384 (32.76%)|||Jon Gerrard
4,742 (45.91%)||Elizabeth May Cameron
369 (3.57%)|||||Jon Gerrard|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Wolseley|||Rob Altemeyer
4,193 (60.68%)||Harpreet Turka
847 (12.26%)||Eric Stewart
506 (7.32%)||James Beddome
1,364 (19.74%)|||||Rob Altemeyer|}
|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Fort Richmond|||Kerri Irvin-Ross
4,026 (53.15%)||Shaun McCaffrey
2,908 (38.39%)||Dustin Hiles
369 (4.87%)||Caitlin McIntyre
226 (2.98%)||||New District|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Fort Whyte||Sunny Dhaliwal
2,655 (29.49%)|||Hugh McFadyen
5,594 (62.13%)||Chae Tsai
710 (7.88%)|||||||Hugh McFadyen|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Riel|||Christine Melnick
5,352 (54.69%)||Rochelle Squires
3,916 (40.01%)||Cheryl Gilarski
480 (4.90%)|||||||Christine Melnick|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Seine River|||Theresa Oswald
5,500 (52.88%)||Gord Steeves
4,569 (43.93%)||Troy Osiname
295 (2.83%)|||||||Theresa Oswald|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Southdale|||Erin Selby
5,662 (51.84%)||Judy Eastman
4,898 (44.84%)||Amarjit Singh
327 (2.99%)|||||||Erin Selby|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|St. Norbert|||Dave Gaudreau
3,966 (44.94%)||Karen Velthuys
3,935 (44.58%)||Marcel Laurendeau
883 (10.00%)|||||||Marilyn Brick|-| style="background:whitesmoke;"|St. Vital|||Nancy Allan
5,023 (59.80%)||Mike Brown
2,876 (34.24%)||Harry Wolbert
461 (5.48%)|||||||Nancy Allan|}
|Progressive Conservative| Jacob Nasekapow |align="right"| 817|align="right"| 29.63|align="right"| +6.18|align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Total valid votes!align="right"|2,743!align="right"|100.00!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Rejected and declined votes!align="right"|14!align="right"|!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Turnout!align="right"|2,757!align="right"|22.10!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Electors on the lists!align="right"|12,475!align="right"|!align="right"||align="right"||}
|Progressive Conservative| Doyle Piwniuk|align="right"| 3,137|align="right"| 68.20|align="right"| +2.23|align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Total valid votes!align="right"|4,600!align="right"|100.00!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Rejected and declined votes!align="right"|10!align="right"|!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Turnout!align="right"|4,610!align="right"|33.55!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Electors on the lists!align="right"|13,739!align="right"|!align="right"||align="right"||}
|Progressive Conservative| Shannon Martin|align="right"| 2,642|align="right"| 69.99|align="right"| -4.01|align="right"|| Independent| Ray Shaw|align="right"| 138|align="right"| 3.66|align="right"| -|align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Total valid votes!align="right"|3,775!align="right"|!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Rejected and declined votes!align="right"|17!align="right"|!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Turnout!align="right"|3,792!align="right"|27.51!align="right"||align="right"||- style="background:white;"! style="text-align:right;" colspan="3"|Electors on the lists!align="right"|13,782!align="right"|!align="right"||align="right"||}
]