Canadian federal elections have provided the following results in Quebec City.
Quebec City, like the rest of the province, used to be solidly Liberal until 1984. In 1984 and 1988, the Progressive Conservatives swept the area, thanks to nationalist support. This nationalist support went to the Bloc Québécois in 1993, and Quebec City became a Bloc stronghold for the next two decades.
In the 2000 election, the Liberals were able to gain some ground, winning two seats, but the Bloc regained those seats in the 2004 election before losing all but one in 2006 to the Conservatives. The 2006 and 2008 federal elections witnessed fierce battles between sovereigntist support for the Bloc, and populist/libertarian support for the Conservatives, which intensified greatly in the fallout of the CHOI-FM controversy.
In 2011, the unexpected surge of NDP support in Quebec managed to overwhelm the support of all other parties, allowing them to sweep Quebec City.
The Liberals remained on the radar screen in Quebec City, but this support didn't translate into actual seats again until 2015, when they won two seats. The Conservatives won the other three, among the few bright spots in the Tories' defeat that year. In 2019 the Bloc regain popularity but only one seat leaving two seats each for Liberals and Conservatives.
Election | / | Social Credit | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1979 | 133,000 66.1% | 15,156 7.7% | 14,496 7.2% | 32,284 16.0% | 6,040 3.0% | ||||||||||||
1980 | 129,060 69.7% | 20,918 11.3% | 14,801 8.0% | 6,711 3.6% | 13,577 7.3% | ||||||||||||
1984 | 73,565 34.1% | 23,635 10.9% | 103,666 48.0% | 1,081 0.5% | 15,136 7.0% | ||||||||||||
1988 | 59,771 26.3% | 34,194 15.1% | 2,837 1.2% | 126,926 55.9% | 3,471 1.5% | ||||||||||||
1993 | 58,648 25.0% | 134,001 57.1% | 4,274 1.8% | 786 0.3% | 30,868 13.2% | 5,975 2.6% | |||||||||||
1997 | 74,184 32.2% | 93,271 40.5% | 5,920 2.6% | 51,655 22.4% | 3,642 1.6% | 1,533 0.7% | |||||||||||
2000 | 85,172 38.1% | 87,066 38.9% | 5,106 2.3% | 1,136 0.5% | 15,343 6.9% | 27,262 12.2% | 2,599 1.2% | ||||||||||
2004 | 65,783 27.2% | 112,567 46.6% | 10,670 4.4% | 41,503 17.2% | 8,191 3.4% | 2,710 1.1% | |||||||||||
2006 | 27,068 10.5% | 90,566 35.3% | 19,829 7.7% | 103,696 40.4% | 9,624 3.7% | 5,972 2.3% | |||||||||||
2008 | 43,262 16.4% | 85,905 33.4% | 29,312 11.4% | 91,428 35.5% | 6,925 2.7% | 736 0.3% | |||||||||||
2011 | 23,124 8.4% | 56,454 20.4% | 116,832 42.3% | 73,936 26.8% | 4,779 1.7% | 981 0.4% | |||||||||||
2015 | 77,313 26.8% | 40,385 14.0% | 62,283 21.6% | 101,232 35.1% | 6,817 2.4% | 655 0.2% | |||||||||||
2019 | 82,362 28.2% | 80,973 27.8% | 25,596 8.8% | 83,978 28.8% | 11,739 4.0% | 6,456 2.2% | |||||||||||
2021 | 75,997 27.0% | 73,523 26.2% | 22,880 8.1% | 96,456 34.3% | 5,569 2.0% | 6,567 2.3% |
See main article: 2021 Canadian federal election. |-| style="background-color:whitesmoke" |Beauport—Limoilou||Ann Gingras
12,378
25.45%||Alupa Clarke
14,164
29.12%|||Julie Vignola
15,146
31.14%||Camille Esther Garon
5,075
10.43%||Dalila Elhak
1,025
2.11%||||Lyne Verret
737
1.52%||Claude Moreau (M-L)
119
0.24%|||Julie Vignola|-| style="background-color:whitesmoke" |Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles||René-Paul Coly
11,326
19.75%|||Pierre Paul-Hus
25,623
44.68%||Marie-Christine Lamontagne
14,237
24.83%||Michel Marc Lacroix
3,446
6.01%||Jacques Palardy-Dion
972
1.69%||Wayne Cyr
1,296
2.26%||Daniel Pelletier
449
0.78%|||||Pierre Paul-Hus|-| style="background-color:whitesmoke" |Louis-Hébert|||Joël Lightbound
22,933
38.35%||Gilles Lépine
14,332
23.97%||Marc Dean
16,247
27.17%||Hamid Nadji
4,337
7.25%||Denis Blanchette
1,573
2.63%||||||Ali Dahan (Ind.)
378
0.63%|||Joël Lightbound|-| style="background-color:whitesmoke" |Louis-Saint-Laurent||Nathanielle Morin
11,228
17.52%|||Gérard Deltell
33,098
51.64%||Thierry Bilodeau
13,069
20.39%||Yu-Ti Eva Huang
3,370
5.26%||Daniel Chicoine
907
1.42%||Guillaume Côté
1,337
2.09%||Mélanie Fortin
1,089
1.70%|||||Gérard Deltell|-| style="background-color:whitesmoke" |Québec|||Jean-Yves Duclos
18,132
35.42%||Bianca Boutin
9,239
18.05%||Louis Sansfaçon
14,824
28.96%||Tommy Bureau
6,652
12.99%||Patrick Kerr
1,182
2.31%||Daniel Brisson
855
1.67%||Karine Simard
307
0.60%|||||Jean-Yves Duclos|}
See main article: 2019 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 2015 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 2011 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 2008 Canadian federal election. The Bloc Québécois won one of the four seats lost to the Conservatives in the last election.
See main article: 2006 Canadian federal election. The Bloc Québécois held on to just one of the five seats in this region, losing four to the Conservatives, who had some of their strongest results in Quebec in this region in 2004, mainly from libertarian voters as a result of the CHOI-FM controversy.
See main article: 2004 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 2000 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 1997 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 1993 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 1988 Canadian federal election.
See main article: 1984 Canadian federal election.