Gouin | |
Province: | Quebec |
Coordinates: | 45.536°N -73.594°W |
Prov-Status: | active |
Prov-Created: | 1965 |
Prov-Election-First: | 1966 |
Prov-Election-Last: | 2022 |
Prov-Rep: | Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois |
Prov-Rep-Party: | QS |
Demo-Census-Date: | 2011 |
Demo-Pop: | 59345 |
Demo-Electors: | 43831 |
Demo-Electors-Date: | 2014 |
Demo-Area: | 5.8 |
Demo-Cd: | Montreal (part) |
Demo-Csd: | Montreal (part) |
Gouin is a provincial electoral district in the Montreal region of the province of Quebec, Canada that elects members to the National Assembly of Quebec. It consists of part of the Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie borough of Montreal. The riding covers the neighbourhoods of La Petite-Patrie and Parc Molson, plus a small part of Vieux-Rosemont.
It was created for the 1966 election from parts of Montréal-Laurier and Montréal–Jeanne-Mance.
Its territory was unchanged during the switch from the 2001 to the 2011 electoral map.
It is named after former Quebec Premier, Lomer Gouin, who was in power from 1905 to 1920.
78.1%
4.7%
17.2%http://www.electionsquebec.qc.ca/documents/pdf/dossier-socio-economique/2011/381.pdf
* Result compared to Action démocratique
* Result compared to UFP|-|Liberal|Edith Keays|align="right"|3,645|align="right"|24.32|align="right"|-5.88|-|-|-|-|Independent|Régent Millette|align="right"|33|align="right"|0.22|align="right"| - |-|}
|-|Liberal|William Aguilar|align="right"|8,996|align="right"|30.20|align="right"|-2.42|-|-|-|-|}
|- |Liberal|Michelle Daines|align="right"|10,273|align="right"|33.62|align="right"|-2.06|-|Socialist Democracy|Geneviève Ricard|align="right"|624|align="right"|2.04|align="right"|-2.62|-|-|-|No designation|Annette Kouri|align="right"|61|align="right"|0.20|align="right"| - |}
1995 Quebec referendum | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Side | Votes | % | ||
Oui | 21,854 | 57.77 | ||
Non | 15,977 | 42.23 |
1992 Charlottetown Accord referendum | |||
---|---|---|---|
Side | Votes | % | |
Non | 15,155 | 66.20 | |
Oui | 7,737 | 33.80 | |
|-|Liberal|Jean L’Abbé|align="right"|10,490|align="right"|45.34|align="right"|+6.91|-|New Democratic|Jacques Derosiers|align="right"|665|align="right"|2.87|align="right"| - |-|Parti indépendantiste|Yvon J. Hachey|align="right"|341|align="right"|1.47|align="right"| - |-|Progressive Conservative|Lorenzo Bonneau|align="right"|181|align="right"|0.78|align="right"| - |-|Humanist|Hernani Da Costa|align="right"|146|align="right"|0.63|align="right"| - |-|Christian Socialist|Jean-François Cloutier|align="right"|51|align="right"|0.22|align="right"| - |-|}
|-|Liberal|Jean Longpré|align="right"|10,354|align="right"|38.43|align="right"|+4.82|-|-|Workers' Communist|Louise Baillargeon|align="right"|159|align="right"|0.59|align="right"| - |-|-|-|Independent|Lorenzo Bonneau|align="right"|66|align="right"|0.24|align="right"| - |-|United Social Credit|Camille Marquis|align="right"|48|align="right"|0.18|align="right"|-2.79|-|}
1980 Quebec referendum | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Side | Votes | % | ||
Non | 13,051 | 51.29 | ||
Oui | 12,395 | 48.71 |
|-|Liberal|Jean M. Beauregard|align="right"|9,015|align="right"|33.61|align="right"|-14.47|-|-|-|Workers|Céline Lenoir Boulanger|align="right"|94|align="right"|0.35|align="right"| - |-|NDP – RMS coalition|Wilbray Thiffault|align="right"|78|align="right"|0.29|align="right"| - |-|}
2001–2011 changes (Flash)
1992–2001 changes (Flash)