Repentigny (federal electoral district) explained

Repentigny
Province:Quebec
Fed-Status:active
Fed-District-Number:24060
Fed-Created:1996
Fed-Election-First:1997
Fed-Election-Last:2021
Fed-Rep:Monique Pauzé
Fed-Rep-Party:BQ
Demo-Pop-Ref:[1]
Demo-Census-Date:2011
Demo-Pop:111191
Demo-Electors:91542
Demo-Electors-Date:2015
Demo-Area:198
Demo-Cd:L'Assomption
Demo-Csd:Repentigny, L'Assomption, Charlemagne, Saint-Sulpice

Repentigny is a federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1997. It consists of the Regional County Municipality of L'Assomption, except the city and parish of L'Épiphanie.

Demographics

According to the 2021 Canadian census[2]

Ethnic groups: 83.9% White, 8.4% Black, 3.1% Arab, 2.0% Latin American, 1.2% Indigenous
Languages: 87.9% French, 1.9% Spanish, 1.6% Arabic, 1.5% English, 1.4% Haitian Creole
Religions: 69.6% Christian (59.2% Catholic, 10.4% other), 4.7% Muslim, 25.2% none

Median income: $44,800 (2020)

Average income: $52,400 (2020)

Political geography

Repentigny had long been one of the most separatist ridings in Quebec. In the 2006 election, every single poll was won by the Bloc Québécois. However, the riding was caught up in the New Democratic Party tsunami that swept through the province five years later.

History

It was created in 1996 from parts of Joliette and Terrebonne ridings. It consisted initially of the cities of Charlemagne, Lachenaie, Mascouche and Repentigny; and the Parish Municipality of La Plaine in the County Regional Municipality of Les Moulins. This riding lost territory to Montcalm during the 2012 electoral redistribution.

Members of Parliament

Electoral history

2021 federal election

2021 federal election redistributed results[3]
PartyVote%
 28,822 51.37
 15,788 28.14
 4,961 8.84
 4,187 7.46
 Others 2,354 4.20

2015 federal election

2011 federal election redistributed results[4]
PartyVote%
 30,339 52.07
 17,963 30.83
 4,613 7.92
 4,342 7.45
 1,006 1.73

2008 federal election

Fr. Gravel chose not to run again, citing pressure from the Church. Party activist Nicolas Dufour secured the Bloc nomination, becoming one of their youngest candidates. Réjean Bellemare ran again for the NDP. The Bloc held the riding handily, with the NDP securing one of the party's four second-place finishes in the province.

2006 by-election

MP Benoît Sauvageau was killed in a car accident on August 28, 2006. Prime Minister Stephen Harper called for a by-election on October 22, 2006 with a polling day of November 27, 2006.

There had been a lot of pressure from opposition parties for Public Works Minister Michael Fortier, a Conservative senator, to run here; however, he has declined. Fortier was appointed to the Senate and the Cabinet to represent Greater Montreal which elected no Conservatives in the last federal election, while Fortier pledged to resign from the Senate and seek election to the House of Commons in the next federal election. Instead, the Conservative candidate was Stéphane Bourgon, a lawyer. The Bloc Québécois, of which Sauvageau was a member, ran Raymond Gravel, a Roman Catholic priest.[5] The New Democratic Party candidate was union activist and former Canadian Navy member Réjean Bellemare, who had also run for the NDP in the previous general election.

The Green Party of Canada had announced that Marc-André Gadoury would be their candidate, but he did not complete and submit paperwork to Elections Canada in sufficient time to get on the ballot. Gadoury suggested that the Greens did not submit the paperwork on purpose and on November 25, 2006, La Presse reported that Gadoury was endorsing the NDP candidate, Réjean Bellemare.

Raymond Gravel of the Bloc Québécois won the by-election with an approximately two-thirds majority of votes.

1997-2006

See also

References

Notes

45.8°N -99°W

Notes and References

  1. [#2011fed|Statistics Canada]
  2. Web site: Government of Canada . Statistics Canada . 2022-02-09 . Profile table, Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population - Repentigny [Federal electoral district (2013 Representation Order)], Quebec ]. 2023-10-12 . www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  3. Web site: Transposition of Votes from the 44th General Election to the 2023 Representation Orders. 9 April 2024. Elections Canada.
  4. http://www.punditsguide.ca/riding.php?riding=1928 Pundits' Guide to Canadian Elections
  5. http://www.canadaeast.com/cp/national/article2.php?articleID=58097