Saint John—Rothesay Explained

Saint John—Rothesay
Province:New Brunswick
Coordinates:45.292°N -66.034°W
Fed-Status:active
Fed-District-Number:13009
Fed-Created:1914
Fed-Election-First:1917
Fed-Election-Last:2021
Fed-Rep:Wayne Long
Fed-Rep-Party:Liberal
Fed-Rep-Party-Link:Liberal Party of Canada
Demo-Pop-Ref:[1]
Demo-Census-Date:2021
Demo-Pop:81996
Demo-Electors:63371
Demo-Electors-Date:2019
Demo-Area:457
Demo-Cd:Kings, Saint John
Demo-Csd:Rothesay, Saint John, Simonds, The Brothers 18

Saint John—Rothesay (formerly Saint John) is a federal electoral district in southern New Brunswick, Canada. With its predecessor ridings, St. John—Albert and Saint John—Lancaster, the area has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1917.

The district has always included the city of Saint John, and various suburbs and bedroom communities have been added or removed from it over the years. Presently the district also includes the town of Rothesay, the Indian reserve of The Brothers 18, and part of Simonds Parish.

The neighbouring ridings are Fundy Royal and New Brunswick Southwest.

History

Originally, Saint John had a special setup for representation in Parliament. The "City of St. John" returned one member, while the "City and County of St. John", which included the County of Saint John returned one as well. Between 1872 and 1896, the "City and County" riding elected two Members of Parliament. In effect, the city itself had two or even three Members of Parliament. This practice continued until 1914.

After 1914, the counties of Saint John and Albert were joined. The two existing ridings were merged into a new riding, called "St. John—Albert", that also incorporated parts of King's and Albert riding. The new riding returned two Members of Parliament until 1935.

In 1966, St. John—Albert was abolished when Albert County was moved to the Fundy—Royal riding. A new riding, "Saint John—Lancaster", was created.

Saint John—Lancaster was abolished in the 1976 redistribution, and a new riding with substantially the same boundaries was created and named "Saint John". The City of Lancaster had been amalgamated into Saint John.

In recent years, the Progressive Conservative Party has had the most success in the city: its members were elected in all but four elections since 1953: 1974, 1980, 2004, and 2006. Well-known Members of Parliament from the area include Father of Confederation Samuel Leonard Tilley, former Veterans Affairs Minister Gerald Merrithew and popular former mayor Elsie Wayne.

As per the 2012 federal electoral redistribution, this riding was renamed Saint John—Rothesay and lost a small portion of territory to Fundy Royal.

Following the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution, the riding will largely be replaced by Saint John—Kennebecasis. It gains Quispamsis from Fundy Royal and loses all of the City of Saint John west of the Saint John River to the new riding of Saint John—St. Croix.

Members of Parliament

These ridings have elected the following members of Parliament:

ParliamentYearsMemberPartyMemberParty
St. John—Albert
Riding created from City and County of St. John
13th1917 – 1921   Rupert Wilson WigmoreGovernment (Unionist)   Stanley Edward ElkinGovernment (Unionist)
14th1921 – 1925   John Babington Macaulay BaxterConservative   Murray MacLarenConservative
15th1925 – 1926Thomas Bell
16th1926 – 1930
17th1930 – 1935
18th1935 – 1938   William RyanLiberal
1938 – 1940Allan McAvity
19th1940 – 1945   King HazenNational Government
20th1945 – 1949   Progressive Conservative
21st1949 – 1953   Daniel Aloysius RileyLiberal
22nd1953 – 1957   Thomas Miller BellProgressive Conservative
23rd1957 – 1958
24th1958 – 1962
25th1962 – 1963
26th1963 – 1965
27th1965 – 1968
St. John—Lancaster
28th1968 – 1972   Thomas Miller BellProgressive Conservative
29th1972 – 1974
30th1974 – 1979   Mike LandersLiberal
Saint John
31st1979 – 1980   Eric FergusonProgressive Conservative
32nd1980 – 1984   Mike LandersLiberal
33rd1984 – 1988   Gerald MerrithewProgressive Conservative
34th1988 – 1993
35th1993 – 1997Elsie Wayne
36th1997 – 2000
37th2000 – 2003
2003 – 2004   Conservative
38th2004 – 2006   Paul ZedLiberal
39th2006 – 2008
40th2008 – 2011   Rodney WestonConservative
41st2011 – 2015
Saint John—Rothesay
42nd2015–2019   Wayne LongLiberal
43rd2019–2021
43rd2021–present

Election results

Saint John—Kennebecasis, 2023 representation order

2021 federal election redistributed results[2]
PartyVote%
 16,082 42.60
 13,737 36.39
 4,975 13.18
 1,851 4.90
 1,106 2.93

Saint John—Rothesay, 2013 representation order

2011 federal election redistributed results[3]
PartyVote%
 17,881 49.72
 11,052 30.73
 5,750 15.99
 992 2.76
 Others 288 0.80

Saint John, 2003 Representation Order

2000 federal election redistributed results
PartyVote%
 19,236 49.05
 11,829 30.16
 4,099 10.45
 3,421 8.72
 Others 635 1.62

St. John—Albert 1914 - 1966

Note: Conservative vote is compared to Government vote in 1917 election, and Liberal vote is compared to Opposition vote. Popular vote is compared to the party's total share of the popular vote in the 1917 general election.

See also

References

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. [#2021fed|Statistics Canada]
  2. Web site: Transposition of Votes from the 44th General Election to the 2023 Representation Orders. 9 April 2024. Elections Canada.
  3. http://www.punditsguide.ca/riding.php?riding=1867 Pundits' Guide to Canadian Elections