St._Boniface_(provincial_electoral_district)

St. Boniface (provincial electoral district)

St. Boniface (provincial electoral district)

Provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada


St. Boniface (French: Saint-Boniface) is a provincial electoral division in the Canadian province of Manitoba. It should not be confused with the federal electoral division of the same name, which includes most of the provincial riding's territory but has expanded boundaries and a larger population base. The riding has existed, in one form or another, since the province's creation.

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In Manitoba's first general election (1870), the riding was divided into St. Boniface East and St. Boniface West. It became a single constituency in 1874, and has existed continuously since then.

The St. Boniface constituency elected its representation by preferential balloting from 1926 to 1953, a single member by instant runoff voting from 1926 to 1945 and two members by single transferable voting in 1949 and 1953. On all other occasions, it has been a single-member constituency, electing its member by First Past The Post.

St. Boniface is located in the central-eastern Winnipeg. Its boundaries roughly correspond with the historical community of Saint Boniface, Manitoba, which was a distinct civic jurisdiction before being amalgamated with the City of Winnipeg in 1971.

The riding's population in 1996 was 19,646. The average family income in 1999 was $45,193, with an unemployment rate of 10.5%. The service sector accounts for 18% of the riding's industry, with a further 15% in health and social services.

St. Boniface has historically been home to the largest francophone community in the Winnipeg area. According to a 1999 census, 34% of the riding's residents speak French as their first language—the highest rate in the province. The riding's aboriginal population is 8%, and almost 19% of the population is over 65 years of age.

For many years after the introduction of partisan politics in 1882, St. Boniface was a hotly contested battleground riding between the provincial Liberals and Conservatives (although candidates of the parliamentary left were also elected in the 1930s and 1940s). During the 1950s and 1960s, it was generally regarded as a safe seat for the Liberals.

In 1969, St. Boniface MLA Laurent Desjardins decided to sit as a Liberal Democrat, supporting the New Democratic Party government of Edward Schreyer. He formally joined the NDP in 1971, and aside from an overturned election result in 1973, continued to represent the area until 1988.

The provincial Liberals recaptured the seat in 1988, during a period of resurgence for that party in the province. After Neil Gaudry's death in 1999, Greg Selinger recaptured the seat for the NDP. He was reelected in 2003 with about 75 percent of the popular vote, and was named premier of Manitoba in 2009.

Selinger left politics two years after the NDP was heavily defeated at the 2016 provincial election, and newly elected Liberal leader Dougald Lamont won the seat at the ensuing by-election.

In the 2023 Manitoba general election, Lamont was defeated by the NDP and resigned as Liberal leader.[1]

Members of the Legislative Assembly

St. Boniface East (1870–1874)

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St. Boniface West (1870–1874)

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St. Boniface (single-member riding, 1874–1949)

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St. Boniface (two-member riding, 1949–1958)

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St. Boniface (single-member riding, 1958–)

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Electoral results

2023

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2019

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2018 by-election

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2016

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2011

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2007

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2003

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1999

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1995

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1990

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1988

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1986

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1981

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1977

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1974 by-election

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1973

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1969

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1966

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1962

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1959

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1958

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1953

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1949

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1945

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1941

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1936

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1932

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1927

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1922

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1920

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1915

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1914

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1913 by-election

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1910

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1907

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1903

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1900 by-election

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1899

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1897 by-election

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1896

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1892

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1888

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1886

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1883

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1882 by-election

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1879

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1878

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1874

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Previous boundaries

The 1999–2011 boundaries for St. Boniface highlighted in red

References

  1. "Dougald Lamont stepping down as Manitoba Liberal leader". Winnipeg. October 3, 2023. Retrieved October 4, 2023.
  2. "Candidates: St Boniface By-Election Expenditure Limit" (PDF). Elections Manitoba. November 25, 2018. Retrieved November 25, 2018.
  3. "Candidates: 41st General Election". Elections Manitoba. March 29, 2016. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  4. "Candidates: 34th General Election" (PDF). Elections Manitoba. April 26, 1988. Retrieved September 26, 2018.

49.886°N 97.103°W / 49.886; -97.103


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