Edmonton Riverbend

Edmonton Riverbend is a federal electoral district in Alberta. Edmonton Riverbend was created by the 2012 federal electoral boundaries redistribution and was legally defined in the 2013 representation order. It came into effect upon the call of the 42nd Canadian federal election, scheduled for October 2015.[3] It was created out of part of the electoral district of Edmonton—Leduc.[4] On October 19, 2015 Matt Jeneroux was the first elected Member of Parliament for the Electoral District receiving 50% of the vote.

Edmonton Riverbend
Alberta electoral district
Federal electoral district
LegislatureHouse of Commons
MP
 
 
 
Matt Jeneroux
Conservative
District created2013
First contested2015
Last contested2019
District webpageprofile, map
Demographics
Population (2011)[1]106,302
Electors (2019)86,609
Area (km²)[2]60
Pop. density (per km²)1,771.7
Census divisionsDivision No. 11
Census subdivisionsEdmonton

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following members of the House of Commons of Canada:

Parliament Years Member Party
Edmonton Riverbend
Riding created from Edmonton—Leduc
42nd  2015–2019     Matt Jeneroux Conservative
43rd  2019–present

Election results

Graph of election results in Edmonton Riverbend (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)
2019 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeMatt Jeneroux35,12657.4%+7.51
LiberalTariq Chaudary14,03823.0%-7.18
New DemocraticAudrey Redman9,33215.3%-1.75
GreenValerie Kennedy1,7972.9%+0.69
People'sKevin Morris8551.4%-
Total valid votes/Expense limit 61,148100.0
Total rejected ballots 329
Turnout 61,47771.0%
Eligible voters 86,609
Conservative hold Swing +7.35
Source: Elections Canada[5][6]
2015 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeMatt Jeneroux28,80549.89-9.49$126,240.74
LiberalTariq Chaudary17,42830.18+15.69$62,340.29
New DemocraticBrian Fleck9,84617.05-4.12$44,795.24
GreenValerie Kennedy1,2752.21-2.75$6,040.67
LibertarianSteven Lack3860.67$500.00
Total valid votes/Expense limit 57,740100.00 $216,148.06
Total rejected ballots 1780.31
Turnout 57,91871.56
Eligible voters 80,938
Conservative hold Swing -12.59
Source: Elections Canada[7][8]
2011 federal election redistributed results[9]
Party Vote %
  Conservative25,69059.38
  New Democratic9,15921.17
  Liberal6,27114.49
  Green2,1474.96
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References


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