Kildonan (electoral district)

Kildonan is a provincial electoral division in the Canadian province of Manitoba. The boundaries for the riding maintained their location through the 2008 redistribution.

Kildonan
Manitoba electoral district
Defunct provincial electoral district
LegislatureLegislative Assembly of Manitoba
District created1957
First contested1958
Last contested2016

Kildonan riding (1870–1899)

The original Kildonan riding was created at the time of the province's establishment in 1870. It was dominated by Manitoba's "old settler" population (i.e., English-speaking families who had lived in the Red River Settlement for many years before the province's creation). There was a large "mixed blood" aboriginal population in the riding, and many of its residents were also of Scottish or partly Scottish ancestry. From 1886 to 1888, the riding was incorporated into "Kildonan and St. Paul" riding.

Kildonan was a hotly contested riding between the Conservatives and Liberals following the establishment of party government in 1888. In 1899, it was dissolved into the riding of "Kildonan and St. Andrews".

Kildonan and St. Andrews riding (1920–1927)

From 1920 to 1927, the Kildonan and St. Andrews riding was represented by Labour Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) Charles Tanner. Otherwise, it continued to return Liberals and Conservatives until being merged into "Kildonan-Transcona" in 1949. After that time, it was generally considered a safe riding for the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation.

Kildonan riding (1958-present)

A riding with the name Kildonan was reestablished in 1957, and formally came into being in the provincial election of 1958. It was located in the northeastern part of the current City of Winnipeg, The Kildonan riding that existed from the 1958 election up to the election of 1981 was located in the East Kildonan area on the east side of the Red River. The present riding of Kildonan existing since 1981 in northwest Winnipeg has completely different boundaries from the old Kildonan riding as this new Kildonan riding was carved out of the old Seven Oaks riding on the west side of the Red River

Kildonan is bordered on the east by River East and Rossmere, to the south by St. Johns and Burrows, to the north by Gimli, and to the west by The Maples.

The seat is generally regarded as safe for the New Democratic Party. The Progressive Conservatives won the former Kildonan on the (east side of the Red River) in 1962 (by 4 votes in the 1962 election) and the Liberals won the Kildonan riding on the (west side of the Red River) in 1988. In both cases, the NDP recaptured the seat after a single term.

Kildonan's current MLA is Nic Curry, a young former officer in the Canadian Armed Forces Reserve.

The riding's population in 1996 was 19,522. In 1999, the average family income was $54381, and the unemployment rate was 6.80%. Almost 18% of the population is above 65 years of age.

Kildonan has a large immigrant population (23% of the total population in 1999), and is ethnically diverse. Ukrainians make up 14% of the riding's population; a further 11% are Jewish, 7% are Polish and 3% are Italian.

Kildonan's residents are primarily middle and upper-income. Manufacturing accounts of 16% of industry in the riding, with a further 15% in the service sector.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

Kildonan riding (1870–1899)

  • (+) From 1886 to 1888, the riding was incorporated into Kildonan and St. Paul.
Name Party Took Office Left Office
John Sutherland Opposition/Canadian Party 1870 1874
vacant 1874 1875
John Sutherland Opposition 1875 1878
Alexander Sutherland Opposition 1878 1879
Government/Liberal-Conservative 1879 1884
John MacBeth(+) Government/Conservative 1884 1888
John Norquay Conservative 1888 1889
Thomas Norquay Conservative 1890 1892
John James Bird Liberal 1892 1896
Hector Sutherland Conservative 1896 1899

Kildonan and St. Andrews riding (1920–1927)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Orton Grain Liberal-Conservative 1899 1903
M.J. O'Donahoe Liberal 1903 1907
Orton Grain Conservative 1907 1913
Walter Montague Conservative 1913 1915
George Prout Liberal 1915 1920
Charles Tanner Dominion Labour 1920 1920
Independent Labour Party 1920 1927
James McLenaghen Conservative/Progressive Conservative 1927 1949

Kildonan-Transcona riding (1949–1958)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
George Olive Co-operative Commonwealth 1949 1953
Russell Paulley Co-operative Commonwealth 1953 1958

Kildonan riding (1961-present)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
A.J. Reid Co-operative Commonwealth 1958 1961
New Democrat 1961 1962
James Mills Progressive Conservative 1962 1966
Peter Fox New Democrat 1966 1981
Mary Beth DolinNew Kildonan Riding- completely different boundaries New Democrat 1981 1985
Marty Dolin New Democrat 1985 1988
Gulzar Singh Cheema Liberal 1988 1990
David Chomiak New Democrat 1990 2016
Nic Curry Progressive Conservative 2016 2019

Electoral results

2016 Manitoba general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
Progressive ConservativeNic Curry3,69444.13+9.45$37,848.07
New DemocraticDave Chomiak3,06536.61-22.10$16,450.60
LiberalNavdeep Khangura97411.64+7.06$9,891.04
GreenSteven Stairs4565.56+5.45$0.00
ManitobaGary Marshall1331.62+1.59$?
Total valid votes/Expense limit 8,322100.0  $45,931.00
Total rejected and declined ballots 83
Turnout 8,40560.96
Eligible voters 13,787
Source: Elections Manitoba[1][2][3]
2011 Manitoba general election: Kildonan
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticDave Chomiak4,80859.52-1.83$27,083.52
     Progressive Conservative Darrell Penner 2,880 35.65 +6.76 $29,346.96
LiberalDimitrius Sagriotis3914.83-1.95$467.60
Total valid votes 8,122
Rejected and declined votes 43
Turnout 54.97
Electors on the lists 14,775
Source: Elections Manitoba[4]
2007 Manitoba general election: Kildonan
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticDave Chomiak5,01261.35−8.75$18,009.09
     Progressive Conservative Brent Olynyk 2,360 28.89 +13.83 $25,656.74
LiberalWade Parke5546.78−6.12$2,234.11
GreenNathan Zahn2032.49+0.57$0.00
Total valid votes 8,132 99.55
Rejected and declined votes 37
Turnout 8,169 58.57 +5.26
Electors on the lists 13,947

[5]

2003 Manitoba general election: Kildonan
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticDave Chomiak5,12370.13+7.81$13,829.93
     Progressive Conservative Garreth McDonald 1,100 15.06 −10.91 $687.20
LiberalMichael Lazar94212.90+1.74$4,417.81
GreenFrank Luschak1401.92+1.92$106.76
Total valid votes 7,305 99.37
Rejected and declined votes 46
Turnout 7,351 53.31 −17.50
Electors on the lists 13,788

[6]

1999 Manitoba general election: Kildonan
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticDave Chomiak6,10162.32 +10.32 $16,574.00
     Progressive Conservative Shannon Martin 2,542 25.97 -3.77 $14,834.13
LiberalMichael Lazar1,09311.16-7.10$7,835.59
Total valid votes 9,736 99.45
Rejected and declined votes 54
Turnout 9,790 70.81
Electors on the lists 13,825
1995 Manitoba general election: Kildonan
Party Candidate Votes%
New DemocraticDave Chomiak5,81252.00
  Progressive Conservative Robert Praznik 3,324 29.74
LiberalJoe Gallagher2,04118.26
Total valid votes
Rejected and declined votes 45
Turnout 11,222 74.29
Electors on the lists 15,106

Template:Manitoba provincial election, 1990/Electoral District/Kildonan (Manitoba electoral district)

1988 Manitoba general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalGulzar Cheema5,65335.69+26.24
Progressive ConservativeJohn Baluta5,06831.99-3.09
New DemocraticMarty Dolin4,54228.67-22.98
ProgressiveSidney Green4452.81-1.01
Western IndependenceTracy Fuhr1330.84n/a
Total valid votes 15,841100.00
Rejected ballots 56
Turnout 15,89776.48
Eligible voters 20,785
Liberal gain from New Democratic Swing +24.61
Source: Elections Manitoba[7]
1986 Manitoba general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
New DemocraticMarty Dolin6,19951.65-3.46
Progressive ConservativeBev Rayburn4,21035.08-1.25
LiberalHy Berman1,1349.45+3.33
ProgressiveBen Hanuschak4593.82+1.39
Turnout 12,03263.47
Eligible voters 18,957
New Democratic hold Swing -1.10
Source: Elections Manitoba[8]
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gollark: I think we need more backups.
gollark: They probably just need some specific quantum operation. Which our computers can slowly emulate.

References

  1. "Candidates: 41st General Election". Elections Manitoba. 29 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  2. "41ST GENERAL ELECTION, APRIL 19, 2016 - OFFICIAL RESULTS". Elections Manitoba. 19 April 2016. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  3. "Election Returns: 41st General Election". Elections Manitoba. 2016. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  4. "Election Returns: 40th General Election". Elections Manitoba. 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  5. http://www.electionsmanitoba.ca/en/Results/39_division_results/39_kildonan_summary_results.html Archived 2012-03-21 at the Wayback Machine - 2007 results
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2009-12-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. "Candidates: 34th General Election" (PDF). Elections Manitoba. April 26, 1988. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  8. "Historical Summary" (PDF). Retrieved 2018-12-13.

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