Mount Pearl South

Mount Pearl South was a prosperous, mostly suburban provincial electoral district for the House of Assembly of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Prior to the 2007 provincial election, the district was known as Mount Pearl. Mount Pearl South has seen an expansion in big-box retail outlets in recent years. In 2011, there were 8,114 eligible voters living within the district.[1]

Mount Pearl South
Newfoundland and Labrador electoral district
Mount Pearl South in relation to other districts in St. John's
Coordinates:47.501°N 52.807°W / 47.501; -52.807
Defunct provincial electoral district
LegislatureNewfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly
District created1975
District abolished2015
First contested1975
Last contested2011
Demographics
Population (2006)11,960
Electors (2011)8,114

The district was created in 1975 and was a Tory stronghold for two decades, with Progressive Conservative Neil Windsor holding the seat from 1975 to 1995. The seat went Liberal in 1996 when Brian Tobin won a large majority government, but returned to the Progressive Conservatives, under Dave Denine, in 2003 when the party swept back to power. Denine won again in the 2007 election.

Dave Denine retired just before the writ was dropped in 2011. The 2011 Election was contested between Progressive Conservative nominee Paul Lane, a Mount Pearl city councillor, New Democrat John Riche, a Real Estate Agent and Liberal Norm Snelgrove, a civic administrator. Paul Lane won the 2011 contest by 700 votes on October 11, 2011 and remained the district's MHA until its dissolution.

On January 20, 2014 Paul Lane announced he was leaving the governing PC Party to sit with the Opposition Liberal Party.[2] In 2015, an electoral district boundary review resulted in the districts dissolution, with its territory being incorporated into Mount Pearl-Southlands.

Members of the House of Assembly

The district had elected the following Members of the House of Assembly:

  Member Party Term
  Paul Lane Liberal 2014–2015
  Progressive Conservative  2011–2014
  Dave Denine Progressive Conservative 2003-2011
  Julie Bettney Liberal 1996-2003
  Neil Windsor Progressive Conservative 1975-1995

[3]

Election results

2011 Newfoundland and Labrador general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Progressive ConservativePaul Lane2,37554.61-29.73
  NDP John Riche 1,675 38.51 +31.78
LiberalNorm Snelgrove2996.88-2.05
2007 Newfoundland and Labrador general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Progressive ConservativeDave Denine4,16384.34+3.04
LiberalBill Reid4418.93-2.53
  NDP Tom McGinnis 332 6.73 -0.51
2003 Newfoundland and Labrador general election: Mount Pearl
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Progressive ConservativeDave Denine5,66281.30
LiberalWayne Ralph79811.46
  NDP Roy Locke 504 7.24
gollark: I mean, it saves the map to a global.
gollark: I do not like your code.
gollark: I've managed to kind of emulate twitch launcher with mcdex and MultiMC.
gollark: Thing is that bedrock will probably never support stuff like that mod which allows inverted gravity.EDIT: Without just special-casing in an API for it.
gollark: It's probably more that Java Edition is less poorly optimized.

References

  1. "Summary of Polling Divisions Mount Pearl South" (PDF). Elections Newfoundland and Labrador. 3 August 2011. Retrieved 7 September 2011.
  2. "Tory MHA Paul Lane crossing the floor". NTV. January 20, 2014. Archived from the original on January 20, 2014. Retrieved January 20, 2014.
  3. CBC news NL votes 2007 district profiles
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.