Papineau (electoral district)

Papineau (formerly Papineau—Saint-Denis and Papineau—Saint-Michel) is a federal electoral district in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1948. Its population in 2006 was 101,019. Justin Trudeau, who is currently Prime Minister of Canada and Leader of the Liberal Party, has represented the riding since the 2008 federal election.

Papineau
Quebec electoral district
Papineau in relation to other federal electoral districts in Montreal and Laval
Federal electoral district
LegislatureHouse of Commons
MP
 
 
 
Justin Trudeau
Liberal
District created2003
First contested2004
Last contested2019
District webpageprofile, map
Demographics
Population (2016)[1]110,750
Electors (2015)78,515
Area (km²)[2]9.91
Pop. density (per km²)11,175.6
Census divisionsMontreal
Census subdivisionsMontreal

The name of the riding comes from a street in the Villeray neighbourhood, named after Joseph Papineau.

At nine square kilometres, it covers the second smallest area of any federal riding in Canada, after Toronto Centre.[3] Linguistically, 45% of residents list French as their mother tongue, 8% list English, and 47% list neither English nor French, with large groups speaking Spanish, Italian, Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi, Pashtu, Bengali, Greek and Arabic. The total immigrant population is 40 per cent.[4]

Geography

The district includes the neighbourhoods of Villeray and Park Extension, and the southern part of the old city of Saint-Michel in the Borough of Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension. The southeast corner of the riding borders the Outremont riding, which was most recently held by Tom Mulcair, the former leader of the New Democratic Party.

Political geography

Papineau, despite its small size, is a very divided riding. The riding spans the former linguistic divide of the city, Saint Laurent Boulevard. South of the riding is the neighbourhood of Park Extension, which is very Liberal. The central part of the riding, around Villeray, was Bloc Québécois territory for almost two decades before swinging heavily to the NDP in the 2011 federal election. And François-Perreault district, in the south of Saint-Michel, is considered as swing territory between the Liberals and the NDP. The district of Saint-Michel, which is part of neighbouring Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel riding to the northeast of Papineau, leans to the Liberals.

Except for the years 2006 to 2008, when it was held by Vivian Barbot of the Bloc, the seat has been in Liberal hands since 1953.

Demographics

According to the Canada 2016 Census
  • Twenty most common mother tongue languages (2016) : 49.7% French, 6.6% Spanish, 6.5% English, 5.9% Arabic, 4.2% Greek, 3.4% Italian, 2.7% Vietnamese, 2.4% Creole languages, 2.2% Panjabi, 2.1% Portuguese, 1.8% Bengali, 1.8% Urdu, 1.5% Tamil, 1.1% Cantonese, 1.0% Gujarati, 0.6% Mandarin, 0.6% Kabyle, 0.5% Khmer, 0.5% Turkish, 0.3% Polish, 0.3% Russian[5]

History

The electoral district of Papineau was created in 1947 from parts of the Hochelaga, Mercier, St. James and Saint-Denis ridings.

It was renamed Papineau-Saint-Michel in 1987 and Papineau-Saint-Denis in 1994. It was shortened back to "Papineau" in 2003.

This riding gained territory from Outremont and Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel during the 2012 electoral redistribution.

Former boundaries

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following Members of Parliament:

Parliament Years Member Party
Papineau
Riding created from Hochelaga, Mercier,
St. James and Saint-Denis
21st  1949–1953     Camillien Houde Independent
22nd  1953–1957     Adrien Meunier Independent Liberal
23rd  1957–1958     Liberal
24th  1958–1962
25th  1962–1963
26th  1963–1965 Guy Favreau
27th  1965–1967
 1967–1968 André Ouellet
28th  1968–1972
29th  1972–1974
30th  1974–1979
31st  1979–1980
32nd  1980–1984
33rd  1984–1988
Papineau—Saint-Michel
34th  1988–1993     André Ouellet Liberal
35th  1993–1996
 1996–1997 Pierre Pettigrew
Papineau—Saint-Denis
36th  1997–2000     Pierre Pettigrew Liberal
37th  2000–2004
Papineau
38th  2004–2006     Pierre Pettigrew Liberal
39th  2006–2008     Vivian Barbot Bloc Québécois
40th  2008–2011     Justin Trudeau Liberal
41st  2011–2015
42nd  2015–2019
43rd  2019–present

Election results

Papineau, 2003 – present

2019 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalJustin Trudeau25,95751.1-0.88
New DemocraticChristine Paré9,74819.2-6.67
Bloc QuébécoisChristian Gagnon8,12416.0+3.82
GreenJuan Vazquez3,7417.4+4.56
ConservativeSophie Veilleux2,1554.2-0.51
RhinocerosJean-Patrick Cacereco Berthiaume3630.7+0.06
People'sMark Sibthorpe3220.6
Christian HeritageSusanne Lefebvre1860.4
IndependentAlain Magnan760.1
No affiliationLuc Lupien750.1
No affiliationSteve Penner340.1
Total valid votes/Expense limit 50,781100.0
Total rejected ballots 938
Turnout 51,71967.2
Eligible voters 76,995
Source: Elections Canada[6][7]
2015 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalJustin Trudeau26,39151.98+14.05$129,821.55
New DemocraticAnne Lagacé Dowson13,13225.87−3.6$111,652.95
Bloc QuébécoisMaxime Claveau6,18212.18−12.71$19,007.27
ConservativeYvon Vadnais2,3904.71−0.33$5,649.91
GreenDanny Polifroni1,4432.84+0.95$82.71
IndependentChris Lloyd5050.99$5,759.41
RhinocerosTommy Gaudet3230.64
IndependentKim Waldron1590.31$2,101.20
Marxist–LeninistPeter Macrisopoulos1420.28−0.25
No affiliationBeverly Bernardo1030.2
Total valid votes/Expense limit 50,77098.64 $213,091.50
Total rejected ballots 6981.36
Turnout 51,46865.44
Eligible voters 78,649
Liberal notional hold Swing +8.83
Source: Elections Canada[8][9]
2011 federal election poll-by-poll redistribution [10]
Party Vote %
  Liberal17,40737.93
  New Democratic13,62529.47
  Bloc Québécois11,42124.89
  Conservative2,3145.04
  Green8681.89
  Others3570.78
2011 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalJustin Trudeau16,42938.41−3.06
New DemocraticMarcos Radhames Tejada12,10228.29+19.55
Bloc QuébécoisVivian Barbot11,09125.93−12.76
ConservativeShama Chopra2,0214.73−2.90
GreenDanny Polifroni8061.88−0.96
Marxist–LeninistPeter Macrisopoulos2280.53
Not affiliated1Joseph Young950.22
Total valid votes 42,772100.0  
Total rejected ballots 588
Turnout 43,330
Source: Official Results, Elections Canada.
1 Communist League
2008 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalJustin Trudeau17,72441.47+2.99$76,857
Bloc QuébécoisVivian Barbot16,53538.69−2.06$70,872
New DemocraticCosta Zafiropoulos3,7348.74+1.04$5,745
ConservativeMustaque Sarker3,2627.63−0.69$44,958
GreenIngrid Hein1,2132.84−0.76$814
IndependentMahmood Raza Baig2670.62+0.20
Total valid votes/Expense limit 42,735 100.00  $81,172
Total rejected ballots 576 1.33
Turnout 43,311 61.77
Eligible voters 70,115
Liberal gain from Bloc Québécois Swing +2.53
Baig's share of popular vote as an independent candidate is compared to his share in the 2006 general election as a Canadian Action Party candidate.
Sources: Official Results, Elections Canada and Financial Returns, Elections Canada.
2006 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
Bloc QuébécoisVivian Barbot17,77540.75+0.79$50,886
LiberalPierre Pettigrew16,78538.48-2.62$75,541
ConservativeMustaque Sarker3,6308.32+3.55$34,951
New DemocraticMarc Hasbani3,3587.70-1.07$2,568
GreenLouis-Philippe Verenka1,5723.60+1.03$181
Marxist–LeninistPeter Macrisopoulos3170.73+0.32
Canadian ActionMahmood-Raza Baig1850.42$2,007
Total valid votes/Expense limit 43,622100.00 $76,023
Bloc Québécois gain from Liberal Swing +1.71
Source: Elections Canada[11]
2004 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalPierre Pettigrew16,89241.10-13.00
Bloc QuébécoisMartine Carrière16,42439.96+13.36$48,511
New DemocraticAndré Frappier3,6038.77+4.29$28,566
ConservativeMustaque Sarker1,9614.77-2.74$38,564
GreenAdam Jastrzebski1,0582.57+0.02
MarijuanaChristelle Dusablon-Pelletier4901.19-0.81
CommunistAndré Parizeau2520.61$825
IndependentJimmy Garoufalis2500.61$2,607
Marxist–LeninistPeter Macrisopoulos1690.41+0.68
Total valid votes/Expense limit 41,099 100.00$75,103
Liberal hold Swing -13.18
Conservative vote is compared to the total of the Canadian Alliance vote and Progressive Conservative vote in 2000 election, and not the vote Sarker received as an independent candidate.

Papineau—Saint-Denis, 1996–2003

2000 Canadian federal election: Papineau—Saint-Denis
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalPierre Pettigrew23,95554.10+0.20
Bloc QuébécoisPhilippe Ordenes11,77926.60-2.31
AllianceYannis Felemegos2,1144.77-8.01
New DemocraticHans Marotte1,9834.48+2.03
Progressive ConservativeEmmanuel Préville1,2152.74-10.04
GreenBoris-Antoine Legault1,1282.55
MarijuanaAntoine Théorêt-Poupart8862.00
IndependentMustaque Sarker7381.67
Marxist–LeninistPeter Macrisopoulos4821.09+0.10
Total valid votes 44,280100.00
Liberal hold Swing +1.26
Canadian Alliance vote compared to the vote Felemegos received as a Progressive Conservative candidate.
1997 Canadian federal election: Papineau—Saint-Denis
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalPierre Pettigrew26,26053.90-5.30$53,271
Bloc QuébécoisMario Beaulieu14,08328.91-5.02$25,032
Progressive ConservativeYannis Felemegos6,22712.78+10.43$19,274
New DemocraticGaby Kombé1,1962.45-1.02$3,030
Marxist–LeninistPeter Macrisopoulos4810.99$0
IndependentMichel Dugré4710.97$270
Total valid votes/Expense limit 41,099 100.00
Liberal hold Swing -0.14

Papineau—Saint-Michel, 1987–1996

Canadian federal by-election, 25 March 1996: Papineau—Saint-Michel
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalPierre Pettigrew15,33059.20+7.22
Bloc QuébécoisDaniel Turp8,78733.93+5.31
New DemocraticRaymond Laurent8993.47+1.64
Progressive ConservativeNicole Roy-Arcelin6082.35-2.02
ReformMartin Masse2721.05New
Total valid votes 25,89698.88
Total rejected ballots 2941.12
Turnout 26,19052.31
Eligible voters 50,063
Liberal hold Swing +0.96
Source: Elections Canada[12]
1993 Canadian federal election: Papineau—Saint-Michel
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet20,06451.98+5.99
Bloc QuébécoisDaniel Boucher15,14839.24
Progressive ConservativeCarmen De Pontbriand1,6864.37-28.86
New DemocraticGisèle Charlebois7081.83-13.27
Natural LawAndré Beaudoin6781.76
Marxist–LeninistSerge Lachapelle1410.37
AbolitionistP. A. D'Aoust980.25
Commonwealth of CanadaNormand Normandeau780.20-0.24
Total valid votes/Expense limit 38,601100.00
1988 Canadian federal election: Papineau—Saint-Michel
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet18,12245.99+7.00
Progressive ConservativeFrank Venneri13,09433.23-3.62
New DemocraticGiovanni Adamo5,94815.10+1.97
RhinocerosCarole Ola Clermont9872.51-3.38
GreenH. Joseph Vega4691.19
CommunistLine Chabot2350.60+0.15
IndependentFrancine Tremblay1930.49
IndependentMichel Dugré1780.45
Commonwealth of CanadaNormand Bélanger1740.44+0.09
Total valid votes/Expense limit 39,400100.00

Papineau, 1947–1987

1984 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet12,75438.99-35.69
Progressive ConservativeTony Iacobaccio12,05336.85+31.40
New DemocraticPaul Comtois4,29513.13+3.81
RhinocerosChristian Jolicoeur1,9255.89+0.52
Parti nationalisteGilles Maillé1,1693.57
CommunistSuzanne Dagenais1470.45+0.22
Social CreditRoland Mireault1470.45-2.88
Commonwealth of CanadaGilles Gervais1130.35
IndependentDoris Lacroix1040.32
Total valid votes 32,707 100.00
1980 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet22,39974.69+6.21
New DemocraticJean-Marc Dompierre2,7969.32+3.78
Progressive ConservativeGérard Hogue1,6345.45-2.24
RhinocerosLa Mule Louis Harvey1,6085.36+1.28
Social CreditAlbert Paiement9993.33-8.38
IndependentGhislaine Cloutier2450.82
Union populaireLucie Desrosiers1700.57+0.13
Marxist–LeninistMichel Gauthier710.24-0.18
CommunistDanielle Ferland680.23-0.22
Total valid votes 29,990 100.00
1979 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet23,61968.48+6.59
Social CreditAlbert Paiement4,03911.71-0.64
Progressive ConservativeClaudy Mailly2,6527.69-8.24
New DemocraticJean A. Richard1,9135.55-2.94
RhinocerosJacques Hurtubise1,4094.09
IndependentRaymond Beaudoin4121.19
CommunistClaire Demers1530.44-0.25
Union populaireJean Saint-Amour1500.43
Marxist–LeninistMichel Gauthier1440.42-0.24
Total valid votes 34,491 100.00
1974 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet14,53261.89+8.46
Progressive ConservativeLéon Vellone3,74015.93+1.29
Social CreditAlbert Paiement2,89912.35-7.85
New DemocraticPaul Marsan1,9928.48-2.37
CommunistRichard Ducharme1640.70
Marxist–LeninistRobert Wallace1550.66
Total valid votes 23,482 100.00
1972 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet15,34753.43-9.78
Social CreditAlbert Paiement5,80220.20+15.39
Progressive ConservativeAngelo Tiveron4,20514.64-3.68
New DemocraticPaul Marsan3,11810.85-0.45
IndependentRobert Wallace2540.88
Total valid votes 28,726 100.00

Note: Social Credit vote is compared to Ralliement créditiste vote in the 1968 election.

1968 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAndré Ouellet14,37963.20+5.23
Progressive ConservativeRené Paquin4,16818.320.00
New DemocraticPierre Demers2,57211.31-3.36
Ralliement créditisteJean-Louis Marier1,0944.81
Démocratisation ÉconomiqueGuy-Gilles Lacombe5372.36
Total valid votes 22,750 100.00
Canadian federal by-election, 29 May 1967
Party Candidate Votes%±%
On Mr. Favreau's resignation, 4 April 1967
LiberalAndré Ouellet6,19757.97+4.87
Progressive ConservativeRaymond Rochon1,95818.32+1.25
New DemocraticMichel Bissonnet1,56814.67+1.21
Radical chrétienAlbert Paiement7026.57
IndependentAlbert Cameron2652.48+0.42
Total valid votes 10,690 100.00
1965 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalGuy Favreau13,92053.10+0.73
Progressive ConservativeBasil Danchyshyn4,47417.07+2.52
New DemocraticArturo Moretti3,52913.46+2.14
Ralliement créditisteAlbert Paiement2,3679.03-7.54
Independent LiberalLéo-C. Morin1,0904.16
IndependentAlbert Cameron5402.06
RhinocerosLucien Rivard2971.13
Total valid votes 26,217 100.00

Note: Ralliement créditiste vote is compared to Social Credit vote in the 1963 election.

1963 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalGuy Favreau15,67752.37-2.56
Social CreditAlbert Paiement4,95916.56+10.82
Progressive ConservativeAlphonse Thérien4,35314.54-14.25
New DemocraticPaul-Émile Trudel3,38811.32+0.77
Ouvrier IndépendantLionel Bécotte1,0643.55
Candidat libéral des électeursVincent Ialenti4961.66
Total valid votes 29,937 100.00
1962 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAdrien Meunier16,06254.93+2.01
Progressive ConservativeAlphonse Thérien8,41828.79-12.68
New DemocraticVianney Desjardins3,08310.54+6.74
Social CreditFerruccio Ariano1,6805.74
Total valid votes 29,243 100.00

Note: NDP vote is compared to CCF vote in 1958 election.

1958 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAdrien Meunier18,46652.92-25.43
Progressive ConservativeClaude Danis14,46841.46+28.03
Co-operative CommonwealthJean Riopel1,3283.81-4.41
IndependentArchie Luccisano6321.81
Total valid votes 34,894 100.00
1957 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalAdrien Meunier24,37378.35+40.79
Progressive ConservativeGaston Rodier4,17713.43-5.05
Co-operative CommonwealthJean Riopel2,5568.22+6.30
Total valid votes 31,106 100.00
1953 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
Independent LiberalAdrien Meunier10,38738.65
LiberalÉmile Dufresne10,09437.56-10.15
Progressive ConservativeJules A. Le Beau4,96618.48+16.24
Independent LiberalArmand Meunier5762.14
Co-operative CommonwealthRaymond Pineau5141.91-0.15
Labor–ProgressiveGermaine Leclerc3371.25
Total valid votes 26,874 100.00
1949 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%
IndependentCamillien Houde12,61148.00
LiberalJ.-Adrien Meunier12,53647.71
Progressive ConservativeWilfred Kendall5872.23
Co-operative CommonwealthJ.-E. Léopold Cadieux5412.06
Total valid votes 26,275 100.00
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See also

References

  • "(Code 24048) Census Profile". 2011 census. Statistics Canada. 2012. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  • Riding history 1948–1988 from the Library of Parliament
  • Riding history 2004–present from the Library of Parliament
  • 2011 Results from Elections Canada
  • Campaign expense data from Elections Canada

Notes

Parliament of Canada
Preceded by
Calgary Southwest
Constituency represented by the Prime Minister
2015–present
Succeeded by
Incumbent

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