Charlotte-Campobello

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Charlotte-Campobello
New Brunswick electoral district
File:Charlotte-Campobello (2014-).png
The riding of Charotte-Campobello (as it exists from 2014) in relation to other New Brunswick electoral districts.
Provincial electoral district
Legislature Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
MLA
 
 
 
John Ames
Liberal
District created 1994
First contested 1995
Last contested 2014
Demographics
Population (2011) 16,833[1]
Electors (2013) 11,196[1]
Census divisions Charlotte, York

Charlotte-Campobello is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada.

It was created as Western Charlotte in 1994 by merging the old districts of Charlotte West and St. Stephen-Milltown save for Deer Island and Campobello Island which became part of Fundy Isles, the rather atypical name of "Western Charlotte" was chosen to prevent confusion with the old smaller district of "Charlotte West".

In 2006, the district again added Campobello Island and the name was changed from Western Charlotte to Charlotte-Campobello.

In 2013, the district expanded northward adding the McAdam area.

The district includes the Town of St. Stephen and the Town of St. Andrews.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

Assembly Years Member Party
Western Charlotte
Riding created from St. Stephen-Milltown and Charlotte West
53rd  1995–1999     Ann Breault Liberal
54th  1999–2003     Tony Huntjens Progressive Conservative
55th  2003–2006
Charlotte-Campobello
56th  2006–2010     Tony Huntjens Progressive Conservative
57th  2010–2014     Curtis Malloch Progressive Conservative
58th  2014–Present     John Ames Liberal

Election results

Charlotte-Campobello

New Brunswick general election, 2014
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Liberal John B. Ames 3,176 41.73 +17.24
Progressive Conservative Curtis Malloch 2,982 39.19 -8.90
New Democratic June Greenlaw 515 6.77 -6.12
People's Alliance Joyce Wright 484 6.36 -0.09
Green Derek Simon 453 5.95 -2.10
Total valid votes 7,610 100.0  
Total rejected ballots 24 0.31
Turnout 7,634 61.61
Eligible voters 12,391

Template:CANelec/notgain

Voting results declared after judicial recount.
Source: Elections New Brunswick[2]
New Brunswick general election, 2010
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Progressive Conservative Curtis Malloch 2,977 48.09 -1.62
Liberal Annabelle Juneau 1,516 24.49 -20.80
New Democratic Lloyd P. Groom 798 12.89 +7.90
Green Janice E. Harvey 498 8.05
People's Alliance John Craig 401 6.48
Total valid votes 6,190 100.0  
Total rejected ballots 27 0.43
Turnout 6,217 68.61
Eligible voters 9,061
Progressive Conservative hold Swing +9.59
Source: Elections New Brunswick[3]
New Brunswick general election, 2006
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Progressive Conservative Tony Huntjens 3,157 49.72 +2.70
Liberal Robert N. Tinker 2,876 45.29 +1.43
New Democratic Andrew Graham 317 4.99 -4.14
Total valid votes 6,350 100.0  
Progressive Conservative notional hold Swing +0.64
[4]

Western Charlotte

New Brunswick general election, 2003
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Progressive Conservative Tony Huntjens 2,854 47.02 -3.97
Liberal Madeleine Drummie 2,662 43.86 -1.01
New Democratic Andrew Graham 554 9.13 +4.99
Total valid votes 6,070 100.0  
Progressive Conservative hold Swing -1.48


New Brunswick general election, 1999
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Progressive Conservative Tony Huntjens 3,490 50.99 +24.74
Liberal Peter Heelis 3,071 44.87 -1.21
New Democratic Andrew Gordon Graham 283 4.14 +0.29
Total valid votes 6,844 100.0  
Progressive Conservative gain from Liberal Swing +25.95
Progressive Conservative candidate Tony Huntjens gained 27.17 percentage points from his 1995 performance running as a Confederation of Regions candidate.
New Brunswick general election, 1995
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Liberal Ann Breault 3,076 46.08
Progressive Conservative Ken Stevens 1,752 26.25
Confederation of Regions Tony Huntjens 1,590 23.82
New Democratic John Alexander 257 3.85
Total valid votes 6,675 100.0  
Liberal notional hold Swing  


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 http://www.gnb.ca/elections/pdf/2013Boundaries/2013-EBRC-CDCER-Report-Rapport-Final.pdf
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. New Brunswick Votes 2006. CBC News. Retrieved May 22, 2009.

External links

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