2017 Saint-Laurent federal by-election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Registered69,302
Turnout28.33% (Decrease 30.65pp)
2017 Saint-Laurent federal by-election

 2015 April 3, 2017 (2017-04-03) 2019 

Seat of Saint-Laurent
Registered69,302
Turnout28.33% (Decrease 30.65pp)
  First party Second party
 
CPC
Candidate Emmanuella Lambropoulos Jimmy Yu
Party Liberal Conservative
Popular vote 11,461 3,784
Percentage 59.13% 19.52%
Swing Decrease 2.44pp Increase 0.01pp

  Third party Fourth party
 
NDP
Candidate Daniel Green Mathieu Auclair
Party Green New Democratic
Popular vote 1,548 1,511
Percentage 7.99% 7.80%
Swing Increase 5.57pp Decrease 3.72pp

MP before election

Stéphane Dion
Liberal

Elected MP

Emmanuella Lambropoulos
Liberal

A by-election was held in the federal riding of Saint-Laurent in Quebec, Canada on 3 April 2017 following the resignation of Liberal MP and Minister of Foreign Affairs Stéphane Dion, who was appointed to a diplomatic post. The seat was held by the Liberal candidate Emmanuella Lambropoulos on a reduced majority.[1]

The by-election was scheduled to coincide with four others across the country; Calgary Heritage, Calgary Midnapore, Markham—Thornhill and Ottawa—Vanier.

Constituency

The district corresponds exactly to the borough of Saint-Laurent in the city of Montreal.

Representation

The riding (previously called Saint-Laurent—Cartierville) has been represented by Stéphane Dion since 1996, and has been held by the Liberals since its creation in 1988.[2] It has long been regarded as one of the safest Liberal ridings in the nation.

Campaign

The riding of Saint-Laurent was vacated on February 6, 2017,[3][4] following the appointment of Liberal MP and former Minister of Foreign Affairs Stéphane Dion as Canada's Ambassador to the European Union and Germany.[3]

The by-election, held on April 3, 2017, was announced on February 22, 2017. The Speaker's warrant regarding the vacancy was received on February 8, 2017; under the Parliament of Canada Act the writ for the by-election had to be issued no earlier than February 19, 2017, and no later than August 7, 2017. The election date must be set to be a Monday at least 36 days after the writ is issued.[5]

Candidates

Candidates for the Liberal nomination included former Nelligan MNA and provincial cabinet minister Yolande James, and tax law professor Marwah Rizqy, the 2015 Liberal candidate in Hochelaga. Saint-Laurent Borough Mayor and Montreal City Councillor Alan DeSousa intended to run for the nomination but was rejected by the party's nomination committee.[6][7] In what was seen as a surprising result, both James and Rizqy were defeated for the Liberal nomination by local educator Emmanuella Lambropoulos.

Jimmy Yu, a Conservative Party national councillor, was named the Conservative candidate on March 8.[8] Yu previously ran for the party in the same riding in 2015. Conservative leadership candidate and venture capitalist Rick Peterson had expressed interest in running for the nomination, but declined on March 7.[9]

Mathieu Auclair was named the New Democratic Party's candidate.[10]

William Fayad was named the Bloc Québécois candidate.[10]

Deputy Leader Daniel Green was named the Green Party candidate.[11]

Results

2015 results

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI