Federal electoral district in Ontario, Canada
Sudbury is a federal electoral district in Ontario , Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1949. The district is one of two serving the city of Greater Sudbury , Ontario .
Geography [ edit ]
Sudbury electoral district consists of the part of the City of Greater Sudbury bounded on the west and south by the Greater Sudbury city limits, and on the north and east by a line drawn from the western city limit of Greater Sudbury east along the northern limit of the former Town of Walden, north, east and south along the limits of the former City of Sudbury, west along Highway 69 and Regent Street, south along Long Lake Road, west along the northern boundary of the Township of Broder, southwest along Kelly Lake, and south along the eastern limit of the former Town of Walden to the southern city limit of Greater Sudbury.
History [ edit ]
Sudbury electoral district was created in 1947 from part of the Nipissing riding. It consisted initially of the city of Sudbury and a part of the territorial district of Sudbury.
In 1952, the boundaries were narrowed significantly to include only the city of Sudbury, the geographic township of McKim and the town of Copper Cliff . The rest of the original Sudbury riding was incorporated into the new riding of Nickel Belt .
In 1976, Sudbury's growth in population led the riding to shrink further. It now included only the northern half of the city; the city's southern half was incorporated into Nickel Belt.
In 1996, it was redefined as the part of the City of Sudbury north of a line drawn from east to west along Highway 69, south along Long Lake Road, and west along the north boundary of the geographic Township of Broder.
In 2003, the riding expanded geographically to include the former town of Walden , now part of the city of Greater Sudbury. The remainder of the city continues to be part of the Nickel Belt riding.
This riding was left unchanged after the 2012 electoral redistribution .
Riding associations [ edit ]
Riding associations are the local branches of political parties:
Party
Association name
CEO
HQ address
HQ city
Conservative
Sudbury Conservative Association
Steve S. Moutsatsos
233 Brady Street East
Sudbury
Green
Sudbury Federal Green Party Association
Simon McMillan
2080 South Bay Road
Sudbury
Liberal
Sudbury Federal Liberal Association
W. Gary Duhaime
2176 Robin Street
Sudbury
New Democratic
Sudbury Federal NDP Riding Association
Richard Eberhardt
182 George Avenue
Sudbury
Members of Parliament [ edit ]
This riding has elected the following Members of Parliament :
Election results [ edit ]
Graph of election results in Sudbury (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)
2019 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Paul Lefebvre
19,643
40.94
-6.48
$66,620.57
New Democratic
Beth Mairs
13,885
28.94
+1.15
$25,924.07
Conservative
Pierre St-Amant
9,864
20.56
-0.54
$20,356.06
Green
Bill Crumplin
3,225
6.72
+3.68
$13,223.85
People's
Sean Paterson
873
1.82
–
none listed
Animal Protection
Chanel Lalonde
282
0.59
–
none listed
Independent
Charlene Sylvestre
135
0.28
–
none listed
Independent
J. David Popescu
70
0.15
-0.02
none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit
47,977
99.24
Total rejected ballots
317
0.66
+0.24
Turnout
48,294
65.36
-3.86
Eligible voters
75,035
Liberal hold
Swing
-3.81
Source: Elections Canada [4] [5]
2015 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Paul Lefebvre
23,534
47.42
+29.43
$112,165.16
New Democratic
Paul Loewenberg
13,793
27.79
-22.13
$95,385.84
Conservative
Fred Slade
10,473
21.10
-7.25
$192,788.16
Green
David Robinson
1,509
3.04
+0.05
$4,970.15
Independent
Jean-Raymond Audet
134
0.27
–
–
Communist
Elizabeth Rowley
102
0.21
–
–
Independent
J. David Popescu
84
0.17
-0.09
–
Total valid votes/Expense limit
49,629
99.58
$204,934.28
Total rejected ballots
209
0.42
–
Turnout
49,838
69.22
–
Eligible voters
73,050
Liberal gain from New Democratic
Swing
+34.77
Source: Elections Canada [6] [7]
2008 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
New Democratic
Glenn Thibeault
15,094
35.15
+3.20
$71,329
Liberal
Diane Marleau
12,969
30.20
−11.37
$50,177
Conservative
Gerry Labelle
11,073
25.79
+4.11
$85,730
Green
Gordon Harris
3,330
7.75
+5.02
$8,704
First Peoples National
Will Morin
397
0.92
$0
Independent
David Popescu
80
0.19
+0.08
$148
Total valid votes/expense limit
42,943
100.00
$82,461
Total rejected ballots
192
0.45
−0.03
Turnout
43,135
58.51
−7.48
Electors on the lists
73,724
Note: italicized expenditure totals refer to data that has not yet been finalized by Elections Canada.
2006 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Diane Marleau
19,809
41.57
−2.62
$78,232
New Democratic
Gerry McIntaggart
15,225
31.95
+2.09
$38,386
Conservative
Kevin Serviss
10,332
21.68
+0.63
$73,294
Green
Joey Methé
1,301
2.73
−1.94
$420
Progressive Canadian
Stephen L. Butcher
782
1.64
–
$365
Marxist–Leninist
Dave Starbuck
77
0.16
−0.07
Communist
Sam Hammond
70
0.15
$280
Independent
David Popescu
54
0.11
–
$365
Total valid votes
47,650
100.00
Total rejected ballots
228
0.48
−0.07
Turnout
47,878
65.99
+5.91
Electors on the lists
72,552
Sources: Official Results, Elections Canada and Financial Returns, Elections Canada .
2004 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Diane Marleau
18,914
44.19
−12.80
$56,246
New Democratic
Gerry McIntaggart
12,781
29.86
+16.42
$19,265
Conservative
Stephen L. Butcher
9,008
21.05
−6.44
$60,810
Green
Luke Norton
1,999
4.67
$1,348
Marxist–Leninist
Dave Starbuck
100
0.23
$660
Total valid votes
42,802
100.00
Total rejected ballots
235
0.55
−0.06
Turnout
43,037
60.08
+5.77
Electors on the lists
71,627
Percentage change figures are factored for redistribution. Conservative Party percentages are contrasted with the combined Canadian Alliance and Progressive Conservative percentages from 2000.
Sources: Official Results, Elections Canada and Financial Returns, Elections Canada .
2000 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Diane Marleau
20,290
58.52
+3.10
$49,746
Alliance
Mike Smith
6,554
18.90
+5.94
$24,801
New Democratic
Paul Chislett
4,368
12.60
−8.52
$10,732
Progressive Conservative
Alex McGregor
2,642
7.62
−1.01
$3,827
Green
Thomas Gerry
503
1.45
$327
Canadian Action
Kathy Wells-McNeil
215
0.62
−0.63
$2,006
Communist
Daryl Janet Shandro
98
0.28
$591
Total valid votes
34,670
100.00
Total rejected ballots
210
0.60
−0.41
Turnout
34,880
54.31
−8.20
Electors on the lists
64,220
Sources: Official Results, Elections Canada and Financial Returns, Elections Canada .
1997 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Diane Marleau
22,223
55.42
−9.56
$38,251
New Democratic
John Filo
8,471
21.12
−0.93
$43,509
Reform
Jim Rollo
5,198
12.96
+11.66
$10,657
Progressive Conservative
Bill Lee
3,459
8.63
+0.28
$6,493
Canadian Action
Kathy McNeil
502
1.25
$1,258
Natural Law
Roy Hankonen
247
0.62
$0.00
Total valid votes
40,100
100.00
Total rejected ballots
412
1.02
+0.72
Turnout
40,512
62.51
−2.82
Electors on the lists
64,806
Percentage change figures are factored for redistribution.
Sources: Official Results, Elections Canada and Financial Returns, Elections Canada .
1993 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Diane Marleau
27,951
66.08
+24.05
$37,453
Reform
Mike Smith
5,788
13.68
$8,233
Progressive Conservative
Maurice Lamoureux
3,679
8.70
−13.29
$35,719
New Democratic Party
Rosemarie Blenkinsop
3,675
8.69
−19.08
$36,968
National
Paul Chislett
512
1.21
$1,555
Non-affiliated (CoR )
Billie Christiansen
276
0.65
−7.32
$2,852
Natural Law
David Shaw
202
0.48
$141
Independent
Ed Pokonzie
129
0.30
$230
Abolitionist
Richard Lionel Gouin
86
0.20
$0
Total valid votes
42,298
100.00
Total rejected ballots
379
0.89
+0.34
Turnout
42,677
65.41
−8.15
Electors on the lists
65,243
Source: Thirty-fifth General Election, 1993: Official Voting Results, Published by the Chief Electoral Officer of Canada. Financial figures taken from official contributions and expenses provided by Elections Canada .
1988 Canadian federal election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Expenditures
Liberal
Diane Marleau
17,879
42.03
+0.9
$37,582
New Democratic
Bill Major
11,811
27.77
+2.0
$36,732
Progressive Conservative
Bob Fera
9,356
21.99
−10.1
$43,024
Confederation of Regions
S. Brent Ridley
3,391
7.97
$8,808
Communist
Mike Phillips
102
0.24
$2,044
Total valid votes
42,539
100.00
Total rejected ballots
234
0.55
Turnout
42,773
73.56
Electors on the lists
58,144
Note: The +/- totals are factored for redistribution.
Note: NDP vote is compared to CCF vote in 1958 election.
See also [ edit ]
References [ edit ]
External links [ edit ]
Coordinates : 46°34′34″N 80°54′40″W / 46.576°N 80.911°W / 46.576; -80.911