Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Groulx

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
District created
  
1980

Last contested
  
2014

Province
  
Québec

First contested
  
1981

Population (2011)
  
74,165

Elector
  
56,154

Legislature
  
National Assembly of Quebec

MNA
  
Claude Surprenant Independent

Census divisions
  
Thérèse-De Blainville Regional County Municipality

Patrick groulx l ex fumeur


Groulx is a provincial electoral district in the Laurentides region of Quebec, Canada that elects members to the National Assembly of Quebec. The district includes part of Blainville, as well as a few other small cities.

Contents

It was created for the 1981 election from a part of the Terrebonne electoral district.

In the change from the 2001 to the 2011 electoral map, it gained a small part of the city of Blainville from the Blainville electoral district; it did not previously include any part of that city.

From its creation in 1981 until 2007, Groulx was a bellwether riding always sending a member from the governing party to the National Assembly. Since the ADQ breakthrough in the suburbs of Montreal in 2007, the riding has been targeted by all major parties and is part of a collection of ridings that determine Quebec elections. The riding is overwhelmingly francophone and white, and has a strong nationalist undercurrent, making it a battleground riding between the Parti Quebecois, ADQ/CAQ, and the Quebec Liberals.

In 2014, the PQ nominated Martine Desjardins, former leader of the FEUQ during the 2012 student strike. She was seen as a star candidate. While the PQ began the campaign with a strong lead among francophones and heavily targeted CAQ-held ridings such as Groulx, the fall of the PQ and rise of the CAQ during the last two weeks of the campaign kept this riding in the hands of the CAQ, albeit in a tight 3-way split with no candidate receiving more than 31% of the vote.

Patrick groulx brigadier


Members of the National Assembly

  1. Élie Fallu, Parti Québécois (1981–1985)
  2. Madeleine Bleau, Liberal (1985–1994)
  3. Robert Kieffer, Parti Québécois (1994–2003)
  4. Pierre Descoteaux, Liberal (2003–2007)
  5. Linda Lapointe, Action démocratique (2007–2008)
  6. René Gauvreau, Parti Québécois (2008–2011, 2012) then Independent (2011–2012)
  7. Hélène Daneault, Coalition Avenir Québec (2012–2014)
  8. Claude Surprenant, Coalition Avenir Québec (2014–2017) then Independent (2017–present)

Election results

^ Change is from redistributed results. CAQ change is from ADQ.

* Result compared to UFP

References

Groulx Wikipedia