Lotbinière-Frontenac

Provincial electoral district in Quebec, Canada
Lotbinière-Frontenac
Quebec electoral district
Provincial electoral district
LegislatureNational Assembly of Quebec
MNA
 
 
 
Isabelle Lecours
Coalition Avenir Québec
District created2011
First contested2012
Last contested2018
Demographics
Electors (2012)[1]53,917
Area (km²)[2]3,317.6
Census division(s)Lotbinière, Les Appalaches
Census subdivision(s)Adstock, Dosquet, East Broughton, Irlande, Kinnear's Mills, Laurier-Station, Leclercville, Lotbinière, Notre-Dame-du-Sacré-Cœur-d'Issoudun, Sacré-Cœur-de-Jésus, Saint-Adrien-d'Irlande, Saint-Agapit, Sainte-Agathe-de-Lotbinière, Saint-Antoine-de-Tilly, Saint-Apollinaire, Sainte-Croix, Saint-Édouard-de-Lotbinière, Saint-Flavien, Saint-Fortunat, Saint-Gilles, Saint-Jacques-de-Leeds, Saint-Jacques-le-Majeur-de-Wolfestown, Saint-Janvier-de-Joly, Saint-Jean-de-Brébeuf, Saint-Joseph-de-Coleraine, Saint-Julien, Saint-Narcisse-de-Beaurivage, Saint-Patrice-de-Beaurivage, Saint-Pierre-de-Broughton, Saint-Sylvestre, Thetford Mines, Val-Alain

Lotbinière-Frontenac is a provincial electoral district in the Chaudière-Appalaches region of Quebec, which elects members to the National Assembly of Quebec. It consists of the entirety of Lotbinière Regional County Municipality and nearly all of Les Appalaches Regional County Municipality. It includes the municipalities of Thetford Mines, Saint-Apollinaire, Saint-Agapit, Saint-Gilles, Adstock, Laurier-Station, Sainte-Croix, East Broughton and Saint-Joseph-de-Coleraine.

It was created for the 2012 election from parts of the former Lotbinière and Frontenac electoral districts; Saint-Fortunat was also taken from Richmond electoral district.[3]

Members of the National Assembly

Legislature Years Member Party
Riding created from Lotbinière, Frontenac and Richmond
40th  2012–2014     Laurent Lessard Liberal
41st  2014–2018
42nd  2018–2022     Isabelle Lecours Coalition Avenir Québec
43rd  2022–Present

Election results

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2022 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Coalition Avenir Québec Isabelle Lecours
Conservative Christian Gauthier
Québec solidaire Christine Gilbert
Parti Québécois Louise Marchand
Liberal Normand Côté
Total valid votes
Total rejected ballots
Turnout
Electors on the lists
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2018 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Coalition Avenir Québec Isabelle Lecours 20,360 53.78 +24.01
Liberal Pierre-Luc Daigle 7,742 20.45 -28.51
Québec solidaire Normand Beaudet 3,593 9.49 +5.93
Parti Québécois Yohann Beaulieu 3,591 9.49 -6.11
Conservative Réjean Labbé 1,410 3.72 +2.67
Green Marie-Claude Dextraze 655 1.73
Citoyens au pouvoir Yves Roy 304 0.8
Parti 51 Daniel Croteau 200 0.53
Total valid votes 37,855 98.07
Total rejected ballots 746 1.93
Turnout 38,601 69.45
Eligible voters 55,581
Coalition Avenir Québec gain from Liberal Swing +26.26
Source(s)
"Rapport des résultats officiels du scrutin". Élections Québec.
2014 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Laurent Lessard 19,296 48.96
Coalition Avenir Québec Luc de la Sablonnière 11,735 29.77
Parti Québécois Kaven Mathieu 6,147 15.60
Québec solidaire Nadia Blouin 1,403 3.56
Conservative Sylvain Rancourt 414 1.05
Option nationale Annie Grégoire-Gauthier 193 0.49
Independent Rodrigue Leblanc 143 0.36
Mon pays le Québec Denis Cadieux 83 0.21
Total valid votes 39,414 98.70
Total rejected ballots 518 1.30
Turnout 39,932 73.57
Electors on the lists 54,278
2012 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Laurent Lessard 17,681 43.32 -4.87
Coalition Avenir Québec Martin Caron 12,725 31.17 +1.80
Parti Québécois Kaven Mathieu 8,629 21.14 +1.30
Québec solidaire Marie-Christine Rochefot 1,783 4.37 +2.27
Total valid votes 40,818 98.37
Total rejected ballots 675 1.63
Turnout 41,493 77.06  
Electors on the lists 53,843
Liberal notional hold Swing -3.34

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

References

  1. ^ http://www.electionsquebec.qc.ca/english/provincial/electoral-map/general-information-on-the-provincial-electoral-divisions-2011.php?bsq=289&section=population [dead link]
  2. ^ http://www.electionsquebec.qc.ca/english/provincial/electoral-map/general-information-on-the-provincial-electoral-divisions-2011.php?bsq=289&section=superficie [dead link]
  3. ^ Commission de la représentation électorale (January 2012). "The electoral map of Québec 2011: Final Report" (PDF). Retrieved March 21, 2012.

External links

Information
  • Elections Quebec
Maps
  • 2011 map (PDF)
    2001–2011 changes to Lotbinière (Flash)
    2001–2011 changes to Frontenac (Flash)
  • Electoral map of Chaudière-Appalaches region
  • Quebec electoral map, 2011
Neighbouring electoral districts
Portneuf Portneuf Louis-Hébert / Chutes-de-la-Chaudière
Nicolet-Bécancour
Arthabaska
Lotbinière-Frontenac
Beauce-Nord
Drummond–Bois-Francs Mégantic Beauce-Sud
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Quebec provincial electoral districts
Bas-Saint-Laurent and Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine
Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean
and Côte-Nord
  • Chicoutimi
  • Dubuc
  • Duplessis
  • Jonquière
  • Lac-Saint-Jean
  • René-Lévesque
  • Roberval
Capitale-Nationale
Mauricie
Chaudière-Appalaches
and Centre-du-Québec
Estrie (Eastern Townships)
  • Brome-Missisquoi
  • Granby
  • Mégantic
  • Orford
  • Richmond
  • Saint-François
  • Sherbrooke
Eastern Montérégie
  • Borduas
  • Chambly
  • Iberville
  • Johnson2
  • Richelieu
  • Saint-Hyacinthe
  • Saint-Jean
  • Verchères
South Shore
  • Beauharnois
  • Châteauguay
  • Huntingdon
  • La Pinière
  • Laporte
  • La Prairie
  • Marie-Victorin
  • Montarville
  • Sanguinet
  • Soulanges
  • Taillon
  • Vachon
  • Vaudreuil
East Montreal
West Montreal
Laval
  • Chomedey
  • Fabre
  • Laval-des-Rapides
  • Mille-Îles
  • Sainte-Rose
  • Vimont
Lanaudière
  • Berthier
  • Joliette
  • L'Assomption
  • Masson
  • Repentigny
  • Rousseau
  • Terrebonne
Laurentides
  • Argenteuil
  • Bertrand
  • Blainville
  • Deux-Montagnes
  • Groulx
  • Labelle
  • Les Plaines
  • Mirabel
  • Saint-Jérôme
  • Prévost
Outaouais
  • Chapleau
  • Gatineau
  • Hull
  • Papineau
  • Pontiac
Abitibi-Témiscamingue and Nord-du-Québec
Eliminated
in the 2012 election:
1Côte-du-Sud is split between Bas-Saint-Laurent and Chaudière-Appalaches

2Johnson is split between Centre-du-Québec and Montérégie

See also:

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