Saint Croix New Brunswick electoral district |
|---|
.gif) The riding of Saint Croix (as it exists from 2016) in relation to other New Brunswick electoral districts. |
| Provincial electoral district |
|---|
| Legislature | Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick |
|---|
| MLA | Kathy Bockus Progressive Conservative |
|---|
| District created | 1994 |
|---|
| First contested | 1995 |
|---|
| Last contested | 2018 |
|---|
| Demographics |
|---|
| Population (2011) | 16,833[1] |
|---|
| Electors (2013) | 11,196[1] |
|---|
| Census division(s) | Charlotte, York |
|---|
| Census subdivision(s) | Campobello Island, Dufferin, Dumbarton, Manners Sutton, McAdam (parish), McAdam (village), Prince William, Saint Andrews (parish), Saint Andrews (town), Saint Croix, Saint David, Saint George, Saint James, Saint Patrick, Saint Stephen, St. Stephen |
|---|
Saint Croix is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. The district includes the Town of St. Stephen and the Town of St. Andrews.
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". The riding also added a small piece of territory from Charlotte Centre.
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.
In 2016, the riding was renamed Saint Croix.
Members of the Legislative Assembly
Election results
Saint Croix
| 2020 New Brunswick general election |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
| | Progressive Conservative | Kathy Bockus | 3,570 | 45.18 | +5.97 |
| | People's Alliance | Rod Cumberland | 2,546 | 32.22 | +14.53 |
| | Green | Kim Reeder | 1,238 | 15.67 | +3.04 |
| | Liberal | John Wayne Gardner | 401 | 5.07 | -24.33 |
| | New Democratic | Brad McKinney | 147 | 1.86 | +0.79 |
| Total valid votes | 7,902 | 100.0 |
| Total rejected ballots | 19 | 0.24 |
| Turnout | 7,921 | 66.09 |
| Eligible voters | 11,985 |
| | Progressive Conservative hold | Swing | -4.28 |
Charlotte-Campobello
| 2014 New Brunswick general election |
| 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 | 60.96 |
| Eligible voters | 12,523 |
| | Liberal notional gain from Progressive Conservative | Swing | +13.07 |
| Voting results declared after judicial recount. |
| Source: Elections New Brunswick[2] |
| 2010 New Brunswick general election |
| 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] |
Western Charlotte
References
External links