world.wikisort.org - CanadaNiagara Centre (renamed to Welland from 2006 – 2018) is a provincial electoral district in Ontario, Canada, represented from 1867 until 1977 and again since 2007 (under different boundaries) in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Its population in 2006 was 112,875.
Provincial electoral district in Ontario, Canada
Niagara Centre Ontario electoral district |
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 Niagara Centre in relation to southern Ontario ridings |
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Legislature | Legislative Assembly of Ontario |
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MPP | Jeff Burch New Democratic |
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District created | 2006 |
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First contested | 2007 |
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Last contested | 2022 |
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Population (2016) | 109,070 |
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Electors (2018) | 88,287 |
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Area (km²) | 490 |
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Pop. density (per km²) | 222.6 |
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Census division(s) | Niagara |
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Census subdivision(s) | Welland, Thorold, Port Colborne, St. Catharines |
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A new riding of Niagara Centre was created before the 1999 election from small parts of the Lincoln and St. Catharines—Brock ridings, and almost all of the Welland—Thorold riding. The current electoral district was created in 2003: 74.9% of the riding came from Niagara Centre riding, 22.5% from Erie—Lincoln and 2.7% from Niagara Falls riding. The name was changed to Welland during redistricting in 2006. In 2018, the name was changed back to Niagara Centre.
Geography
The pre-2018 Welland riding consisted of the cities of Welland, Thorold, Port Colborne, and the part of the City of St. Catharines lying south of a line drawn from the western city limit east along St. Paul Street West, northeast along St. Paul Crescent, east and south along Twelve Mile Creek, and east along Glendale Avenue to the eastern city limit.[1]
Members of Provincial Parliament
Assembly |
Years |
Member |
Party |
Welland |
1st |
1867–1871 | | William Beatty | Liberal |
2nd |
1871–1874 | James Currie |
3rd |
1875–1879 |
4th |
1879–1883 | Daniel Near |
5th |
1883–1886 | James E. Morin |
6th |
1886–1890 |
7th |
1890–1894 | | William McCleary | Conservative |
8th |
1894–1898 | | William Manley German | Liberal |
9th |
1898–1900 |
1900–1902 | John Franklin Gross |
10th |
1902–1904 |
11th |
1905–1908 | | Evan Eugene Fraser | Conservative |
12th |
1908–1911 |
13th |
1911–1914 |
14th |
1914–1919 | Donald Sharpe |
15th |
1919–1923 | | Robert Cooper | Liberal |
16th |
1923–1926 | | Marshall Vaughan | Conservative |
17th |
1926–1929 |
18th |
1929–1934 |
19th |
1934–1937 | | Edward James Anderson | Liberal |
20th |
1937–1943 |
21st |
1943–1945 | | Howard Elis Brown | Co-operative Commonwealth |
22nd |
1945–1948 | | Thomas Henry Lewis | Progressive Conservative |
23rd |
1948–1951 | | Harold William Walker | Liberal |
24th |
1951–1955 | | Ellis Morningstar | Progressive Conservative |
25th |
1955–1959 |
26th |
1959–1963 |
27th |
1963–1967 |
28th |
1967–1971 |
29th |
1971–1975 |
30th |
1975–1977 | | Mel Swart | New Democratic |
Welland—Thorold |
31st |
1977–1981 | | Mel Swart | New Democratic |
32nd |
1981–1985 |
33rd |
1985–1987 |
34th |
1987–1988 |
1988–1990 | Peter Kormos |
35th |
1990–1995 |
36th |
1995–1999 |
Niagara Centre Created from Welland—Thorold, Lincoln and St. Catharines—Brock |
37th |
1999–2003 | | Peter Kormos | New Democratic |
38th |
2003–2007 |
Welland |
39th |
2007–2011 | | Peter Kormos | New Democratic |
40th |
2011–2014 | Cindy Forster |
41st |
2014–2018 |
Niagara Centre |
42nd |
2018–2022 | | Jeff Burch | New Democratic |
43rd |
2022–present |
Source: Legislative Assembly of Ontario[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]
Election results
Niagara Centre, 2018–
2022 Ontario general election |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % | |
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New Democratic | Jeff Burch | 16,360 | 39.70 | -4.53 |
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Progressive Conservative | Fred Davies | 15,506 | 37.64 | +0.13 |
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Liberal | Terry Flynn | 5,492 | 13.33 | +1.51 |
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Green | Michelle McArthur | 1,865 | 4.52 | +0.83 |
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New Blue | Gary Dumelie | 1,148 | 2.78 |
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Ontario Party | Vincent Gircys | 837 | 2.03 |
Total valid votes |
41,208 | 99.53 | +0.90 |
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots |
194 | 0.47 | -0.90 |
Turnout |
41,402 | 43.33 | -12.80 |
Eligible voters |
95,540 |
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New Democratic hold |
Swing |
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Source: Elections Ontario[22] |
2018 Ontario general election |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % | |
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New Democratic | Jeff Burch | 21,618 | 44.23 | −3.65 |
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Progressive Conservative | April Jeffs | 18,333 | 37.51 | +10.87 |
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Liberal | Benoit Mercier | 5,779 | 11.82 | −8.60 |
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Green | Joe Dias | 1,803 | 3.69 | −0.34 |
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None of the Above | Joe Crawford | 623 | 1.27 | |
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Libertarian | Patrick Pietruszko | 368 | 0.75 | −0.27 |
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Independent | Steve Soos | 217 | 0.44 | |
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People's Political Party | Dario Smagata-Bryan | 133 | 0.27 | |
Total valid votes |
48,874 | 98.63 |
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots |
680 | 1.37 |
Turnout |
49,554 | 56.13 |
Eligible voters |
88,287 |
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New Democratic hold |
Swing |
-7.26 |
Source: Elections Ontario[23] |
2014 general election redistributed results[24] |
Party |
Vote |
% |
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New Democratic | 20,334 | 47.88 |
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Progressive Conservative | 11,313 | 26.64 |
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Liberal | 8,674 | 20.42 |
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Green | 1,713 | 4.03 |
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Libertarian | 435 | 1.02 |
Welland, 2007–2018
2014 Ontario general election |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % | |
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New Democratic | Cindy Forster | 21,326 | 46.79 | +2.06 |
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Progressive Conservative | Frank Campion | 12,933 | 28.37 | -3.71 |
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Liberal | Benoit Mercier | 9,060 | 19.88 | -0.01 |
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Green | Donna Cridland | 1,803 | 3.96 | +1.81 |
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Libertarian | Andrea J. Murik | 460 | 1.01 | -0.16 |
Total valid votes |
45,582 | 100.0 |
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New Democratic hold |
Swing |
+2.88 |
Source: Elections Ontario[25] |
2011 Ontario general election |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % | |
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New Democratic | Cindy Forster | 19,527 | 44.66 | -9.28 |
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Progressive Conservative | Domenic Ursini | 14,048 | 32.13 | +13.25 |
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Liberal | Benoit Mercier | 8,638 | 19.76 | -3.15 |
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Green | Donna Cridland | 1,005 | 2.30 | -1.94 |
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Libertarian | Donna-Lynne Hamilton | 505 | 1.15 | |
Total valid votes |
43,723 | 100.00 |
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots |
248 | 0.56 |
Turnout |
43,971 | 51.64 |
Eligible voters |
85,141 |
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New Democratic hold |
Swing |
-11.27 |
Source: Elections Ontario[26] |
2007 Ontario general election |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % |
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New Democratic | Peter Kormos | 24,910 | 53.94 |
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Liberal | John Mastroianni | 10,580 | 22.91 |
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Progressive Conservative | Ron Bodner | 8,722 | 18.88 |
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Green | Mark Grenier | 1,973 | 4.27 |
Total valid votes |
46,185 | 100.0 |
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots |
347 | 0.75 |
Turnout |
46,532 | 55.29 |
Eligible voters |
84,161 |
Source: Elections Ontario[27][28] |
Niagara Centre, 1999–2007
1999 Ontario general election |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes | % |
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New Democratic | Peter Kormos | 21,856 | 44.43 |
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Progressive Conservative | Frank Sheehan | 17,217 | 35 |
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Liberal | Maurice Charbonneau | 9,539 | 19.39 |
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Natural Law | Margaret Larrass | 382 | 0.78 |
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Independent | Lank Makuloluwa | 198 | 0.4 |
Source: Elections Ontario[29] |
2007 Ontario electoral reform referendum |
Side |
Votes |
% |
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First Past the Post |
26,925 |
60.1 |
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Mixed member proportional |
17,859 |
39.9 |
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Total valid votes |
44,784 |
100.0 |
References
External links
Provincial ridings in Hamilton, Halton and Niagara |
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New Democratic | |
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Progressive Conservative | |
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Northern | |
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Eastern | |
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Central | |
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Midwestern | |
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Southwestern | |
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Peel | |
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Hamilton, Halton, and Niagara | |
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Ottawa | |
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Durham and York | |
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Toronto | |
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- See also: Federal ridings in Ontario
- List of elections
- Politics of Ontario
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