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Bertrand (electoral district)

Coordinates: 46°06′N 74°10′W / 46.10°N 74.17°W / 46.10; -74.17
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Bertrand
Quebec electoral district
Provincial electoral district
LegislatureNational Assembly of Quebec
MNA
 
 
 
France-Élaine Duranceau
Coalition Avenir Québec
District created1992
First contested1994
Last contested2022
Demographics
Population (2011)69,765
Electors (2012)[1]56,544
Area (km²)[2]1,955.2
Pop. density (per km²)35.7
Census division(s)La Rivière-du-Nord (part), Les Laurentides (part), Les Pays-d'en-Haut (part), Matawinie (part)
Census subdivision(s)Entrelacs, Estérel, Ivry-sur-le-Lac, Lantier, Notre-Dame-de-la-Merci, Piedmont, Prévost, Sainte-Adèle, Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, Sainte-Anne-des-Lacs, Saint-Donat, Sainte-Lucie-des-Laurentides, Sainte-Marguerite-du-Lac-Masson, Saint-Sauveur, Val-David, Val-des-Lacs, Val-Morin; Doncaster; Lac-des-Dix-Milles

Bertrand is a provincial electoral district in the Lanaudière and Laurentides regions of Quebec, Canada that elects members to the National Assembly of Quebec. It is not to be confused with the former, entirely different Bertrand electoral district located in the Montérégie region, which existed from 1981 to 1994; they used the same name but otherwise have nothing in common.

It was created for the 1994 election from parts of Labelle, Prévost and Rousseau. It notably includes the municipalities of Saint-Adele, Rawdon and Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts.

In the change from the 2001 to the 2011 electoral map, it lost Chertsey and Saint-Hippolyte to Rousseau electoral district and gained Prévost from Prévost electoral district, which became defunct.

In the change from the 2011 to 2017 electoral map, the riding will lose Piedmont, Prévost, Sainte-Anne-des-Lacs, Saint-Sauveur to the new riding of Prévost and will gain Chertsey and Rawdon from Rousseau.

It is named after former Union Nationale and Quebec premier Jean-Jacques Bertrand who was in power from 1968 to 1970 after the death of Daniel Johnson.

Members of the National Assembly

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Legislature Years Member Party
Riding created from Labelle, Prévost and Rousseau
35th  1994–1997     Robert Thérien Liberal
 1997–1998 Denis Chalifoux
36th  1998–2003     Claude Cousineau Parti Québécois
37th  2003–2007
38th  2007–2008
39th  2008–2012
40th  2012–2014
41st  2014–2018
42nd  2018–2022     Nadine Girault Coalition Avenir Québec
43rd  2022–Present France-Élaine Duranceau

Election results

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2022 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Coalition Avenir Québec France-Élaine Duranceau
Parti Québécois Guillaume Freire
Québec solidaire Julie Francoeur
Conservative Philippe Meloni
Liberal André Nadeau
Green Karine Steinberger
Parti humain Marie-Eve Ouellette
Climat Québec Samuel Fortin
Total valid votes
Total rejected ballots
Turnout
Electors on the lists
2018 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Coalition Avenir Québec Nadine Girault 13,867 41.55 +14.62
Parti Québécois Gilbert Lafrenière 7,815 23.41 -13.93
Québec solidaire Mylène Jaccoud 6,047 18.12 +10.59
Liberal Diane de Passillé 4,471 13.4 -13.3
Green Natacha Alarie 613 1.84
Conservative Kathy Laframboise 261 0.78
Citoyens au pouvoir Benoît Pigeon 197 0.59
Parti libre Benoit Martin 107 0.32
Total valid votes 33,378 98.44
Total rejected ballots 530 1.56
Turnout 33,908 67.60
Eligible voters 50,158
Coalition Avenir Québec gain from Parti Québécois Swing +14.28
Source(s)
"Rapport des résultats officiels du scrutin". Élections Québec.
2014 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Parti Québécois Claude Cousineau 15,232 37.34 -4.35
Coalition Avenir Québec Robert Milot 10,985 26.93 -4.97
Liberal Isabelle Leblond 10,892 26.70 +9.39
Québec solidaire Lucie Mayer 3,070 7.53 +2.17
Parti nul Patrick Dubé 305 0.75 -
Option nationale Dianne Massicotte 199 0.49 -1.21
Independent Mario Roy 111 0.27 -
Total valid votes 40,794 98.65
Total rejected ballots 559 1.35 +0.46
Turnout 41,353 71.10 -6.63
Electors on the lists 58,161
Parti Québécois hold Swing +0.31

2014 source:[1]

2012 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Parti Québécois Claude Cousineau 18,305 41.69
Coalition Avenir Québec Jean-Marc Lacoste 14,005 31.89
Liberal Yannick Ouellette 7,602 17.31
Québec solidaire Lise Boivin 2,351 5.35
Option nationale Samuelle Ducrocq-Henry 744 1.69
Green Marc St-Germain 682 1.55
Coalition pour la constituante Patrick Dubé 222 0.51
Total valid votes 43,911 99.11
Total rejected ballots 394 0.89
Turnout 44,305 77.73
Electors on the lists 57,000

2012 source: [2]

2008 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Parti Québécois Claude Cousineau 15,263 49.12
  Liberal Isabelle Lord 10,627 34.20
Action démocratique Diane Bellemare 3,496 11.25
Québec solidaire Mylène Jaccoud 851 2.74
Green Michelle L. Déry 834 2.68
2007 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Parti Québécois Claude Cousineau 13,672 37.02
Action démocratique Sylvain Charron 11,188 30.29
  Liberal Daniel Desjardins 9,082 24.59
Green Richard Savignac 1,766 4.78
Québec solidaire Jocelyne Lavoie 1,228 3.32
2003 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Parti Québécois Claude Cousineau 14,704 43.33
  Liberal Michelle Monpetit 13,502 39.79
Action démocratique Danielle Tremblay 4,834 14.24
Green Richard Savignac 664 1.96
Christian Democracy Serge Haroun 190 0.56
  No Affiliation David Rovins 41 0.12
1998 Quebec general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Parti Québécois Claude Cousineau 15,666 46.63
  Liberal Denis Chalifoux 13,923 41.44
Action démocratique Benoît Martin 3,725 11.09
  Socialist Democracy Jacques Rose 125 0.37
  Natural Law Pierre Monpetit 98 0.29
  Independent David Rovins 59 0.18

References

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Information
Election results
Maps

46°06′N 74°10′W / 46.10°N 74.17°W / 46.10; -74.17