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Carleton-York

Coordinates: 45°54′47″N 67°17′35″W / 45.913°N 67.293°W / 45.913; -67.293
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carleton-York
New Brunswick electoral district
The riding of Carleton-York (as it exists from 2023) in relation to other New Brunswick electoral districts
Coordinates:45°54′47″N 67°17′35″W / 45.913°N 67.293°W / 45.913; -67.293
Provincial electoral district
LegislatureLegislative Assembly of New Brunswick
MLA
 
 
 
Richard Ames
Progressive Conservative
District created2013
First contested2014
Last contested2020
Demographics
Population (2011)15,790
Electors (2013)11,336
Census division(s)York, Carleton

Carleton-York is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. It was contested for the first time in the 2014 general election. It was created in the 2013 redistribution of electoral boundaries.

The district draws its population from the northwestern parts of York County and southern parts of Carleton County, the boundaries commission proposed it be named "York" which might have been confused with its immediate predecessor of the same name which was based in southwestern York County. The two districts share only about 12% of population in common. Accordingly, a committee of the legislative assembly changed the name to Carleton-York before the district could be contested.[1]

The electoral districts of York (2006-2014) and York (2014-) as they relate to York County and its municipalities.

The new district includes all of Carleton County south of the Town of Woodstock, and northwestern parts of York County including Nackawic-Millville, Lakeland Ridges and Harvey.

Carleton-York (as it exists from 2023) and the roads in the riding

Members of the Legislative Assembly

[edit]
Assembly Years Member Party
Riding created from York North, Woodstock
and York (1995–2014)
58th  2014–2018     Carl Urquhart Progressive Conservative
59th  2018–2020
60th  2020–Present Richard Ames
61st  2024–Present

Election results

[edit]
2020 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Richard Ames 4,750 57.83 +20.67
People's Alliance Gary Lemmon 1,524 18.55 -12.24
Liberal Robert Kitchen 940 11.44 -7.11
Green Louise Comeau 890 10.84 +0.86
New Democratic Jarrett Oldenburg 110 1.34 -1.70
Total valid votes 8,214 99.90
Total rejected ballots 8 0.10
Turnout 8,222 67.54
Eligible voters 12,174
Progressive Conservative hold Swing +16.46
Source: Elections New Brunswick[2]
2018 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Carl Urquhart 3,118 37.16 -9.37
People's Alliance Gary Lemmon 2,583 30.79 +23.33
Liberal Jackie Morehouse 1,556 18.55 -9.44
Green Sue Rickards 837 9.98 +2.33
New Democratic Robert Kitchen 255 3.04 -7.33
KISS Lloyd Maurey 40 0.48 --
Total valid votes 8,389 100.0  
Total rejected ballots 10
Turnout 8,399 69.61%
Eligible voters 12,066
Progressive Conservative hold Swing -16.3
Source: Elections New Brunswick[2]
2014 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Conservative Carl Urquhart 3,662 46.53
Liberal Ashley Cummings 2,203 27.99
New Democratic Jacob Elsinga 816 10.37
Green Terry Wishart 602 7.65
People's Alliance David Graham 587 7.46
Total valid votes 7,870 100.0  
Total rejected ballots 16 0.20
Turnout 7,886 65.08
Eligible voters 12,117
This riding was created from York North, Woodstock and the former riding of York, all of which elected a Progressive Conservative in the previous election. Carl Urquhart was the incumbent from the former riding of York.
Source: Elections New Brunswick[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Names of three electoral districts changed". June 19, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c "Provincial Election Results". www.electionsnb.ca. Elections New Brunswick.
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