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Fort Rouge (electoral district)

Provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

Fort Rouge (electoral district)

Summary

Provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

FieldValue
nameFort Rouge
provinceManitoba
imageManitoba 2018 Fort Rouge.svg
captionLocation in Winnipeg
prov-statusactive
prov-repWab Kinew
prov-rep-partyNDP
prov-created1957
prov-election-last2023
prov-election-first1958

|prov-status = active | prov-rep = Wab Kinew | prov-rep-party = NDP |demo-census-date = |demo-pop = | prov-created = 1957 |prov-election-last = 2023 |demo-electors = |prov-election-first = 1958 |demo-cd = |demo-csd =

Fort Rouge () is a provincial electoral district of Manitoba, Canada. It was created by redistribution in 1957, and formally came into existence in the general election of 1958. The riding was eliminated in 1989, and re-established in 1999. It is located in the central section of the city of Winnipeg.

Fort Rouge is bordered on the east by St. Boniface, to the south by Fort Garry-Riverview, to the north by Logan, and to the west by River Heights. The actual Legislative Assembly of Manitoba building is located across the river from Fort Rouge.

The riding's population in 1996 was 20,364. In 1999, the average family income was $49,361, and the unemployment rate was 8.70%. 39.6% of Fort Rouge's residents are listed as low-income, the sixth-highest rate in the province. Almost 80% of occupied dwelling are rentals, and over 20% of households are single-parent families. Almost 25% of Fort Rouge's residents have a university degree—one of the highest rates in the province.

Fort Rouge has an immigrant population of 20%. Eight per cent of the riding's residents are aboriginal. The service sector accounts for 21% of Fort Rouge's industry, with a further 11% in social services.

The seat was held by the Progressive Conservatives from 1958 to 1973, and was a rare bastion of Liberal strength in the province from 1973 to 1981. Lloyd Axworthy was the riding's representative from 1973 to 1979; for a time, he was the only Liberal in the legislature. Roland Penner's election for the New Democratic Party in 1981, however, foretold of future NDP successes in the riding. Though Jim Carr would win the riding back for the Liberals in 1988, the seat would be broken into Crescentwood, Broadway and Osborne for the 1990 election. By the time the seat was reestablished in 1999, Crescentwood, Broadway and Osborne would all have NDP representatives, with Crescentwood MLA Tim Sale becoming the first MLA of the reestablished Fort Rouge. It has been continuously represented by the NDP since the riding was reestablished in 1999.

In the 2007, 2011, and 2016 provincial elections the Liberals were the main challengers to the NDP, though the party would continue to hold the seat with Jennifer Howard. In 2016, Liberal leader Rana Bokhari ran in Fort Rouge, losing to the NDP's Wab Kinew. At the 2015 federal election, according to Elections Canada data, Fort Rouge voted heavily Liberal. In the 2019 and 2023 elections, the Progressive Conservatives finished second behind the NDP, with the Liberals falling behind Green candidate James Beddome in 2019.

The district is represented by NDP leader and Premier Wab Kinew.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

AssemblyYearsMemberParty
25th1958–1959MBPCbackground}}Gurney Evans
26th1959–1962
27th1962–1966
28th1966–1969
29th1969–1973Inez Trueman
30th1973–1977MBLiberalbackground}}Lloyd Axworthy
31st1977–1979
1979–1981June Westbury
32nd1981–1986MBNDPbackground}}Roland Penner
33rd1986–1988
34th1988–1990Jim Carr
37th1999–2003MBNDPbackground}}Tim Sale
38th2003–2007
39th2007–2011Jennifer Howard
40th2011–2016
41st2016–2019Wab Kinew
42nd2019–2023
43rd2023–present

Opinion polls

Polling firmLast date of pollingLink
width=10% align="center"NDPwidth=10% align="center"Liberalwidth=10% align="center"PC
Mainstreet Research/PostmediaHTML

Election results

1958

1959

1962

1966

1969

1973

1977

1979 by-election

1981

1986

1988

1999

2003

2007

2011

2016

2019

2023

Previous boundaries

The 1999–2011 boundaries of the riding of Fort Rouge highlighted in red.

References

References

  1. CBC "2015 federal election: How did your Manitoba neighbours vote?" 2 March 2016
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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