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Fort Whyte

Provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

Fort Whyte

Summary

Provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

FieldValue
nameFort Whyte
provinceManitoba
imageManitoba 2018 Fort Whyte.svg
captionLocation in Winnipeg
prov-statusactive
prov-repObby Khan
prov-rep-partyPC
prov-created1999
prov-election-last2022
prov-election-first1999
demo-cdDivision No. 11
demo-csdWinnipeg

|prov-status = active | prov-rep = Obby Khan | prov-rep-party = PC |demo-census-date = |demo-pop = | prov-created = 1999 |prov-election-last = 2022 |demo-electors = |prov-election-first = 1999 |demo-cd = Division No. 11 |demo-csd = Winnipeg

Fort Whyte is a provincial electoral district of Manitoba, Canada. It was created in 1999, after the provincial electoral boundaries commission determined that southwestern Winnipeg had experienced enough population growth to deserve an extra seat. Fort Whyte was created from territory formerly belonging to the divisions of Tuxedo, Fort Garry, and St. Norbert.

The current MLA for Fort Whyte is Obby Khan, a Progressive Conservative who currently serves as Leader of the Opposition. Khan succeeded fellow Progressive Conservative and former Premier of Manitoba Brian Pallister following his resignation in 2021.

Constituency profile

Geography

Following Manitoba's 2018 electoral redistribution, Fort Whyte is bordered to the east by Fort Garry, to the south by Waverley, to the west by Roblin, and to the north by River Heights and Tuxedo.

Demographics

The constituency's population in 2018 was 21,780. The average family income in 2018 was $117,535. The unemployment rate is 4.9%, and 19.2% of the population is above 65 years of age. Almost 42% of the population have university degrees. Health and social services account for 13.5% of Fort Whyte's industry, with a further 10.4% in Retail Trade.

Fort Whyte is an ethnically diverse constituency, with an immigrant population of 25.6%. 6.7% of the riding's residents are East Indian, 5.6% are Chinese.

Political history

The constituency has been held by the Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba (PCs) for its entire existence, and has always been comfortably safe for that party. The riding's first Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA), John Loewen, won it handily in 1999 even as the Tories were soundly defeated by the New Democratic Party of Manitoba in that year's provincial election, after having been in government for over eleven years. On September 23, 2005, Loewen announced that he was leaving provincial politics to seek the Liberal Party of Canada's nomination for Charleswood—St. James—Assiniboia in the federal election anticipated. He formally resigned from the legislature on September 26.

On December 13, 2005, a by-election was held to fill Loewen's seat. The winner was another Tory, Hugh McFadyen. A few months later, McFadyen became leader of the provincial PCs. McFadyen was easily re-elected in the 2007 provincial election, but was one of only four PC MLAs returned from Winnipeg. After the PCs were again defeated in 2011, McFadyen announced he would retire from politics as soon as a successor was chosen.

Former provincial MLA and federal MP Brian Pallister was elected his successor, and easily won Fort Whyte in the ensuing by-election. Pallister served as Premier of Manitoba while MLA for Fort Whyte from 2016, leading the party to a second electoral mandate in 2019, until 2021, when he resigned first as premier and later as an MLA.

A by-election to replace his vacancy was held on March 22, 2022. Obby Khan, a fellow Progressive Conservative, won the seat, defeating Liberal candidate Willard Reaves. Khan successfully won reelection in 2023.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

ParliamentYearsMemberParty
37th1999–2003MBPCbackground}}John Loewen
38th2003–2005
2005–2007Hugh McFadyen
39th2007–2011
40th2011–2012
2012–2016Brian Pallister
41st2016–2019
42nd2019–2021
2022–2023Obby Khan
43rd2023–present

Election results

2016 provincial election redistributed resultsParty%
Progressive Conservative65.4
New Democratic15.7
Liberal11.4
Green7.2
Manitoba1.3

|Progressive Conservative |Brian Pallister |Independent |Darrell Ackman

Previous boundaries

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

References

References

  1. [[Elections Manitoba]] [https://electionsmanitoba.ca/downloads/winnipeg_map_EN.pdf electoral map of Winnipeg, 2018]
  2. (2023-10-04). "Obby Khan beats Willard Reaves in Manitoba election battle of former Winnipeg Blue Bombers".
  3. (22 March 2022). "2022 Byelection: Fort Whyte". [[Elections Manitoba]].
  4. Marcoux, Jacques. (2019-08-27). "New Manitoba election boundaries give upper hand to Progressive Conservatives, CBC News analysis finds". CBC.
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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