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St. James (provincial electoral district)

Provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

St. James (provincial electoral district)

Summary

Provincial electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

FieldValue
nameSt. James
provinceManitoba
imageManitoba 2018 St. James.svg
captionLocation in Winnipeg
prov-statusactive
prov-repAdrien Sala
prov-rep-partyNDP
prov-created1957
prov-election-last2023
prov-election-first1958
demo-csdWinnipeg

| prov-status = active | prov-rep = Adrien Sala | prov-rep-link = | prov-rep-party = NDP | prov-rep-party-link = | demo-census-date = | demo-pop = | prov-created = 1957 | prov-election-last = 2023 | demo-electors = | prov-election-first = 1958 | demo-cd = | demo-csd = Winnipeg

St. James is a provincial electoral district of Manitoba, Canada.

Historical riding

The original St. James riding was established at the province's creation in 1870, and lasted until the election of 1879. It was located in what was then a separate community on Winnipeg's periphery.

Historical members of the Legislative Assembly

NamePartyTook officeLeft office
Edwin BourkeCanadian Party/Opposition18701874
Independent18741878
David WalkerGovernment/Conservative18781879

Modern riding

The modern St. James riding was created by redistribution in 1957 out of part of Assiniboia, and has formally existed since the provincial election of 1958. The riding is located in the western section of Winnipeg.

St. James is bordered on the east by Wellington, Minto and Wolseley, to the south by Tuxedo, to the north by Wellington and Lakeside, and to the west by Assiniboia and Kirkfield Park.

The riding's population in 1996 was 20,417. In 1999, the average family income was $47,842, and the unemployment rate was 6.20%. Almost 19% of St. James's population is over 65 years of age, and almost 38% of dwelling units are rented.

The service sector accounts for 15% of St. James's industry, following by government services (14%) and manufacturing (13%).

St. James was a marginal Progressive Conservative/NDP riding for most of its history to 1988. It was won in that year by Liberal Paul Edwards, who was elected leader of his party in 1993. The NDP recaptured the seat in 1995.

Recent boundary changes

The St. James riding underwent a dramatic redistribution in 1999. Previously, the space the riding occupied roughly the same space as the riding of Minto, which was newly created that year and, as of 2019, exists as Notre Dame. In fact, the original plan of the Manitoba Electoral Boundaries Commission in 1999 was to rename St. James as Minto, and create a new riding called King Edward to its immediate west (primarily from the old riding of Sturgeon Creek). Instead, the boundaries legislation passed by the Manitoba legislature in 1999 determined that the new riding would be called St. James.

Although the current riding has some territory in common with its predecessor of the same name, it is probably more accurately regarded as the successor riding to Sturgeon Creek. The NDP captured this seat from the Tories in 1999, and retained it in 2003.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

NamePartyTook officeLeft office
Douglas StanesPC19581969
Alvin MacklingNDP19691973
George MinakerPC19731981
Alvin MacklingNDP19811988
Paul EdwardsLib19881995
MaryAnn MihychukNDP19951999
Bonnie KorzeniowskiNDP19992011
Deanne CrothersNDP20112016
Scott JohnstonPC20162019
Adrien SalaNDP2019

Electoral results

1870

1874

1878

1958

1959

1962

1966

1969

1973

1977

1981

1986

1988

1990

1995

1999

2003

2007

2011

2016

2019

2016 provincial election redistributed resultsParty%
Progressive Conservative38.5
New Democratic34.6
Liberal13.8
Green10.0
Others3.2

2023

Previous boundaries

The 1999–2011 boundaries for St. James highlighted in red.

References

References

  1. http://www.electionsmanitoba.ca/apps/results/37gen/pbp.asp?ED=43 - 1999
  2. http://www.electionsmanitoba.ca/en/Results/39_division_results/39_stjames_summary_results.html - 2007 results
  3. 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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