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Winnipeg South Centre

Federal electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

Winnipeg South Centre

Summary

Federal electoral district in Manitoba, Canada

FieldValue
provinceManitoba
image
captionInteractive map of riding boundaries from the 2025 federal election
fed-statusactive
fed-district-number46014
fed-created1987
fed-election-first1988
fed-election-last2025
fed-repBen Carr
fed-rep-partyLiberal
demo-pop-ref
demo-area-ref
demo-census-date2011
demo-pop90711
demo-electors67988
demo-electors-date2015
demo-area46
demo-cdDivision No. 11
demo-csdWinnipeg (part)

| fed-status = active | fed-district-number = 46014 | fed-created = 1987 | fed-abolished = | fed-election-first = 1988 | fed-election-last = 2025 | fed-rep = Ben Carr | fed-rep-party = Liberal | demo-pop-ref = | demo-area-ref = | demo-electors-ref = | demo-census-date = 2011 | demo-pop = 90711 | demo-electors = 67988 | demo-electors-date = 2015 | demo-area = 46 | demo-cd = Division No. 11 | demo-csd = Winnipeg (part)

Winnipeg South Centre () is a federal electoral district in Manitoba, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1925 to 1979 and since 1988.

Geography

The district includes the neighbourhoods of Beaumont, Brockville, Buffalo, Chevrier, Crescent Park, Crescentwood, Earl Grey, Ebby-Wentworth, Edgeland, Fort Garry, Grant Park, J.B. Mitchell, Linden Woods, Lord Roberts, Mathers, Maybank, McMillan, Osborne Village, Parker, Pembina Strip, Point Road, River Heights, Riverview, Rockwood, Roslyn, Sir John Franklin, Wellington Crescent and Wildwood Park in the city of Winnipeg.

The Liberals tend to win their most votes in River Heights and adjacent neighbourhoods like Wellington Crescent. They are also strong in Roslyn. The Conservatives tend to do best in Tuxedo and Brockville. The NDP tends to do the best in Osborne Village.

Demographics

:According to the 2021 Canadian census

Languages: 77.1% English, 2.5% French, 1.7% Tagalog, 1.6% Punjabi, 1.5% Spanish, 1.5% Mandarin, 1.5% German

Religions: 44.1% Christian (16.3% Catholic, 5.2% United Church, 3.7% Anglican, 1.9% Anabaptist, 1.9% Orthodox, 1.8% Lutheran, 13.3% Others), 6.4% Jewish, 2.7% Muslim, 2.3% Hindu, 1.8% Sikh, 40.8% No religion

Median income (2020): $44,000

Average income (2020): $63,850

Panethnic group202120162011Pop.%Pop.%Pop.%Total responses92,60590,19088,370Total population94,80393,05390,711
European63,43066,90570,395
Indigenous7,6506,9005,830
South Asian5,8153,6802,745
Southeast Asian4,0553,5602,620
East Asian3,9903,7253,060
African3,4952,2601,635
Middle Eastern1,6051,185885
Latin American1,3601,060800
Other/multiracial1,205920395
Notes: Totals greater than 100% due to multiple origin responses.
Demographics based on 2012 Canadian federal electoral redistribution riding boundaries.

History

The electoral district was originally created in 1924 from the ridings of Winnipeg South and Winnipeg Centre. Its first iteration was generally located west of the Red River and north of the Assiniboine River. In 1952, it gained parts the Rural Municipality (and later city) of St. James. In 1966, it gained parts the municipalities of Assiniboia, and Charleswood, and the Town of Tuxedo. By this time, the riding had moved further west and crossed the Assiniboine.

In 1976, it was abolished with its territory transferred to the ridings of Winnipeg—Assiniboine and Winnipeg—St. James.

The electoral district was re-created in 1987 from parts of the redrawn ridings of St. Boniface and Winnipeg North Centre, and the abolished Winnipeg—Assiniboine and Winnipeg—Fort Garry. The new riding was almost entirely south of the Assiniboine River, except for Downtown Winnipeg, and had very little territory in common with the original Winnipeg South Centre. The riding contained all of Downtown Winnipeg south of Portage Avenue, plus the neighbourhoods of Alpine Place, Crescentwood, Earl Grey, Winnipeg, Ebby-Wentworth, Elm Park, Glenwood, Grant Park, J. B. Mitchell, Kingston Crescent, Lord Roberts, Mathers, McMillan, the northern half of Norberry, River-Osborne, River Heights, Riverview, Rockwood, Roslyn, St. George, Varennes, Wellington Crescent, and Tuxedo east of Edgeland Blvd.

The district's boundaries were redistributed in 1996. It lost all of its territory east of the Red River to St. Boniface; it lost all of Downtown Winnipeg north of York Avenue and east of Main Street to Winnipeg Centre. It gained Armstrong's Point and West Broadway south of Portage Avenue from Winnipeg North Centre; and it gained the remainder of Tuxedo plus the neighbourhoods of Assiniboine Park, Edgeland, Old Tuxedo, Sir John Franklin, and Vialoux from Winnipeg South.

The 2003 redistribution moved the riding entirely south of the Assiniboine for the first time, losing its territory north of the Assiniboine to Winnipeg Centre. The riding also lost Assiniboine Park and Vialoux to Charleswood—St. James. It gained the neighbourhoods of Beaumont, Buffalo, Chevrier, Crescent Park, Maybank, the western half of Pembina Strip, Point Road, and Wildwood from Winnipeg South.

This riding gained the neighbourhoods of Brockville, Linden Woods, Tuxedo Industrial and the remainder of the Pembina Strip from Winnipeg South during the 2012 electoral redistribution.

Following the report from the 2022 electoral redistribution, the riding is set to lose the Tuxedo area to the new riding of Winnipeg West, while adding Whyte Ridge, Linden Ridge and West Fort Garry Industrial from Winnipeg South.

Historical boundaries

| File: 192446017 Winnipeg South Centre.svg | 1924 representation order | File: 193346017 Winnipeg South Centre.svg | 1933 representation order | File: 194746016 Winnipeg South Centre.svg | 1947 representation order | File: 195246014 Winnipeg South Centre.svg | 1952 representation order | File: 196646013 Winnipeg South Centre.svg | 1966 representation order | File: 198746013 Winnipeg South Centre (Sud-Centre).svg | 1987 representation order | File: 199646012 Winnipeg South Centre Winnipeg-Centre-Sud.svg | 1996 representation order

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following members of Parliament:

| Assembly# = 15 | Assembly# = 16 | Assembly# = 17 | Assembly# = 18 | RepTerms# = 4 | PartyTerms# = 4 | Assembly# = 19 | Assembly# = 20 | Assembly# = 21 | #ByElections = 1 | RepTerms# = 7 | PartyTerms# = 7 | Assembly# = 22 | Assembly# = 23 | Assembly# = 24 | Assembly# = 25 | Assembly# = 26 | Assembly# = 27 | Assembly# = 28 | Assembly# = 29 | RepTerms# = 2 | PartyTerms# = 2 | Assembly# = 30 | Assembly# = 34 | RepTerms# = 3 | PartyTerms# = 7 | Assembly# = 35 | Assembly# = 36 | Assembly# = 37 | RepTerms# = 4 | Assembly# = 38 | Assembly# = 39 | Assembly# = 40 | Assembly# = 41 | Assembly# = 42 | RepTerms# = 3 | PartyTerms# = 5 | Assembly# = 43 | Assembly# = 44 | #ByElections = 1 | RepTerms# = 2 | Assembly# = 45

Current member of Parliament

Ben Carr has represented Winnipeg South Centre since a by-election in June 2023. He is the son of former MP and federal cabinet minister Jim Carr, who died in office in December 2022.

Election results

1988–present

2021 federal election redistributed resultsPartyVote%
Liberal22,18445.29
Conservative13,77328.12
New Democratic10,12420.67
People's1,3782.81
Green1,3002.65
Others2260.46
2011 federal election redistributed resultsPartyVote%
Conservative19,18541.15
Liberal17,05736.59
New Democratic8,55418.35
Green1,5023.22
Others3210.69
Map of the riding from 2004 to 2011
2000 federal election redistributed resultsPartyVote%
Liberal15,99241.96
Progressive Conservative10,10026.50
New Democratic6,98118.32
Canadian Alliance4,20011.02
Others8432.21
Map of the riding from 1997 to 2000
Map of the riding from 1987 to 1993

1925–1979

Student vote results

Notes

References

References

  1. [[#2011fed. Statistics Canada]]: 2012
  2. [[#2011fed. Statistics Canada]]: 2012
  3. (February 9, 2022). "Census Profile, 2021 Census, Statistics Canada".
  4. Government of Canada, Statistics Canada. (2022-10-26). "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population".
  5. Government of Canada, Statistics Canada. (2021-10-27). "Census Profile, 2016 Census".
  6. Government of Canada, Statistics Canada. (2015-11-27). "NHS Profile".
  7. "Transposition of Votes from the 44th General Election to the 2023 Representation Orders".
  8. [http://www.punditsguide.ca/riding.php?riding=2081 Pundits' Guide to Canadian Elections]
  9. [http://electionprediction.org/2004_fed/riding/46014-winnipeg-south-centre.htm Election Prediction Project]
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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