St. John's East (federal electoral district)

St. John's East (French: St. John's-Est; formerly known as St. John's North) is a federal electoral district in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1949.

St. John's East
Newfoundland and Labrador electoral district
St. John's East in relation to other Newfoundland and Labrador ridings (2013 boundaries)
Federal electoral district
LegislatureHouse of Commons
MP
 
 
 
Joanne Thompson
Liberal
District created1949
First contested1949
Last contested2021
District webpageprofile, map
Demographics
Population (2016)[1]85,697
Electors (2019)66,063
Area (km²)[1]363
Pop. density (per km²)236.1
Census division(s)Division 1
Census subdivision(s)St. John's, Logy Bay-Middle Cove-Outer Cove, Paradise, Portugal Cove-St. Philip's, Subdivision 1R, Torbay, Wabana

It covers a part of St. John's. For a brief period in 2003 and 2004, it was known as "St. John's North".[2]

In the 2019 federal election, former NDP MP Jack Harris defeated incumbent MP Nick Whalen in a rematch of the 2015 election. Harris retired in 2021, and Liberal Joanne Thompson won the seat.[3]

Demographics

Ethnic groups: 97.2% White
Languages: 97.7% English, 1.9% Other
Religions: 47.1% Catholic, 46.0% Protestant, 4.9% No affiliation
Average income: $28 969

Geography

The district includes the extreme northeastern part of the Avalon Peninsula including the northern half of the City of St. John's, and the eastern half of the Town of Conception Bay South. It also includes Bell Island, Little Bell Island and Kelly's Island.

The neighbouring ridings are Avalon and St. John's South—Mount Pearl.

According to Elections Canada, the geographic boundaries for this riding as of the 39th General Election are:

"All that area consisting of:
(a) the towns of Bauline, Flatrock, Logy Bay-Middle Cove-Outer Cove, Portugal Cove-St. Philip's, Pouch Cove, Torbay and Wabana;
(b) that part of the Town of Paradise lying northeasterly and northerly of a line described as follows: commencing at the intersection of the easterly limit of the Town of Paradise with Topsail Road; thence generally westerly along said road to Paradise Road; thence generally northwesterly along said road to Camrose Drive; thence northerly along said drive to the northerly limit of said town; and
(c) that part of the City of St. John's lying northwesterly of a line described as follows: commencing at the intersection of the westerly limit of the City of St. John's with Kenmount Road coincident with the northerly limit of the City of Mount Pearl; thence northeasterly and easterly along said road and Freshwater Road to Lemarchant Road; thence southerly along said road to Barter's Hill; thence generally southeasterly along Barter's Hill to Waldegrave Street; thence easterly and northeasterly along said street to Water Street; thence northerly and northeasterly along said street to Temperance Street; thence northwesterly along said street to Duckworth Street; thence northeasterly along said street to Signal Hill Road; thence northeasterly along said road to Cabot Avenue; thence northeasterly in a straight line to a point on Signal Hill at approximate latitude 47°34'31"N and longitude 52°41'21"W (on the northern boundary of the Johnson Geo Centre lot); thence due east in a straight line to the Atlantic Ocean."

See the map of the St. John's East riding.

History

The riding was created when Newfoundland joined Confederation in 1949 and has historically been a conservative stronghold.[4] St. John's East was won by Liberal Bonnie Hickey in 1993 election, who was defeated by Progressive Conservative Norman Doyle in the 1997 election. Doyle held the riding for the PCs and then the Conservatives, but stood down in 2008 and was replaced in a landslide by New Democrat, Jack Harris.[5][6] Harris held the riding until his defeat in the 2015 election by Nick Whalen. That result was considered one of the biggest surprises of the 2015 election.[7]

Following the 2012 electoral redistribution, 21% of the riding was moved into Avalon, and it gained 5% from St. John's South—Mount Pearl.

Following the 2022 electoral redistribution, it will lose all of its territory in Paradise to Cape Spear, and it will gain the rest of St. John's Harbour, the Wishingwell Park area and the Ayre Athletic Field area from St. John's South—Mount Pearl.

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following members of Parliament:

ParliamentYearsMemberParty
St. John's East
21st  1949–1953     Gordon Higgins Progressive Conservative
22nd  1953–1957     Allan Fraser Liberal
23rd  1957–1958     James McGrath Progressive Conservative
24th  1958–1962
25th  1962–1963
26th  1963–1965     Joseph O'Keefe Liberal
27th  1965–1968
28th  1968–1972     James McGrath Progressive Conservative
29th  1972–1974
30th  1974–1979
31st  1979–1980
32nd  1980–1984
33rd  1984–1986
 1987–1988     Jack Harris New Democratic
34th  1988–1993     Ross Reid Progressive Conservative
35th  1993–1997     Bonnie Hickey Liberal
36th  1997–2000     Norman Doyle Progressive Conservative
37th  2000–2003
 2003–2004     Conservative
St. John's North
38th  2004–2006     Norman Doyle Conservative
St. John's East
39th  2006–2008     Norman Doyle Conservative
40th  2008–2011     Jack Harris New Democratic
41st  2011–2015
42nd  2015–2019     Nick Whalen Liberal
43rd  2019–2021     Jack Harris New Democratic
44th  2021–present     Joanne Thompson Liberal

Election results

Graph of election results in St. John's East and St.John's North (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)

St. John's East (2004-present)

Graph of election results in St. John's East (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)

Next

Next Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
LiberalJoanne Thompson
New DemocraticMary Shortall
ConservativeDavid Brazil
Total valid votes/Expense limit
Total rejected ballots
Turnout
Eligible voters

2021

2021 federal election redistributed results[8]
PartyVote%
 Liberal16,74145.14
 New Democratic12,92034.84
 Conservative6,70918.09
 People's7181.94
2021 election by polling area
2021 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
LiberalJoanne Thompson17,23945.16+11.90$71,466.38
New DemocraticMary Shortall13,09034.29–12.63$65,576.70
ConservativeGlenn Etchegary7,11918.65+0.59$44,852.25
People'sDana Metcalfe7231.89none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit38,17199.23-0.61$105,251.87
Total rejected ballots2960.77–0.39
Turnout38,46757.61–10.04
Registered voters66,768
Liberal gain from New DemocraticSwing+12.30
Source: Elections Canada[9][10]

2019

2019 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticJack Harris21,14846.92+1.63none listed
LiberalNick Whalen14,96233.20−13.54none listed
ConservativeJoedy Wall8,14118.06+11.52$56,419.96
GreenDavid Peters8211.82+0.71$0.00
Total valid votes/expense limit45,07299.84 $101,886.12
Total rejected ballots5281.16+0.91
Turnout45,60067.65-0.21
Eligible voters67,406
New Democratic gain from LiberalSwing+7.58
Source: Elections Canada[11]

2015

2015 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
LiberalNick Whalen20,97446.73+38.96
New DemocraticJack Harris20,32845.29-25.36
ConservativeDeanne Stapleton2,9386.55-13.90
GreenDavid Anthony Peters5001.11-0.02
CommunistSean Burton1400.31
Total valid votes/expense limit44,88099.75 $198,664.41
Total rejected ballots1110.25
Turnout44,99167.86
Eligible voters66,304
Liberal gain from New DemocraticSwing+32.16
Source: Elections Canada[12][13]
2011 federal election redistributed results[14]
PartyVote%
 New Democratic26,04270.65
 Conservative7,53820.45
 Liberal2,8637.77
 Green4151.13

2011

2011 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticJack Harris31,38871.22-3.33$68,045.84
ConservativeJerry Byrne9,19820.87+11.61$85,207.91
LiberalJohn Allan3,0196.85-5.73$53,539.40
GreenRobert Miller4671.06-0.32$335.14
Total valid votes/Expense limit44,072100.0  $85,537.94
Total rejected, declined and unmarked ballots1360.31+0.32
Turnout44,20857.85+0.96
Eligible voters 76,424
New Democratic holdSwing-7.47
Sources:[15][16]

2008

2008 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticJack Harris30,88174.55+57.03$78,829
LiberalWalter Noel5,21112.58-22.37$51,030
ConservativeCraig Westcott3,8369.26-37.30$79,772
Progressive CanadianShannon Tobin5781.40none listed
GreenHoward Story5701.38+0.40none listed
Newfoundland and Labrador FirstLes Coultas3470.84none listed
Total valid votes/Expense limit41,423 100.0  $81,734
Total rejected, declined and unmarked ballots137 0.33 -0.06
Turnout41,560 56.89-4.6
Eligible voters 73,053
New Democratic gain from ConservativeSwing+39.70

2006

2006 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeNorman Doyle19,11046.56+5.16$72,442
LiberalPaul Antle14,34534.95-1.70$71,682
New DemocraticMike Kehoe7,19017.52-2.25$14,072
GreenStephen Eli Harris4020.98-1.19none listed
Total valid votes/Expense limit41,047100.0   $74,567
Total rejected, declined and unmarked ballots1110.27-0.04
Turnout 41,158 60.50+4.88
Eligible voters68,026
Conservative holdSwing+3.43

St. John's North (2003-2004)

Graph of election results in St. John's North (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)

2004

2004 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeNorman Doyle15,07341.40-12.50$67,414
LiberalWalter Noel13,34336.65+4.07$70,872
New DemocraticJanine Piller7,19819.77+7.09$17,703
GreenScott Vokey7912.17$564
Total valid votes/Expense limit36,405100.0   $72,255
Total rejected, declined and unmarked ballots1140.31
Turnout36,519 55.62-1.47
Eligible voters65,660
Conservative notional gain from Progressive ConservativeSwing-8.28
Changes from 2000 are based on redistributed results. Change for the Conservatives is based on the combined totals of the Progressive Conservatives and the Canadian Alliance.
2000 federal election redistributed results
PartyVote%
 Progressive Conservative17,75251.26
 Liberal11,28232.58
 New Democratic4,39112.68
 Alliance9132.64
 Others2900.84

St. John's East (1949-2003)

Graph of election results in St. John's East (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)

2000

2000 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeNorman Doyle23,60653.22+14.24
LiberalPeter Miller13,83531.19+4.02
New DemocraticCarol Cantwell5,39512.16-15.93
AllianceGarry Hartle1,1442.58-1.88
IndependentJudy Day2540.57
Natural LawMichael Rayment1220.28-0.15
Total valid votes44,356100.00
Changes for the Canadian Alliance from 1997 are based on the results of its predecessor, the Reform Party.

1997

1997 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeNorman Doyle17,28638.98-2.83
New DemocraticTed Warren12,46028.09+21.62
LiberalBonnie Hickey12,04827.17-17.27
ReformDavid Tulett1,9774.46+1.56
GreenJonathan C. Whalen3880.87
Natural LawMichael Rayment1910.43-0.42
Total valid votes44,350100.00

1993

1993 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalBonnie Hickey19,51144.44+25.38
Progressive ConservativeRoss Reid18,35541.81-2.32
New DemocraticBob Buckingham2,8396.47-28.83
ReformJ. Leonard Barron1,2712.90
NationalBill Vetter1,2112.76
Natural LawMichael Rayment3740.85
Christian HeritageBob Tremblett3390.77-0.75
Total valid votes43,900 100.00

1988

1988 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeRoss Reid21,50344.13+9.16
New DemocraticJack Harris17,19835.30-10.98
LiberalJim Baird9,28519.06+1.84
Christian HeritageRobert Tremblett7391.52
Total valid votes48,725 100.00

1987 by-election

Canadian federal by-election, 20 July 1987
Resignation of James McGrath, 4 September 1986
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
New DemocraticJack Harris15,84246.28+39.72
Progressive ConservativeThomas V. Hickey11,97134.97-43.33
LiberalSteve Neary5,89417.22+2.9
RhinocerosPeter Francis Quinlan5271.54
Total valid votes34,234 100.00

1984

1984 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath30,86678.30+17.04
LiberalElizabeth Reynolds5,64414.32-11.15
New DemocraticChristine Oliver2,5846.56-5.60
LibertarianPaul Paquet3250.82
Total valid votes39,419100.00

1980

1980 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath20,00761.26+2.83
LiberalErnest J. Bishop8,32025.47+3.17
New DemocraticGeorge P. Corbett3,97312.16-7.11
IndependentAnn Margaret Barney2700.83
Marxist–LeninistCarol Hodge910.28
Total valid votes32,661100.00

1979

1979 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath20,26258.43+2.25
LiberalJohn Dustan7,73422.30-11.48
New DemocraticStratford G. Canning6,68419.27+10.04
Total valid votes34,680100.00

1974

1974 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath16,94156.18-4.29
LiberalNorman Whalen10,18733.78+0.06
New DemocraticGeorge Corbett2,7839.23+3.90
IndependentJ. Wayne Saint John2420.80
Total valid votes30,153100.00

1972

1972 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath17,72860.47-0.46
LiberalMargaret Dunn9,88733.72-1.72
New DemocraticR. Graham Kelly1,5635.33+2.12
Social CreditNorman W. King1390.47+0.05
Total valid votes29,317 100.00

1968

1968 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath18,15360.93+19.79
LiberalJoseph O'Keefe10,55835.44-20.53
New DemocraticMary Summers9563.21+1.13
Social CreditNorman W. King1260.42-0.39
Total valid votes29,793100.00

1965

1965 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalJoseph O'Keefe16,18255.97+4.48
Progressive ConservativeWilliam Joseph Browne11,89441.14-7.37
New DemocraticCyril W. Strong6022.08Ø
Social CreditNorman William King2330.81Ø
Total valid votes28,911100.00

1963

1963 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalJoseph O'Keefe14,76851.49+5.92
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath13,91148.51-3.82
Total valid votes28,679100.00

1962

1962 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath14,82152.33-13.09
LiberalBrian White12,90745.57+11.95
New DemocraticJames J. Walsh4351.54Ø
Social CreditEric Dixon Cave Hiscock1580.56Ø
Total valid votes28,321 100.00

1958

1958 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath17,89465.42+12.22
LiberalGregory O'Grady9,19733.62-13.18
Independent LiberalDavid Ignatius Jackman2630.96Ø
Total valid votes27,354 100.00

1957

1957 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive ConservativeJames McGrath10,31253.20+18.82
LiberalAllan Fraser9,07346.80+4.1
Total valid votes19,385100.00

1953

1953 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalAllan Fraser8,31042.70-1.21
Progressive ConservativeGordon Higgins6,69134.38-20.62
IndependentPeter John Cashin4,45922.91Ø
Total valid votes19,460100.00

1949

1949 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%
Progressive ConservativeGordon Higgins9,91255.00
LiberalAmbrose John Dalton Shea7,91343.91
Co-operative CommonwealthWilliam W. Gillies1971.09
Total valid votes18,022100.00

Student vote results

2019

2019 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
New DemocraticJack Harris2,13540.34-1.87
LiberalNick Whalen1,54229.14-13.46
ConservativeJoedy Wall96418.22+11.45
GreenDavid Peters65112.30+7.57
Total Valid Votes5,292100.0
Source: Student Vote Canada[17]

2015

2015 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalNick Whalen64842.60+25.72
New DemocraticJack Harris64242.21-11.51
ConservativeDeanne Stapleton1036.77-11.75
GreenDavid Anthony Peters724.736.15
CommunistSean Burton563.68
Total Valid Votes1,521100.0
Source: Student Vote Canada[18]

2011

2011 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%
New DemocraticJack Harris81553.72
ConservativeJerry Bynre28118.52
LiberalJohn Allan25616.88
GreenRobert Miller16510.88
Total Valid Votes1,517100.0
Source: Student Vote Canada[19]

See also

References

  • "St. John's East (federal electoral district) (Code 10006) Census Profile". 2011 census. Government of Canada - Statistics Canada. Retrieved March 3, 2011.
  • St. John's East riding from Elections Canada
  • Riding history for St. John's East (1949–1952) from the Library of Parliament
  • Riding history for St. John's East (1952–1987) from the Library of Parliament
  • Riding history for St. John's East (1987–2003) from the Library of Parliament
  • Riding history for St. John's North (2003–2004) from the Library of Parliament
  • Riding history for St. John's East (2004– ) from the Library of Parliament
  • Election Financial Reports from Elections Canada

Notes