Toronto Centre (provincial electoral district)

Toronto Centre is a provincial electoral district in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Since 1999 it has elected one member to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.

Toronto Centre
Ontario electoral district
Location in Toronto
Provincial electoral district
LegislatureLegislative Assembly of Ontario
MPP
 
 
 
Kristyn Wong-Tam
New Democratic
District created1996
First contested1999
Last contested2022
Demographics
Population (2016)103,805
Electors (2018)82,044
Area (km²)6
Pop. density (per km²)17,300.8
Census division(s)Toronto
Census subdivision(s)Toronto
Toronto Centre from 2003 to 2018

It was created in 1999 as Toronto Centre—Rosedale from most of St. George—St. David and parts of St. Andrew—St. Patrick, Fort York, when ridings were redistributed to match their federal counterparts.

From 1999 to 2007 the riding included the area of Toronto from Avenue Road/University Avenue in the west to the Don River and the city limits in the east and the Mount Pleasant Cemetery and the CPR in the north.

In 2007, the riding was abolished and redistributed mostly into Toronto Centre. It lost the area west of Yonge Street and south of College Street plus Toronto Island to Trinity—Spadina. It also gained some parts of Toronto—Danforth as the riding's east border was altered to continue along the Don River past the former city limits to Pottery Road to Bayview Avenue to the CPR. Another boundary change altered the borders around the Rosehill Reservoir.[citation needed]

The Ontario Legislative Building was located within this district until the 2015 electoral redistribution.

Members of Provincial Parliament

AssemblyYearsMemberParty
Toronto Centre—Rosedale
Riding created from St. Andrew—St. Patrick,
St. George—St. David and Fort York
37th  1999–2003     George Smitherman Liberal
38th  2003–2007
Toronto Centre
39th  2007–2010     George Smitherman Liberal
 2010–2011 Glen Murray
40th  2011–2014
41st  2014–2017
42nd  2018–2022     Suze Morrison New Democratic
43rd  2022–present Kristyn Wong-Tam
Sourced from the Ontario Legislative Assembly[1]

Election results

2022

2022 Ontario general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticKristyn Wong-Tam15,28543.77−9.89$117,371
LiberalDavid Morris12,82036.71+9.56$86,950
Progressive ConservativeJess Goddard4,24512.16−1.96$25,855
GreenNicki Ward1,7845.11+1.99$13,592
New BlueSteve Hoehlmann3851.10 $0
CommunistIvan Byard1660.48 $0
None of the AboveRon Shaw1310.38 $326
Stop the New Sex-Ed AgendaJennifer Snell1050.30+0.07$0
Total valid votes/Expense limit34,92199.36+0.27$123,610
Total rejected, unmarked, and declined ballots2240.64−0.27
Turnout35,14539.82−14.48
Eligible voters88,307
New Democratic holdSwing−9.72
Source(s)
  • "Summary of Valid Votes Cast for Each Candidate" (PDF). Elections Ontario. 2022. Archived from the original on 2023-05-18.
  • "Statistical Summary by Electoral District" (PDF). Elections Ontario. 2022. Archived from the original on 2023-05-21.

2018

The Liberal incumbent Glen Murray resigned his seat effective 1 September 2017 to accept a position with the Pembina Institute, and the seat remained vacant until this election. In April 2018, PC candidate Meredith Cartwright hired actors to pretend to be Doug Ford supporters at the first provincial leader's debate.[2]

2018 Ontario general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
New DemocraticSuze Morrison23,68853.66+34.16
LiberalDavid Morris11,98627.15-33.33
Progressive ConservativeMeredith Cartwright6,23414.12+1.94
GreenAdam Sommerfeld1,3773.12-1.62
LibertarianJudi Falardeau3710.84
Special NeedsDan King1170.27
New People's ChoiceCameron James1100.25
Stop the New Sex-Ed AgendaTheresa Snell1020.23
People's Political PartyKevin Clarke980.22
Canadian EconomicWanda Marie Fountain650.15
Total valid votes44,14899.09
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots4040.91
Turnout44,55254.30
Eligible voters82,044
New Democratic gain from LiberalSwing+33.74
Source: Elections Ontario[3]

2014

2014 general election redistributed results[4]
PartyVote%
 Liberal20,73360.48
 New Democratic6,68519.50
 Progressive Conservative4,17712.18
 Green1,6234.73
 Others1,0653.11
2014 Ontario general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalGlen Murray29,93558.47+3.23
Progressive ConservativeMartin Abell9,49818.55+2.91
New DemocraticKate Sellar8,14015.90-9.40
GreenMark Daye2,2654.42+1.98
LibertarianJudi Falardeau5511.08+0.11
Special NeedsLada Alekseychuk2000.39
CommunistDrew Garvie1630.32+0.04
Vegan EnvironmentalHarvey Rotenburg1520.30+0.17
FreedomChris Goodwin1370.27+0.32
Canadians' ChoiceBahman Yazdanfar780.15+0.11
People's Political PartyRobin Nurse760.15+0.10
Total valid votes51,195100.0  
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots5461.07
Turnout51,74150.86
Eligible voters101,741
Liberal holdSwing+0.16
Source: Elections Ontario[5]

2011

2011 Ontario general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalGlen Murray25,23654.94+7.77
New DemocraticCathy Crowe11,57125.19-8.22
Progressive ConservativeMartin Abell7,18615.64+0.34
GreenMark Daye1,1232.44-0.57
LibertarianJudi Falardeau4410.96+0.57
CommunistCathy Holliday1460.32
IndependentHarvey Rotenberg930.20
FreedomChristopher Goodwin920.20-0.03
People's Political PartyPhil Sarazen290.06
IndependentBahman Yazdanfar190.04
IndependentAnne Abbottwithdrawn
Total valid votes45,936100.00
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots2860.62
Turnout46,22248.42
Eligible voters95,466
Liberal holdSwing+8.00
Source: Elections Ontario[6]

2010 by-election

On January 6, 2010, a provincial by-election was called in Toronto Centre[7] to replace George Smitherman, who had resigned as MPP to run for mayor of Toronto.[8] The by-election took place on February 4, 2010.[9]

Ontario provincial by-election, February 4, 2010 (Resignation of George Smitherman)[10]
Resignation of George Smitherman
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalGlen Murray12,28947.17-0.58
New DemocraticCathy Crowe8,70533.41+14.55
Progressive ConservativePamela Taylor3,98515.30-5.11
GreenStefan Premdas7833.01-6.65
LibertarianHeath Thomas1010.39-1.10
IndependentJohn Turmel660.25
IndependentRaj Rama630.24
FreedomWayne Simmons610.23
Total valid votes26,204 100.00

2007

2007 Ontario general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalGeorge Smitherman21,52247.85−5.03
Progressive ConservativePamela Taylor9,08420.20−1.63
New DemocraticSandra Gonzalez8,46418.82−1.28
GreenMike McLean4,4129.815.82
LibertarianMichael Green6861.53 
Special NeedsDanish Ahmed2590.58 
CommunistJohan Boyden1960.44 
IndependentPhilip Fernandez1910.42−0.37
IndependentGary Leroux1670.37 
Total valid votes44,981100.00
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots4571.02
Turnout45,43849.90
Eligible voters91,050

2003

2003 Ontario general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalGeorge Smitherman23,87252.78+13.88
Progressive ConservativeJohn Adams9,96822.04-7.84
New DemocraticGene Lara9,11220.14+11.34
GreenGabriel Draven1,7393.84+2.98
IndependentPhilip Fernandez3240.72
FreedomSilvio Ursomarzo2180.48-0.27
Total valid votes45,233100.00

1999

1999 Ontario general election
PartyCandidateVotes%
LiberalGeorge Smitherman17,75638.90
Progressive ConservativeDurhane Wong-Rieger13,64029.88
IndependentJohn Sewell8,82219.33
New DemocraticHelen Breslauer4,0198.80
GreenJoseph Cohen3920.86
FreedomPaul McKeever3440.75
IndependentMike Ryner2360.52
Family CoalitionBill Whatcott2320.51
Natural LawRon Parker2050.45
Total valid votes 45,646100.00

Referendum results

2007

2007 Ontario electoral reform referendum
SideVotes%
First Past the Post22,20450.2
Mixed member proportional22,07049.8
Total valid votes44,274100.0

References

Sources

43°39′40″N 79°22′08″W / 43.661°N 79.369°W / 43.661; -79.369