{| class="wikitable"

|-

! colspan="4" | 2011 federal election redistributed results

|-

! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="130px" colspan="2" | Party

! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="50px" | Vote

! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="30px" | %

|-

| |  

| Liberal ||align=right| 14,585 ||align=right| 38.47

|-

| |  

| New Democratic ||align=right| 12,269 ||align=right| 32.36

|-

| |  

| Bloc Québécois ||align=right| 7,212 ||align=right| 19.02

|-

| |  

| Conservative ||align=right| 3,114 ||align=right| 8.21

|-

| |  

| Green ||align=right| 590 ||align=right| 1.56

|-

| |  

| Others ||align=right| 144 ||align=right| 0.38

|}

On 16 May 2013, Liberal MP Denis Coderre announced he would resign his seat on 2 June in order to run for Mayor of Montreal. The Chief Electoral Officer received official notification of the vacancy on 3 June 2013 and the by-election had to be called by 30 November 2013.

Note: Change based on redistributed results. Conservative vote is compared to the total of the Canadian Alliance vote and Progressive Conservative vote in 2000 election.

Montreal—Bourassa, 1972–1979

Note: Social Credit vote is compared to Ralliement créditiste vote in the 1968 election.

Bourassa, 1968–1972

See also

  • List of Canadian electoral districts
  • Historical federal electoral districts of Canada

References

  • Campaign expense data from Elections Canada
  • 2011 Results from Elections Canada

Riding history from the Library of Parliament

  • Bourassa (1966–1971)
  • Montreal—Bourassa (1971–1976)
  • Bourassa (1976– )

Notes