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This article details Canadian federal election results in Quebec City.
Local profile
Quebec City, like the rest of the province, used to be solidly Liberal until 1984. In 1984 and 1988, the Progressive Conservatives swept the area, thanks to nationalist support. This nationalist support went to the Bloc Québécois in 1993, and Quebec City became a Bloc stronghold for the next two decades.
In the 2000 election, the Liberals were able to gain some ground, winning two seats, but the Bloc regained those seats in the 2004 election before losing all but one in 2006 to the Conservatives. The 2006 and 2008 federal elections witnessed fierce battles between sovereigntist support for the Bloc, and populist/libertarian support for the Conservatives, which intensified greatly in the fallout of the CHOI-FM controversy.
In 2011, the unexpected surge of NDP support in Quebec managed to overwhelm the support of all other parties, allowing them to sweep Quebec City.
The Liberals remained on the radar screen in Quebec City, but this support didn't translate into actual seats again until 2015, when they won two seats. The Conservatives won the other three, among the few bright spots in the Tories' defeat that year. In 2019 the Bloc regained popularity, but only took one seat leaving two seats each for Liberals and Conservatives. All parties held their respective seats in 2021.
The 2025 election saw a surge in support for the Liberals at the expense of the Bloc, part of a wider trend across the province. They flipped the riding of Beauport—Limoilou from the Bloc. Meanwhile, the Conservative vote share declined in all five of the city's ridings (they did not field a candidate in Québec Centre due to a filing error), but the party managed to retain both of their seats.
Votes by party throughout time
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! scope="row"|1979
| 133,000<br><small>66.1%</small>
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| 15,156<br><small>7.7%</small>
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| 14,496<br><small>7.2%</small>
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| 32,284<br><small>16.0%</small>
| 6,040<br><small>3.0%</small>
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! scope="row"|1980
| 129,060<br><small>69.7%</small>
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| 20,918<br><small>11.3%</small>
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| 14,801<br><small>8.0%</small>
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| 6,711<br><small>3.6%</small>
| 13,577<br><small>7.3%</small>
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! scope="row"|1984
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2019
2015
2011
2008
The Bloc Québécois won one of the four seats lost to the Conservatives in the last election.
2006
The Bloc Québécois held on to just one of the five seats in this region, losing four to the Conservatives, who had some of their strongest results in Quebec in this region in 2004, mainly from libertarian voters as a result of the CHOI-FM controversy.
2004
Maps
- Beauport
- Charlesbourg
- Louis-Hébert
- Louis-Saint-Laurent
- Québec
<gallery widths=185 heights=185>
Image:qc04.PNG|Key map
File:Bloc Québécois election results, Quebec City 2004.PNG|Bloc Québécois
File:Conservative Party of Canada election results, Quebec City 2004.PNG|Conservative Party of Canada
File:Green Party of Canada election results, Quebec City 2004.PNG|Green Party of Canada
File:Liberal Party of Canada election results, Quebec City 2004.PNG|Liberal Party of Canada
File:New Democratic Party election results, Quebec City 2004.PNG|New Democratic Party
</gallery>
2000
1997
1993
1988
1984
Notes and References
Notes
References
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