Windsor—Tecumseh—Lakeshore (formerly Windsor—Tecumseh) is a federal electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 2004.
Geography
thumb|right|200px|Ontario 2018 Windsor-Tecumseh.
Windsor—Tecumseh consists of the Town of Tecumseh, and the part of the City of Windsor lying east and north of a line drawn from the U.S. border southeast along Langlois Avenue, east along Tecumseh Road East, and southeast along Pillette Road to the southern city limit.
History
Windsor—St. Clair was created in 1987 as "Windsor—Lake St. Clair" from parts of Essex—Windsor and Windsor—Walkerville ridings. In 1989, the riding's name was changed to "Windsor—St. Clair". It was also a provincial riding for the 1999 and 2003 Ontario provincial elections.
Windsor—Tecumseh was created in 2003 from parts of Essex and Windsor—St. Clair ridings.
This riding was left unchanged after the 2012 electoral redistribution.
Following the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution, this riding has been renamed Windsor—Tecumseh—Lakeshore, first used in the April 2025 election. The riding gained the part of Lakeshore north of the 401 and west of the Puce River (Pike Creek and Elmstead areas) from Essex.
Demographics
:According to the 2021 Canadian census
Ethnic groups: 75.9% White, 5.4% Arab, 4.6% Black, 3.2% South Asian, 3.1% Aboriginal, 1.7% West Asian, 1.4% Filipino, 1.4% Latin American, 1.2% Chinese<br />
Languages: 72.2% English, 4% Arabic, 2.6% French, 2.2% Serbo-Croatian, 1.8% Italian, 1.5% Chaldean Neo-Aramaic, 1.3% Serbian, 1.2% Spanish, 1% Polish<br />
Religions: 65.1% Christian (39.6% Catholic, 4.3% Eastern Orthodox, 3.6% Anglican, 2.5% United Church, 1.4% Baptist, 1.4% Pentecostal and other Charismatic, 1% Presbyterian), 27.1 No religion, 4.6% Muslim, 1.3 Hindu <br />
Median income (2020): $40,400
Members of Parliament
Election results
Windsor—Tecumseh—Lakeshore
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! colspan="4" | 2021 federal election redistributed results
|-
! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="130px" colspan="2" | Party
! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="50px" | Vote
! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="30px" | %
|-
| |
| Liberal ||align=right| 19,019 ||align=right| 30.88
|-
| |
| New Democratic ||align=right| 18,660 ||align=right| 30.30
|-
| |
| Conservative ||align=right| 16,650 ||align=right| 27.03
|-
| |
| People's ||align=right| 6,339 ||align=right| 10.29
|-
| |
| Green ||align=right| 744 ||align=right| 1.21
|-
| |
| Others ||align=right| 181 ||align=right| 0.29
|}
Windsor—Tecumseh
|align="left" colspan=2|New Democratic Party hold
|align="right"|Swing
|align="right"| +2.74
|align="right"|
Windsor—St. Clair
|-
|-
|-
|-
Windsor—Lake St. Clair
|-
|New Democratic Party
|Howard McCurdy
|align="right"|18,915
|43.42
|Liberal
|Shaughnessy Cohen
|align="right"|16,192
|37.17
|Progressive Conservative
|Bruck Easton
|align="right"|8,453
|19.41
See also
- List of Canadian electoral districts
- Historical federal electoral districts of Canada
References
- Riding history from the Library of Parliament
- 2011 results from Elections Canada
