Sault Ste. Marie (federal electoral district)

Last updated

Flag of Ontario.svg Ontario electoral district
Sault Ste. Marie, riding.png
Sault Ste. Marie in relation to other northern Ontario electoral districts (2003 boundaries)
Federal electoral district
Legislature House of Commons
MP
 
 
 
Terry Sheehan
Liberal
District created1966
First contested 1968
Last contested 2021
District webpage profile, map
Demographics
Population (2011) [1] 82,052
Electors (2015)63,555
Area (km²) [2] 5,921
Pop. density (per km²)13.9
Census division(s) Algoma
Census subdivision(s) Garden River 14, Goulais Bay 15A, Obadjiwan 15E, Prince, Sault Ste. Marie, Unorganized North Algoma, Whitefish Island

Sault Ste. Marie is a federal electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1968.

Contents

This riding is centred on the city of Sault Ste. Marie. It includes the adjacent communities of Rankin Location 15D, Garden River 14 and Prince, and covers a portion of Unorganized North Algoma District north to the Montreal River (including the communities of Goulais Bay 15A and Obadjiwan 15E).

Under the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution the riding will be renamed Sault Ste. Marie—Algoma. [3]

Riding history

The riding was created in 1966 from parts of Algoma West riding. For most of its history, the riding included only the city of Sault Ste. Marie and some immediately surrounding communities.

It consisted initially of the City of Sault Ste. Marie and the Township of Prince. In 1976, it was redefined to consist of the part of the City of Sault Ste. Marie east of Allen's Side Road and south of the Second Line.

In 1987, it was redefined to consist of the part of the City of Sault Ste. Marie lying south of Third Line and the part of Rankin Location 15D lying within the city limits.

In 1996, it was redefined to consist of the City of Sault Ste. Marie.

In 2003, the geographic boundaries of this riding were expanded and defined as:

"Consisting of that part of the Territorial District of Algoma lying westerly and southerly of a line described as follows: commencing at the intersection of the international boundary between Canada and the United States with the southeast corner of the Township of Plummer Additional; thence northerly and westerly along the easterly and northerly limits of said township to the southwest corner of the geographic Township of Galbraith; thence northerly along the westerly boundary of the geographic townships of Galbraith, Morin, Kane, Hurlburt, Jollineau, Menard, Pine, Hoffman and Butcher to the southerly limit of the Territorial District of Sudbury; thence westerly and northerly along the southerly and westerly limits of said territorial district to the Montreal River; thence generally westerly along said river to the northerly boundary of the geographic Township of Home; thence westerly along the northerly boundary of the geographic townships of Home and Peever to the northern shore of Lake Superior; thence S 45°00' W to the international boundary between Canada and the United States of America."

Current boundaries

In the 2012 federal electoral redistribution, this riding was redefined, losing St. Joseph Island, Macdonald, Meredith and Aberdeen Additional, Laird, Tarbutt, Johnson, Plummer Additional, Bruce Mines and a portion of Unorganized North Algoma to Algoma—Manitoulin—Kapuskasing. It is now defined as:

"Consisting of that part of the Territorial District of Algoma described as follows: commencing at the intersection of the international boundary between Canada and the United States of America with the southeasterly corner of the Territorial District of Thunder Bay; thence N45°00'E in a straight line to the intersection of the northern shoreline of Lake Superior with the northerly boundary of the geographic Township of Peever; thence easterly along the northerly boundary of the geographic townships of Peever and Home to the Montreal River; thence generally easterly along said river to the easterly limit of the Territorial District of Algoma; thence southerly and easterly along the limit of said territorial district to the easterly boundary of the geographic Township of Bracci; thence southerly along said boundary and the easterly boundary of the geographic townships of Gaudry, Nahwegezhic, Lamming, Hughes, Curtis, Gillmor and McMahon to the northerly boundary of the geographic Township of Aberdeen; thence westerly along said boundary to the northerly limit of the Township of MacDonald, Meredith and Aberdeen Additional; thence generally westerly along said limit to the international boundary between Canada and the United States of America; thence generally westerly and northwesterly along said boundary to the point of commencement." [4]

Future boundaries

After the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution to take effect at the next election, this riding will be greatly expanded to include much of rural Algoma District, and be renamed Sault Ste. Marie—Algoma. It will consist of:

Demographics

According to the 2021 Canadian census [5]

Ethnic groups: 81.0% White, 14.9% Indigenous, 1.5% South Asian

Languages: 87.5% English, 3.2% Italian, 2.9% French

Religions: 58.1% Christian (32.3% Catholic, 6.1% United Church, 4.8% Anglican, 1.6% Lutheran, 1.5% Baptist, 1.2% Presbyterian, 10.6% other), 39.2% none

Median income: $40,800 (2020)

Average income: $49,640 (2020)

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following members of Parliament:

ParliamentYearsMemberParty
Sault Ste. Marie
Riding created from Algoma West
28th  1968–1972   Terrence Murphy Liberal
29th  1972–1974   Cyril Symes New Democratic
30th  1974–1979
31st  1979–1980
32nd  1980–1984   Ron Irwin Liberal
33rd  1984–1988   James Kelleher Progressive Conservative
34th  1988–1993   Steve Butland New Democratic
35th  1993–1997   Ron Irwin Liberal
36th  1997–2000 Carmen Provenzano
37th  2000–2004
38th  2004–2006   Tony Martin New Democratic
39th  2006–2008
40th  2008–2011
41st  2011–2015   Bryan Hayes Conservative
42nd  2015–2019   Terry Sheehan Liberal
43rd  2019–2021
44th  2021–present

Election results

Graph of election results in Sault Ste. Marie (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)

Sault Ste. Marie, 2013 representation order

2021 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
Liberal Terry Sheehan 15,23137.89-1.16$73,397.78
Conservative Sonny Spina14,98437.27+5.12$87,131.34
New Democratic Marie Morin-Strom8,04120.01-2.67$27,710.93
People's Kasper Makowski1,9234.83+3.05$3,910.72
Total valid votes/expense limit40,179100.00$105,047.67
Total rejected ballots2810.00-0.80
Turnout40,46061.19-2.25
Eligible voters66,121
Liberal hold Swing -1.16
Source: Elections Canada [6]
2019 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
Liberal Terry Sheehan 16,28439.05-5.70$77,577.01
Conservative Sonny Spina13,40732.15+1.04$63,685.77
New Democratic Sara McCleary9,45922.68+0.87$23,511.40
Green Geo McLean1,8094.34+2.20$1,428.49
People's Amy Zuccato7411.78newnone listed
Total valid votes/expense limit41,70099.20
Total rejected ballots3370.80+0.35
Turnout42,03763.05-5.24
Eligible voters66,668
Liberal hold Swing -3.37
Source: Elections Canada [7] [8]
2015 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
Liberal Terry Sheehan 19,58244.75Increase2.svg25.02$59,074.57
Conservative Bryan Hayes 13,61531.12Decrease2.svg9.28$114,243.06
New Democratic Skip Morrison9,54321.81Decrease2.svg15.63$63,747.71
Green Kara Flannigan9342.13Increase2.svg0.04$127.42
Marxist–Leninist Mike Taffarel830.19Increase2.svg0.10none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit43,75799.55 $198,539.65
Total rejected ballots2000.45Decrease2.svg0.06
Turnout43,95768.29Increase2.svg4.10
Eligible voters64,365
Liberal gain from Conservative Swing Increase2.svg17.15
Source: Elections Canada [9] [10]
2011 federal election redistributed results [11]
PartyVotes %
  Conservative 16,31640.40
  New Democratic 15,12337.44
  Liberal 7,96719.73
  Green 8452.09
 Others1380.34

Sault Ste. Marie, 2003 representation order

2011 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
Conservative Bryan Hayes 18,32841.14Increase2.svg3.72$80,142.96
New Democratic Tony Martin 16,46737.23Decrease2.svg3.20$81,906.09
Liberal Christian Provenzano 8,34318.86Increase2.svg2.10$63,159.73
Green Luke MacMichael9452.14Decrease2.svg2.19$3,129.72
Christian Heritage Randy Riauka1110.25new$105.54
Marxist–Leninist Mike Taffarel380.09Decrease2.svg0.11none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit44,232 100.0   $86,404.40
Total rejected ballots228 0.51Increase2.svg0.11
Turnout 44,460 64.19Increase2.svg4.77
Eligible voters69,259
Conservative gain from New Democratic Swing Increase2.svg3.46
Sources: [12] [13]
2008 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
New Democratic Tony Martin 16,57240.43+1.55$83,799.84
Conservative Cameron Ross15,46137.72+13.72$79,518.05
Liberal Paul Bichler6,87016.76-17.46$35,533.07
Green Luke Macmichael1,7744.33+2.28$2,586.65
First Peoples National Cory McLeod2350.57+0.08$433.95
Marxist–Leninist Mike Taffarel810.20+0.13none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit40,993 100.0   $83,824
Total rejected ballots1650.40-1.25
Turnout41,15859.42-8.33
Eligible voters69,272
New Democratic hold Swing -6.08
2006 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
New Democratic Tony Martin 17,97938.88+0.59$69,741.00
Liberal Christian Provenzano 15,82534.22-2.33$66,957.47
Conservative Kenneth Walker11,09924.00+0.88$62,248.21
Green Mark Viitala1,0562.28+0.39$1,450.96
First Peoples National Guy Dumas2250.49$419.75
Marxist–Leninist Mike Taffarel590.13-0.03$184.15
Total valid votes/expense limit46,243100.0   $77,689
Total rejected ballots1921.65+0.59
Turnout46,43567.75
Eligible voters68,537
New Democratic hold Swing +1.46
2004 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%Expenditures
New Democratic Tony Martin 16,51238.29+14.30$66,870.00
Liberal Carmen Provenzano 15,76036.55-11.64$46,534.02
Conservative Cameron Ross9,96923.12-2.28$47,437.02
Green Julie Emmerson8141.89$379.80
Marxist–Leninist Mike Taffarel670.16$357.98
Total valid votes/expense limit43,122 100.0   $75,828
Total rejected ballots2500.58
Turnout43,37263.36+0.73
Eligible voters68,454
New Democratic notional gain from Liberal Swing +12.97
Changes from 2000 are based on redistributed results. Change for the Conservative Party is based on the combined totals of the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservative Party.
2000 federal election redistributed results
PartyVote %
  Liberal 20,51048.19
  New Democratic 10,21123.99
  Alliance 9,28721.82
  Progressive Conservative 1,5223.58
 Others1,0302.42

Sault Ste. Marie, previous elections

2000 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal Carmen Provenzano 18,86750.79+6.30
New Democratic Bud Wildman 9,20224.77-2.35
Alliance David Ronald Rose7,00618.86-1.01
Progressive Conservative Doug Lawson1,1683.14-4.80
Green Kathie Brosemer7762.09
Canadian Action Martin Bruce Odber1280.34
Total37,147 100.00

* Changes for the Canadian Alliance are from the Reform votes in 1997.

1997 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal Carmen Provenzano 16,87144.49-8.42
New Democratic Phyllis Dietrich10,28327.12+4.95
Reform David Rose7,53619.87+3.64
Progressive Conservative Doug Lawson3,0107.94+0.15
Natural Law Colleen Hibbs2190.58+0.20
Total37,919 100.00
1993 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal Ron Irwin 21,40752.91+20.91
New Democratic Steve Butland 8,97022.17-13.11
Reform Paul Mathewson6,56616.23+16.23
Progressive Conservative Gerry Nori3,1527.79-24.93
National Henry A. Roess2090.52
Natural Law Chris Evans1550.38
Total40,459100.00
1988 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
New Democratic Steve Butland 14,59535.28+3.76
Progressive Conservative Jim Kelleher 13,53332.72-5.88
Liberal Joe Sniezek13,23732.00+2.70
Total41,365 100.00
1984 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive Conservative Jim Kelleher 13,13538.60+25.68
New Democratic Karl Morin-Strom 10,72631.52-7.42
Liberal Ron Irwin 9,97229.30-18.66
Commonwealth of Canada Charles L. Rooney1980.58
Total34,031100.00
1980 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal Ron Irwin 15,44947.96+12.29
New Democratic Cyril Symes 12,54238.94+1.68
Progressive Conservative Penny Hanson4,16112.92-13.79
Marxist–Leninist Mike Taffarel590.18+0.06
Total32,211100.00
1979 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
New Democratic Cyril Symes 12,08937.26-13.24
Liberal Terry Murphy 11,57435.67-5.41
Progressive Conservative Gord Cunningham8,66826.71+18.49
Communist Richard Orlandini790.24+0.04
Marxist–Leninist Mike Taffarel380.12
Total32,448100.00
1974 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
New Democratic Cyril Symes 19,04450.50+13.79
Liberal Alex Sinclair15,49041.08+5.12
Progressive Conservative Bob de Fazio3,0988.22-19.10
Communist Gerrit van Houten760.20
Total37,708 100.00
1972 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
New Democratic Cyril Symes 12,90336.71+13.51
Liberal C. Terrence Murphy 12,63935.96-3.87
Progressive Conservative L.B. Lou Lukenda9,60327.32-9.34
Total35,145100.00
1968 Canadian federal election
PartyCandidateVotes%
Liberal C. Terrence Murphy 12,52739.83
Progressive Conservative Russ Ramsay 11,52936.66
New Democratic Anne Valentine7,29723.20
Independent George Skov1020.32
Total31,455 100.00

See also

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References

Notes

47°01′59″N84°27′07″W / 47.033°N 84.452°W / 47.033; -84.452