Conservative Party of Canada candidates in the 2008 Canadian federal election
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This is a list of nominated candidates for the Conservative Party of Canada in the 40th Canadian federal election.[1] The party nominated 307 out of a possible 308 candidates, Portneuf—Jacques-Cartier was the only riding not to field a Conservative candidate.
Newfoundland and Labrador - 7 seats edit
Riding |
Candidate's Name | Notes | Gender | Residence | Occupation | Votes | % | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Avalon | Fabian Manning | incumbent MP | M | St. Bride's | Parliamentarian | 11,542 | 35.2% | 2nd |
Bonavista—Gander—Grand Falls—Windsor | Andrew House | M | Gander | Lawyer | 4,354 | 15.2% | 2nd | |
Humber—St. Barbe—Baie Verte | Lorne Robinson | M | Pasadena | Financial Planner | 2,799 | 10.6% | 3rd | |
Labrador | Lacey Lewis | F | Ottawa | Office Assistant | 615 | 8.0% | 3rd | |
Random—Burin—St. George's | Herb Davis | M | Gatineau | Policy Advisor | 4,791 | 20.5% | 3rd | |
St. John's East | Craig Westcott | M | Conception Bay South | Journalist | 3,836 | 9.3% | 3rd | |
St. John's South—Mount Pearl | Merv Wiseman | M | North Harbour | Maritime Search & Rescue Coordinator | 4,324 | 12.6% | 3rd |
Prince Edward Island - 4 seats edit
Riding | Candidate | Notes | Gender | Residence | Occupation | Votes | % | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cardigan | Sid McMullin | M | Georgetown | Human Resource Officer | 5,661 | 29.6% | 2nd | |
Charlottetown | Thomas L. DeBlois | M | Charlottetown | Business Manager | 5,704 | 32.1% | 2nd | |
Egmont | Gail Shea | Former Provincial MLA | F | Tignish | Former Civil Servant | 8,110 | 43.9% | 1st |
Malpeque | Mary Crane | F | Kensington | Educator | 7,388 | 39.3% | 2nd |
Nova Scotia - 11 seats edit
Cape Breton—Canso edit
Allan R. Murphy
Central Nova edit
Peter MacKay, incumbent MP and Minister of National Defence
Cumberland—Colchester—Musquodoboit Valley edit
Joel Bernard
Dartmouth—Cole Harbour edit
Wanda Webber
Halifax edit
Ted Larsen
Halifax West edit
Rakesh Khosla
Kings—Hants edit
Rosemary Segado
Sackville—Eastern Shore edit
David K. Montgomery
South Shore—St. Margaret's edit
Gerald Keddy, incumbent MP
Sydney—Victoria edit
Kristen Rudderham
West Nova edit
New Brunswick - 10 seats edit
Acadie—Bathurst edit
Jean-Guy Dubé
Beauséjour edit
Omer Léger, former provincial cabinet minister under Richard Hatfield
Fredericton edit
Keith Ashfield, former provincial cabinet minister under Bernard Lord
Fundy Royal edit
Rob Moore - Incumbent MP
Madawaska—Restigouche edit
Jean-Pierre Ouellet former provincial cabinet minister under Richard Hatfield
Miramichi edit
Tilly Gordon
Moncton—Riverview—Dieppe edit
Daniel Allain, CEO of Downtown Moncton Centre-Ville.
New Brunswick Southwest edit
Greg Thompson - Incumbent MP and Minister of Veteran Affairs
Saint John edit
Rodney Weston, former provincial cabinet minister under Bernard Lord
Tobique—Mactaquac edit
Mike Allen - Incumbent MP
Quebec - 75 seats edit
Riding | Candidate's Name | Notes | Gender | Residence | Occupation | Votes | % | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bas-Richelieu—Nicolet—Bécancour | Réjean Bériault | Bériault was born in March 1961 in Lachine. He holds a diploma in public administration from HEC Montréal, a certificate in law from the University of Montreal, and a Bachelor's Degree in legal sciences at the University of Quebec in Montreal.[2] | M | 8,904 | 18.15 | 2nd | ||
Brome—Missisquoi | Mark Quinlan | Quinlan was born in Cowansville. He has bachelor's degrees in civil law and finance and a graduate diploma from Université de Sherbrooke in notarial law.[3] He joined the Canadian Alliance in 2000, ran for the party in that year's federal election, and was later employed by the party as a press secretary. A Stockwell Day loyalist, he was dismissed from office when Stephen Harper succeeded Day as party leader in March 2002.[4] After the Conservatives formed a minority government in 2006, he was hired as a press secretary for Justice Minister Vic Toews, and later followed Toews to a new posting at the Treasury Board of Canada.[5] He became the press secretary for Christian Paradis later in the same year and continued to serve with Paradis after the 2008 election.[6] Quinlan's mother, Pauline Quinlan, is the mayor of Bromont.[7][8] | M | 9,309 | 18.66 | 3rd | ||
Outremont | Lulzim Laloshi | Laloshi was thirty-two years old at the time of the election and was described as the leader of Quebec's Albanian Community in Montreal.[9] | M | Computer Specialist[10] | 3,820 | 10.53 | 4th | |
Shefford | Jean Lambert | Lambert was born and raised in Granby and has worked in public relations and advertising in Granby, Montreal, and Quebec City.[11] He was at one time a vice-president of Groupaction and testified before the Gomery Commission on the firm's activities.[12][13] | M | 9,927 | 19.63 | 3rd |
edit
Jean-Maurice Matte Abitibi
Abitibi—Témiscamingue edit
Pierre Grandmaitre
Ahuntsic edit
Jean Précourt
Alfred-Pellan edit
Alexandre Salameh
Argenteuil—Papineau—Mirabel edit
Scott Pearce
Beauce edit
Maxime Bernier, incumbent MP.
Beauharnois—Salaberry edit
Dominique Bellemare
Beauport—Limoilou edit
Sylvie Boucher
Berthier—Maskinongé edit
Marie-Claude Godue
Bourassa edit
Michelle Allaire
Brossard—La Prairie edit
Maurice Brossard
Chambly—Borduas edit
Suzanne Chartand
Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles edit
Daniel Petit, incumbent MP.
Châteauguay—Saint-Constant edit
Pierre-Paul Routhier
Chicoutimi—Le Fjord edit
Jean-Guy Maltais
Compton—Stanstead edit
Michel Gagné
Drummond edit
André Komlosy
Gaspésie—Îles-de-la-Madeleine edit
Darryl Gray
Gatineau edit
Denis Tassé
Haute-Gaspésie—La Mitis—Matane—Matapédia edit
Jérôme Landry
Hochelaga edit
Luc Labbé
Honoré-Mercier edit
Rodrigo Alfaro
Hull—Aylmer edit
Paul Fréchette
Jeanne-Le Ber edit
Joliette edit
Sylvie Lavallée
Jonquière—Alma edit
Jean-Pierre Blackburn, incumbent MP and Minister of Labour
La Pointe-de-l'Île edit
Hubert Pichet
Lac-Saint-Louis edit
Andrea Paine
LaSalle—Émard edit
Béatrice Guay-Pepper
Laurentides—Labelle edit
Guy Joncas
Laurier—Sainte-Marie edit
Laval edit
Jean-Pierre Bélisle
Laval—Les Îles edit
Agop Evereklian
Lévis—Bellechasse edit
Steven Blaney
Longueuil—Pierre-Boucher edit
Jacques Bouchard
Lotbinière—Chutes-de-la-Chaudière edit
Jacques Gourde
Louis-Hébert edit
Luc Harvey
Louis-Saint-Laurent edit
Josée Verner
Manicouagan edit
Pierre Breton
Marc-Aurèle-Fortin edit
Claude Moreau
Mégantic—L'Érable edit
Christian Paradis
Montcalm edit
Claude Marc Boudreau
Montmagny—L'Islet—Kamouraska—Rivière-du-Loup edit
Denis Laflamme
Montmorency—Charlevoix—Haute-Côte-Nord edit
Guy-Léonard Tremblay
Mount Royal edit
Rafael Tzoubari
Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Lachine edit
Carmine Pontillo
Papineau edit
Mustague Sarker
Pierrefonds—Dollard edit
Pierre-Olivier Brunelle
Pontiac edit
Lawrence Cannon, incumbent MP.
Portneuf-Jacques-Cartier edit
No Candidate
Québec edit
Myriam Taschereau
Repentigny edit
Bruno Royer
Richmond—Arthabaska edit
Éric Lefebvre
Rimouski-Neigette—Témiscouata—Les Basques edit
Gaston Noël
Rivière-des-Mille-Îles edit
Claude Carignan
Rivière-du-Nord edit
Gilles Duguay
Roberval—Lac-Saint-Jean edit
Denis Lebel
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie edit
Sylvie Boulianne
Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert edit
Nicole Charbonneau Barron
Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot edit
René Vincelette
Saint-Jean edit
Marie-Josée Mercier
Saint-Lambert edit
Patrick Clune
Saint-Laurent—Cartierville edit
Dennis Galiatsatos
Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel edit
Lucie Le Tourneau
Saint-Maurice—Champlain edit
Stéphane Roof
Sherbrooke edit
André Bachand
Terrebonne—Blainville edit
Daniel Lebel
Trois-Rivières edit
Claude Durand
Vaudreuil—Soulanges edit
Michael Fortier, Minister of Public Works
Verchères—Les Patriotes edit
Benoît Dussault
Westmount—Ville-Marie edit
Guy Dufort
Ontario - 106 seats edit
Ajax—Pickering edit
Rick Johnson
Algoma—Manitoulin—Kapuskasing edit
Dianne Musgrove
Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale edit
David Sweet
Barrie edit
Patrick Brown
Beaches—East York edit
Caroline Alleslev
Bramalea—Gore—Malton edit
Stella Ambler
Brampton—Springdale edit
Brampton West edit
Kyle Seeback
Brant edit
Phil McColeman
Bruce—Grey—Owen Sound edit
Larry Miller
Burlington edit
Mike Wallace
Cambridge edit
Gary Goodyear
Carleton—Mississippi Mills edit
Gordon O'Connor, incumbent MP and Minister of National Revenue.
Chatham-Kent—Essex edit
Dave Van Kesteren
Davenport edit
Theresa Rodriguez
Don Valley East edit
Eugene McDermott
Don Valley West edit
John Carmichael
Dufferin—Caledon edit
David Tilson
Durham edit
Bev Oda, incumbent MP.
Eglinton—Lawrence edit
Joe Oliver
Elgin—Middlesex—London edit
Joe Preston
Essex edit
Jeff Watson
Etobicoke Centre edit
Axel Kuhn
Etobicoke—Lakeshore edit
Patrick Boyer
Etobicoke North edit
Bob Saroya
Glengarry—Prescott—Russell edit
Pierre Lemieux
Guelph edit
Gloria Kovach
Haldimand—Norfolk edit
Diane Finley, incumbent MP and Minister of Citizenship and Immigration.
Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock edit
Barry Devolin
Halton edit
Lisa Raitt is the president and chief executive officer of the Toronto Port Authority (TPA), a Canadian federal corporation that manages commerce, transportation (including the Toronto City Centre Airport) and recreation in the Toronto harbour. She has also served as the TPA's corporate secretary and general counsel,[14] and harbourmaster. She is believed to have been the first female harbourmaster of a Canadian port.[15] She is currently on unpaid leave from the TPA for the duration of the election. Lisa Raitt's OFFICIAL Campaign Website Lisa Raitt's Campaign Blog
Hamilton Centre edit
Leon O'Connor
Hamilton East—Stoney Creek edit
Frank Rukavina
Hamilton Mountain edit
Terry Anderson
Huron—Bruce edit
Ben Lobb
Kenora edit
Greg Rickford
Kingston and the Islands edit
Brian Abrams
Kitchener Centre edit
Stephen Bonner
Kitchener—Conestoga edit
Harold Albrecht
Kitchener—Waterloo edit
Peter Braid
Lambton—Kent—Middlesex edit
Bev Shipley
Lanark—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington edit
Scott Reid
Leeds—Grenville edit
Gord Brown
London—Fanshawe edit
Mary Lou Ambrogio
London North Centre edit
Paul Van Meerbergen
London West edit
Ed Holder
Markham—Unionville edit
Duncan Fletcher
Mississauga—Brampton South edit
Salma Ataullahjan is a current Canadian Senator appointed on July 9, 2010.
Mississauga East—Cooksville edit
Melissa Bhagat
Mississauga—Erindale edit
Bob Dechert
Mississauga South edit
Hugh Arrison
Mississauga—Streetsville edit
Wajid Khan, incumbent MP.
Nepean—Carleton edit
Newmarket—Aurora edit
Lois Brown
Niagara Falls edit
Rob Nicholson, incumbent MP and Minister of Justice.
Niagara West—Glanbrook edit
Dean Allison, incumbent MP.
Nickel Belt edit
Ian McCracken
Nipissing—Timiskaming edit
Joe Sinicrope
Northumberland—Quinte West edit
Rick Norlock
Oak Ridges—Markham edit
Paul Calandra
Oakville edit
Terence Young
Oshawa edit
Colin Carrie
Ottawa Centre edit
Brian McGarry
Ottawa—Orléans edit
Royal Galipeau
Ottawa South edit
Elie Salibi
Ottawa—Vanier edit
Patrick Glémaud
Ottawa West—Nepean edit
John Baird, incumbent MP and Minister of the Environment.
Oxford edit
Dave MacKenzie
Parkdale—High Park edit
Jilian Saweczko
Parry Sound-Muskoka edit
Tony Clement, incumbent MP and Minister of Health.
Perth Wellington edit
Gary Schellenberger, incumbent MP
Peterborough edit
Dean Del Mastro, incumbent MP
Pickering—Scarborough East edit
George Khouri
Prince Edward—Hastings edit
Daryl Kramp, incumbent MP
Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke edit
Cheryl Gallant, incumbent MP.
Richmond Hill edit
St. Catharines edit
Rick Dykstra, incumbent MP
St. Paul's edit
Heather Jewell
Sarnia—Lambton edit
Pat Davidson, incumbent MP
Sault Ste. Marie edit
Cameron Ross
Scarborough—Agincourt edit
Benson Lau
Scarborough Centre edit
Roxanne James
Scarborough-Guildwood edit
Chuck Konkel
Scarborough—Rouge River edit
Jerry Bance
Scarborough Southwest edit
Greg Crompton
Simcoe—Grey edit
Helena Guergis, incumbent MP
Simcoe North edit
Bruce Stanton, incumbent MP
Stormont—Dundas—South Glengarry edit
Guy Lauzon
Sudbury: Gerry Labelle edit
Gerry Labelle was born in Mattawa and raised in Sudbury. He is a businessperson and community activist in Sudbury, where he operates a consulting firm.[16] Labelle is a founding member of Music and Film in Motion and has served on the board of several non-profit organizations. At the time of the election, he was a member of the Make Poverty History committee on the city's Social Planning Council.[17]
Labelle became involved in a minor controversy during the 2008 campaign when he made statements in a French-language interview that seemed critical of the Conservative government. According to a press release from Liberal incumbent Diane Marleau, Labelle criticized Finance Minister Jim Flaherty for describing Ontario as "the last place" to invest, took issue with the government's decision to abolish the Court Challenges Program of Canada, and said that he was not impressed with the Conservative Party's environmental record. He later issued a retraction, saying that he had not expressed himself clearly and was fully supportive of the Harper government.[18] Labelle also spoke in support of the arts community and rejected arguments that his party was hostile to the arts.[19] Late in the campaign, the Sudbury Star newspaper noted that he "did not come across as a Harper Conservative".[20]
Labelle received 11,073 votes (25.79%), finishing third against New Democratic Party candidate Glenn Thibeault. He has said that he will probably run for Conservatives again.[21]
Thornhill edit
Thunder Bay—Rainy River edit
Richard Neumann
Thunder Bay—Superior North edit
Bev Sarafin
Timmins-James Bay edit
Bill Greenberg
Toronto Centre edit
David Gentili
Toronto—Danforth edit
Christina Perreault
Trinity—Spadina edit
Christine McGirr
Vaughan edit
Richard Lorello
Welland edit
Alf Kiers
Wellington—Halton Hills edit
Michael Chong, incumbent MP.
Whitby—Oshawa edit
Jim Flaherty, incumbent MP and Minister of Finance.
Willowdale edit
Jake Karns
Windsor—Tecumseh edit
Denise Ghanam
Windsor West edit
Lisa Lumley
York Centre edit
Rochelle Wilner
York—Simcoe edit
Peter Van Loan, incumbent MP.
York South—Weston edit
Aydin Cocelli
York West edit
Kevin Nguyen
Manitoba - 14 seats edit
Brandon—Souris edit
Merv Tweed, incumbent MP.
Charleswood—St. James—Assiniboia edit
Steven Fletcher, incumbent MP.
Churchill edit
Wally Daudrich
Dauphin—Swan River—Marquette edit
Inky Mark, incumbent MP.
Elmwood—Transcona edit
Kildonan—St. Paul edit
Joy Smith, incumbent MP.
Portage—Lisgar edit
Candice Hoeppner
Provencher edit
Vic Toews, incumbent MP.
Saint Boniface edit
Shelly Glover
Selkirk—Interlake edit
James Bezan, incumbent MP.
Winnipeg Centre edit
Kenny Daodu
Winnipeg North edit
Ray Larkin
Winnipeg South edit
Rod Bruinooge, incumbent MP.
Winnipeg South Centre edit
Saskatchewan - 14 seats edit
Battlefords—Lloydminster edit
Gerry Ritz, incumbent MP and Minister of Agriculture.
Blackstrap edit
Lynne Yelich, incumbent MP.
Cypress Hills—Grasslands edit
David L. Anderson, incumbent MP.
Desnethé—Missinippi—Churchill River edit
Rob Clarke, incumbent MP.
Palliser edit
Prince Albert edit
Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre edit
Tom Lukiwski, incumbent MP.
Regina—Qu'Appelle edit
Andrew Scheer, incumbent MP.
Saskatoon—Humboldt edit
Brad Trost, incumbent MP.
Saskatoon—Rosetown—Biggar edit
Saskatoon—Wanuskewin edit
Maurice Vellacott, incumbent MP.
Souris—Moose Mountain edit
Ed Komarnicki, incumbent MP.
Wascana edit
Yorkton—Melville edit
Garry Breitkreuz, incumbent MP.
Alberta - 28 seats edit
Calgary Centre edit
Lee Richardson, incumbent MP.
Calgary Centre-North edit
Jim Prentice, incumbent MP.
Calgary East edit
Deepak Obhrai, incumbent MP.
Calgary Northeast edit
Calgary—Nose Hill edit
Diane Ablonczy, incumbent MP.
Calgary Southeast edit
Jason Kenney, incumbent MP.
Calgary Southwest edit
Stephen Harper, incumbent MP and Prime Minister of Canada.
Calgary West edit
Rob Anders, incumbent MP.
Crowfoot edit
Kevin Sorenson, incumbent MP.
Edmonton Centre edit
Laurie Hawn, incumbent MP.
Edmonton East edit
Peter Goldring, incumbent MP.
Edmonton—Leduc edit
James Rajotte, incumbent MP.
Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont edit
Mike Lake, incumbent MP.
Edmonton—St. Albert edit
Brent Rathgeber, former MLA for Edmonton-Calder.
Edmonton—Sherwood Park edit
Tim Uppal
Edmonton—Spruce Grove edit
Rona Ambrose, incumbent MP.
Edmonton—Strathcona edit
Rahim Jaffer, incumbent MP.
Fort McMurray—Athabasca edit
Brian Jean, incumbent MP.
Lethbridge edit
Rick Casson, incumbent MP.
Macleod edit
Ted Menzies, incumbent MP.
Medicine Hat edit
Peace River edit
Chris Warkentin, incumbent MP.
Red Deer edit
Vegreville—Wainwright edit
Leon Benoit, incumbent MP.
Westlock—St. Paul edit
Brian Storseth, incumbent MP.
Wetaskiwin edit
Blaine Calkins, incumbent MP.
Wild Rose edit
Yellowhead edit
Rob Merrifield, incumbent MP.
British Columbia - 36 seats edit
Abbotsford edit
Ed Fast, incumbent MP since 2006.
British Columbia Southern Interior edit
Rob Zandee
Burnaby—Douglas edit
Ronald Leung
Burnaby—New Westminster edit
Sam Rakhra
Cariboo—Prince George edit
Dick Harris, incumbent MP.
Chilliwack—Fraser Canyon edit
Chuck Strahl, incumbent MP and Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development.
Delta—Richmond East edit
John Cummins, incumbent MP.
Esquimalt—Juan de Fuca edit
Troy DeSouza
Fleetwood—Port Kells edit
Nina Grewal, incumbent MP.
Kamloops—Thompson—Cariboo edit
Kelowna—Lake Country edit
Ron Cannan, incumbent MP.
Kootenay—Columbia edit
Jim Abbott, incumbent MP.
Langley edit
Mark Warawa, incumbent MP since 2004 and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of the Environment.
Nanaimo—Alberni edit
Nanaimo—Cowichan edit
Newton—North Delta edit
Sandeep Pandher
New Westminster—Coquitlam edit
Yonah Martin
North Vancouver edit
Andrew Saxton
Okanagan—Coquihalla edit
Stockwell Day, incumbent MP and Minister for Public Safety.
Okanagan—Shuswap edit
Colin Mayes, incumbent MP.
Pitt Meadows—Maple Ridge—Mission edit
Randy Kamp, incumbent MP.
Port Moody—Westwood—Port Coquitlam edit
James Moore, incumbent MP.
Prince George—Peace River edit
Jay Hill, incumbent MP.
Richmond edit
Alice Wong
Saanich—Gulf Islands edit
Gary Lunn, incumbent MP and Minister of Natural Resources.
Skeena—Bulkley Valley edit
Sharon Smith
South Surrey—White Rock—Cloverdale edit
Russ Hiebert, incumbent MP.
Surrey North edit
Vancouver Centre edit
Vancouver East edit
Ryan Warawa
Vancouver Island North edit
John Duncan
Vancouver Kingsway edit
Salomon Rayek
Vancouver Quadra edit
Deborah Meredith
Vancouver South edit
Wai Young
Victoria edit
Jack McClintock
West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country edit
John Weston
Yukon - 1 seat edit
Yukon edit
Northwest Territories - 1 seat edit
Western Arctic edit
edit
edit
Leona Aglukkaq, MLA for Nattilik and Health Minister for the Government of Nunavut
See also edit
References edit
- ^ Elections Canada
- ^ Canada Votes 2008: Bas-Richelieu—Nicolet—Bécancour, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, accessed 9 August 2009.
- ^ Canada Votes 2008: Brome—Missisquoi, Candidate Profiles, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, accessed 22 November 2010. One of Quinlan's degrees is a Bachelor of Commerce from Concordia University. See Shawn Berry, "Canadian Alliance fields candidate in Sherbrooke," Sherbrooke Record, 25 October 2000, p. 5.
- ^ Graham Fraser, "Race for the right," Toronto Star, 13 June 2000, p. 1; Sheldon Alberts, "Day aides threaten to sue Strahl," National Post, 17 May 2001, A1; Brian Laghi, "Harper fires four former Day staff," Globe and Mail, 23 March 2002, A8.
- ^ Randy Boswell, "U.S. murder case to test Tories on extradition," National Post, 28 June 2006, A6; "Media Advisory - President of the Treasury Board in Greater Toronto Area" [press release], Canada NewsWire, 16 January 2007, 8:24.
- ^ "Minister of Finance to Address the Conseil du patronat du Québec and to Visit Varennes, Quebec" [press release], Canada NewsWire, 27 March 2007, 15:16.
- ^ Sarah Rogers, "Quinlan promises anglo attention; B-M Tory," Sherbrooke Record, 9 April 2008, p. 4.
- ^ Quinlan's electoral record is as follows:
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner 2000 federal Sherbrooke Canadian Alliance 2,284 4.51 3/8 Serge Cardin, Bloc Québécois 2008 federal Brome—Missisquoi Conservative 9,309 18.66 3/6 Christian Ouellet, Bloc Québécois
Sources: Official results, Elections Canada: 2000 and 2008 - ^ "'Campaign about ideas' drives Mulcair; Outremont," Montreal Gazette, 15 October 2008, B4.
- ^ OUTREMONT (2008/10/14), History of Federal Ridings Since 1867, Parliament of Canada], accessed 24 March 2017.
- ^ Rita Legault, "Facing opposition in Shefford," Sherbrooke Record, 24 September 2008, p. 1.
- ^ Maurice Crossfield, "Whistleblower in to win for Conservatives in Shefford," Sherbrooke Record, 22 December 2005, p. 4.
- ^ Lambert's electoral record is as follows:
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner 2006 federal Shefford Conservative 12,734 24.76 2/5 Robert Vincent, Bloc Québécois 2008 federal Shefford Conservative 9,927 19.63 3/5 Robert Vincent, Bloc Québécois
Sources: Official results, Elections Canada: 2006 and 2008 - ^ "Port CEO rips Martin for bridge comments" The Globe and Mail, Online Edition. 28 November 2003.
- ^ "Covering the waterfront; Toronto's first female harbourmaster takes helm of complex port job" Toronto Star, page B1. 5 April 2001.
- ^ Harold Carmichael, "Labelle wants to carry Tory banner", Sudbury Star, 20 July 2007, A4; "Tories prepare for nomination meeting", Sudbury Star, 2 November 2007, A4; Rachel Punch, "Parties ready for fall vote", Sudbury Star, 29 August 2008, A1.
- ^ Lara Bradley, "An unlikely Tory among Liberals", Sudbury Star, 4 October 2008, A3.
- ^ "Labelle retracts radio interview statements", Sudbury Star, 22 September 2008, A3; "Voters still wary of Harper" [editorial], Sudbury Star, 27 September 2008, A10.
- ^ Angela Scappatura, "'Gerry Labelle supports arts'", Sudbury Star, 11 October 2008, A3.
- ^ "Thibeault in Sudbury" [editorial], Sudbury Star, 11 October 2008, A10.
- ^ Lara Bradley, "Labelle jubilant in defeat", Sudbury Star, 15 October 2008, A3.