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Papineau (electoral district)

Papineau (formerly Papineau—Saint-Denis and Papineau—Saint-Michel) is a federal electoral district in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1948. Its population in 2016 was 110,750. Justin Trudeau, the Prime Minister of Canada and Leader of the Liberal Party, has represented the riding since the 2008 federal election. Trudeau became Liberal leader in a 2013 leadership election, succeeding Bob Rae, and prime minister when the Liberals returned to government in the 2015 Canadian federal election, succeeding Conservative leader Stephen Harper.

This article is about the federal district. For the provincial district in the Outaouais, see Papineau (provincial electoral district).

Quebec electoral district

2003

110,750

78,515

9.91

11,175.6

The name of the riding comes from a street in the Villeray neighbourhood, named after Joseph Papineau.


At nine square kilometres, it covers the second smallest area of any federal riding in Canada after Toronto Centre.[3] Linguistically, 45% of residents list French as their mother tongue, 8% list English, and 47% list neither English nor French, with large groups speaking Spanish, Italian, Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi, Pashtu, Bengali, Greek, and Arabic. Immigrants make up 40 percent of the riding's population.[4]

Twenty most common mother tongue languages (2016) : 49.7% French, 6.6% Spanish, 6.5% English, 5.9% Arabic, 4.2% Greek, 3.4% Italian, 2.7% Vietnamese, 2.4% Creole languages, 2.2% Punjabi, 2.1% Portuguese, 1.8% Bengali, 1.8% Urdu, 1.5% Tamil, 1.1% Cantonese, 1.0% Gujarati, 0.6% Mandarin, 0.6% Kabyle, 0.5% Khmer, 0.5% Turkish, 0.3% Polish, 0.3% Russian

[6]

2004 to 2011 election

2004 to 2011 election

List of Canadian federal electoral districts

Historical federal electoral districts of Canada

. 2011 census. Government of Canada - Statistics Canada. Retrieved 7 March 2011.

"Papineau (electoral district) (Code 24048) Census Profile"

Archived February 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Library of Parliament

Riding history 1948–1988 from the

Library of Parliament

Riding history 2004–present from the

2011 Results from Elections Canada

Campaign expense data from Elections Canada