Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert, QC — 2011 Federal Election Results Map
Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert — 2011 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert was contested in the 2011 election.
🏆 Djaouida Sellah, the NDP-New Democratic Party candidate, won the riding with 24,142 votes (44.4% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Carole Lavallée (Bloc Québécois) with 15,384 votes (28.3%), defeated by a margin of 8,758 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Michel Picard (Liberal, 14%) and Nicole Charbonneau Barron (Conservative, 11%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert
Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert is a suburban riding on Montreal's South Shore in the Montérégie region, encompassing the city of Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville and the borough of Saint-Hubert in the city of Longueuil. The riding sits just east of the Champlain Bridge corridor, with convenient highway access to downtown Montreal.
Candidates
Djaouida Sellah (NDP) — Born in Algiers, Algeria, Sellah was a physician who had practised medicine for more than a decade. After immigrating to Canada, she spent six years completing the qualifying courses required to practise as a medical doctor in the country. She was a founding member and president of the Association of Quebec Doctors Graduated outside Canada and the United States, an advocacy group for internationally trained physicians. Earlier in her career, she had volunteered as a doctor with the Red Crescent.
Carole Lavallée (Bloc Québécois) — The incumbent MP, first elected in 2004. Born in Montreal in 1954, Lavallée was a businesswoman, communications consultant, and journalist before entering politics. She had been re-elected in 2006 and 2008, serving three consecutive terms. In Parliament, she served as the Bloc's critic for labour.
Michel Picard (Liberal) — The Liberal Party candidate in the riding.
Nicole Charbonneau Barron (Conservative) — The Conservative Party candidate in the riding.
Germain Denoncourt (Green Party) — The Green Party candidate in the riding.
About the Riding
The riding combines two communities of distinct character. Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville, with a population of roughly 26,000, is an affluent residential town at the foot of Mont Saint-Bruno, a Monteregian hill whose summit is protected as a provincial park. The town has a high rate of homeownership, with over 70 percent of dwellings being single-detached houses, and a predominantly francophone population with a notable anglophone minority. Saint-Hubert, the larger of the two communities with approximately 80,000 residents in 2011, is a borough of Longueuil that serves as the city's administrative centre. Saint-Hubert's economy has a significant aerospace component: Pratt & Whitney Canada operates a major facility near Saint-Hubert Airport, and the Canadian Space Agency maintains its national headquarters in the borough. The airport itself, known as Montréal/Saint-Hubert Airport, was founded in 1927 and was a major training base during the Second World War under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. A Canadian Forces garrison remains on site, including 438 Tactical Helicopter Squadron. The borough features a mix of residential suburbs, commercial zones, and industrial parks. The riding's proximity to Montreal via Highway 30 and the Champlain Bridge corridor makes it a popular commuter community, with many residents working in the metropolitan core.





