Mississauga—Streetsville, ON — 2011 Federal Election Results Map
Mississauga—Streetsville — 2011 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Mississauga—Streetsville was contested in the 2011 election.
🏆 Brad Butt, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 22,104 votes (43.9% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Bonnie Crombie (Liberal) with 18,651 votes (37.0%), defeated by a margin of 3,453 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Aijaz Naqvi (NDP-New Democratic Party, 15%).
Riding information
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Mississauga—Streetsville occupies the northwestern portion of the City of Mississauga, bounded by the city limits to the north and west, Mississauga Road and Highway 401 to the east, and Britannia Road and Eglinton Avenue to the south. The riding is centred on the historic villages of Streetsville and Meadowvale, both of which predate Mississauga's incorporation as a city. The Credit River runs through Streetsville's core, lending the area a distinctive small-town character within the suburban fabric of the GTA.
Candidates
Brad Butt (Conservative) — Born in 1967, Butt was the son of the late Terry Butt, a Mississauga property developer and Ward 7 city councillor. He had been involved in politics from a young age, first running for Mississauga city council in 1988. He subsequently ran for the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario in the 1990 provincial election in Mississauga East and for the Canadian Alliance in the 2000 federal election in Mississauga South. By 2011, Butt had spent over a decade as president and CEO of the Greater Toronto Apartment Association, a trade organization representing the rental housing industry, and had been a political commentator on Mississauga Cable 10.
Bonnie Crombie (Liberal) — The incumbent MP, Crombie won the seat in 2008 by defeating Conservative incumbent Wajid Khan, who had crossed the floor from the Liberals. Crombie held an Honours Bachelor of Arts in political science and international relations from St. Michael's College at the University of Toronto and an MBA from York University's Schulich School of Business. Before entering politics, she had a twenty-year career in business, working as a marketing manager for McDonald's Canada and the Walt Disney Company, and later as manager of government relations for the Insurance Bureau of Canada. In Parliament, she served as co-chair of the Liberal Caucus Outreach Committee alongside Justin Trudeau and as the Liberal critic for Crown corporations under Michael Ignatieff.
Aijaz Naqvi (NDP) — Naqvi ran as the NDP candidate in the riding. Detailed biographical information about Naqvi from this period is limited.
Chris Hill ran for the Green Party.
About the Riding
Streetsville, founded as a milling village on the Credit River in the early 1800s, was incorporated as a village in 1858 and retained its independence until amalgamation into Mississauga in 1974. Its Queen Street main street, running between the Credit River and the railway tracks, preserves a walkable village core with shops, restaurants, and heritage buildings. The annual Bread and Honey Festival reflects the community's attachment to its small-town roots. Meadowvale, at the riding's northern end, is a large suburban community developed from the 1970s onward, with residential streets organized around parks and two man-made lakes, Lake Wabukayne and Lake Aquitaine.
The riding is one of the more affluent in Mississauga, with newer housing stock in areas like Churchill Meadows and established family neighbourhoods throughout. The population is diverse, with significant South Asian, East Asian, and European communities. Many residents are commuters, travelling to employment in Toronto or to Mississauga's corporate centres along the 401 and 403 corridors. The Meadowvale GO station provides commuter rail access.
Heading into 2011, local issues included transit connectivity, the management of continued residential growth in the riding's western edges, and the preservation of heritage character in Streetsville's village core amid development pressures. The riding had been a competitive battleground, changing hands between the Conservatives and Liberals multiple times since its creation.





