Bourassa, QC 2015 Federal Election Results Map

Bourassa — 2015 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Bourassa was contested in the 2015 election.

🏆 Emmanuel Dubourg, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 22,234 votes (54.1% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Gilles Léveillé (Bloc Québécois) with 7,049 votes (17.1%), defeated by a margin of 15,185 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: Dolmine Laguerre (NDP-New Democratic Party, 15%) and Jason Potasso-Justino (Conservative, 9%).

Riding information

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Bourassa

Tucked into the northeastern corner of the island of Montreal, Bourassa encompasses the borough of Montreal-Nord and the eastern portion of Ahuntsic-Cartierville's Sault-au-Recollet neighbourhood. The riding covers just under 14 square kilometres but packs in more than 105,000 residents, making it one of the most densely populated districts in the country. It is among the most ethnically diverse ridings in Quebec, with significant communities of Haitian, Arab, Latin American, and South Asian origin.

Candidates

Emmanuel Dubourg (Liberal) -- Born in Saint-Marc, Haiti, Dubourg immigrated to Canada in 1974 and became a chartered accountant, later teaching at several Quebec post-secondary institutions. He served as a member of the Quebec National Assembly for the riding of Viau from 2007 to 2013 before resigning to seek the federal Liberal nomination. He won a November 2013 by-election in Bourassa to replace Denis Coderre, who had left to run for mayor of Montreal.

Gilles Leveille (Bloc Quebecois) -- A former journalist who had worked at Radio-Canada and the newspaper Le Devoir, Leveille brought name recognition from his media career to the Bloc's campaign in Bourassa.

Dolmine Laguerre (NDP) -- Laguerre campaigned on affordable childcare and reversing cuts to health and employment insurance.

Jason Potasso-Justino (Conservative) -- Potasso-Justino ran as the Conservative candidate in a riding where the party's federalist message had limited traction.

Maxime Charron (Green Party), Julie Demers (Independent), Claude Brunelle (Marxist-Leninist), and Jean-Marie Floriant Ndzana (Forces et Democratie) also appeared on the ballot.

About the Riding

Bourassa has been a Liberal stronghold since Denis Coderre first captured it in 1997, and the party's deep roots in Montreal-Nord's immigrant communities have made it one of the safest Liberal seats in Quebec. The riding's Haitian-origin population -- at roughly one-fifth of all residents, the largest concentration in Canada -- has historically shaped local political engagement. The economy in Montreal-Nord leans toward the service sector and small businesses, with median incomes among the lowest on the island of Montreal. Social housing, youth employment, and community safety were recurring concerns heading into the 2015 campaign. The riding also drew attention for its high proportion of newcomers navigating federal immigration and citizenship services, making the local MP's constituency office a critical point of contact for thousands of families.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings