Louis-Hébert, QC — 2015 Federal Election Results Map
Louis-Hébert — 2015 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Louis-Hébert was contested in the 2015 election.
🏆 Joël Lightbound, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 21,516 votes (34.8% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Jean-Pierre Asselin (Conservative) with 16,789 votes (27.2%), defeated by a margin of 4,727 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Denis Blanchette (NDP-New Democratic Party, 21%) and Caroline Pageau (Bloc Québécois, 14%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Louis-Hébert
Named for the apothecary considered one of the first European settlers in New France, Louis-Hébert covers the southern reaches of Quebec City, corresponding largely to the borough of Sainte-Foy—Sillery—Cap-Rouge. The riding stretches from the historic streets of Sillery along the St. Lawrence bluffs through the commercial and institutional core of Sainte-Foy to the residential community of Cap-Rouge at its western edge.
Candidates
Joël Lightbound (Liberal) — A lawyer born in 1988 who studied at McGill University's Faculty of Law, Lightbound was making his first run for elected office. He campaigned in a riding that had swung between parties over the previous decade, pitching the Liberal platform of middle-class tax relief and infrastructure spending.
Jean-Pierre Asselin (Conservative) — Asselin ran as the Conservative candidate in a riding where the party sought to capitalize on its strength in the Quebec City region.
Denis Blanchette (NDP) — A computer analyst and public servant, Blanchette had been elected to represent Louis-Hébert in 2011 after two previous unsuccessful campaigns in 2006 and 2008. During his time in Parliament, he tabled a private member's bill calling on CN to repaint the Quebec Bridge, a landmark spanning the St. Lawrence near the riding.
Caroline Pageau (Bloc Québécois) — Pageau ran for the Bloc in a riding where the party had once been competitive before the NDP's 2011 breakthrough.
Andrée-Anne Beaudoin-Julien (Green Party) — Beaudoin-Julien represented the Green Party, bringing the party's environmental message to a riding dominated by other concerns.
About the Riding
Sainte-Foy is home to Université Laval, one of Canada's oldest and largest French-language universities, whose campus and surrounding student population give parts of the riding a youthful character. The borough also houses major hospital complexes, federal government offices, and the Place Laurier shopping centre, one of eastern Canada's largest retail destinations. Sillery, once a separate municipality, is known for its heritage properties and tree-lined streets overlooking the St. Lawrence. Cap-Rouge, at the riding's western edge, offers a more residential setting with access to green spaces along the Cap-Rouge River. The Quebec Bridge and the Pierre-Laporte Bridge, both linking the south shore to Quebec City, sit at the riding's eastern boundary and are critical transportation arteries. Federal issues in the 2011–2015 period included research funding for Université Laval, the maintenance of federal heritage buildings, and infrastructure investment for the aging Quebec Bridge.





