Beauport—Limoilou, QC — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Beauport—Limoilou — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Beauport—Limoilou was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Julie Vignola, the Bloc Québécois candidate, won the riding with 15,149 votes (30.2% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Alupa Clarke (Conservative) with 13,185 votes (26.3%), defeated by a margin of 1,964 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Antoine Bujold (Liberal, 26%) and Simon-Pierre Beaudet (NDP-New Democratic Party, 11%).
Riding information
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Beauport—Limoilou encompasses two distinct boroughs on the east side of Quebec City. Limoilou, a grid-patterned neighbourhood of triplexes, small shops, and a growing café scene along 3e Avenue, sits on the north bank of the Saint-Charles River. Beauport extends eastward along the St. Lawrence as a more suburban district of single-family homes, reaching to the mouth of the Montmorency River. With a population of roughly 110,000, the riding is over 92 percent francophone and has a median individual income below the Quebec City average.
Candidates
Julie Vignola (Bloc Québécois) — Born in Sept-Îles and raised in the Côte-Nord mining town of Fermont, Vignola earned a bachelor's degree in teaching history and geography from the Université du Québec à Rimouski. She worked as an English as a second language teacher, then as an assistant principal and education coordinator. She entered federal politics as a first-time candidate after being approached by the Bloc in January 2019.
Alupa Clarke (Conservative) — The incumbent, first elected in 2015, Clarke was born in Quebec City in 1986 and grew up in New Brunswick. He completed a master's degree in political science at Université Laval, writing a thesis on constitutional theories of the judicialization of politics. In Parliament, he served as the Conservative shadow minister for official languages and la francophonie.
Antoine Bujold (Liberal) — An entrepreneur with 15 years of experience in restaurant management and operations, Bujold was a father of three and a government affairs consultant.
Simon-Pierre Beaudet (NDP) — Beaudet carried the NDP banner in the riding.
Dalila Elhak (Green Party) — Elhak was the Green Party candidate.
Alicia Bédard (People's Party) and Claude Moreau (ML) also ran.
About the Riding
The riding's economy is closely tied to Quebec City's large public sector, with federal and provincial government offices providing significant employment. The Hôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus, located in the riding, is a major trauma and research centre. In Limoilou, more than 80 percent of residents are tenants, and gentrification along the 3e Avenue commercial strip was pushing rents upward, making housing affordability a pressing campaign issue. Environmental concerns also figured prominently: the Port of Quebec, a federal jurisdiction, had been a source of controversy since 2012, when iron ore dust from transshipment operations blanketed the Vieux-Limoilou neighbourhood and subsequent testing revealed elevated nickel levels. Beauport—Limoilou is one of Quebec City's most politically volatile ridings, having changed party allegiance repeatedly — from the Bloc to the Conservatives to the NDP and back to the Conservatives — between 2004 and 2015. The 2019 race was a tight three-way contest between Vignola, Clarke, and Bujold.





