Brome—Missisquoi, QC — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Brome—Missisquoi — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Brome—Missisquoi was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Lyne Bessette, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 23,450 votes (38.2% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Monique Allard (Bloc Québécois) with 21,152 votes (34.4%), defeated by a margin of 2,298 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Bruno Côté (Conservative, 13%), Sylvie Jetté (NDP-New Democratic Party, 8%) and Normand Dallaire (Green Party, 5%).
Riding information
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Brome—Missisquoi stretches across southern Quebec between Montreal and Sherbrooke, straddling the administrative regions of Montérégie and Estrie in the Eastern Townships. The riding extends south to the Vermont border and takes in the towns of Bromont, Cowansville, Farnham, Sutton, and Bedford, along with the village of Lac-Brome. The landscape transitions from open agricultural plains in the west to the forested ridges and valleys of the Appalachian foothills in the east, a geography that has made the region one of Quebec's premier destinations for viticulture and outdoor tourism.
Candidates
Lyne Bessette (Liberal) — Born in Lac-Brome, Bessette is a retired professional cyclist who competed at the 2000 and 2004 Olympic Games for Canada. She won a gold medal in the road race at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur and captured bronze in the individual time trial at the 2002 Manchester Commonwealth Games. A multiple-time national road and time trial champion, she also won gold as a tandem pilot at the 2012 Paralympic Games. The 2019 campaign was her first entry into electoral politics.
Monique Allard (Bloc Québécois) — A resident of Magog, Allard spent her career at Canada Post and became the first woman appointed as a regional leader of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers. She was chosen as the Bloc candidate at an investiture assembly in Eastman in May 2019 and made the environment the centrepiece of her campaign.
Bruno Côté (Conservative) — Côté won the Conservative nomination at an assembly held at Château Bromont in April 2019, prevailing over two other candidates. He launched his campaign from the village of Mansonville.
Sylvie Jetté (NDP) — A director of studies in nursing sciences at the Université de Sherbrooke, Jetté had been an NDP member since 2005 and served as president of the party's Brome—Missisquoi riding association. She campaigned on electrifying the proposed Montreal–Sherbrooke passenger rail link.
Normand Dallaire (Green Party) — Dallaire represented the Green Party of Canada.
François Poulin ran for the People's Party of Canada, Steeve Cloutier stood for the Rhinoceros Party, and Lawrence Cotton represented the Veterans Coalition Party.
About the Riding
Brome—Missisquoi is the heartland of Quebec's wine industry. The Brome-Missisquoi Wine Route, a 160-kilometre marked trail connecting roughly two dozen vineyards, threads through the countryside around Dunham and Lac-Brome. Agriculture beyond viticulture — dairy farming, grain crops, orchards, and artisanal food production — remains the backbone of the regional economy. Bromont, built around its ski resort and equestrian facilities, functions as a year-round tourism hub, while Cowansville and Farnham have a more industrial character anchored by manufacturing and food processing. Sutton, near the Vermont border, draws hikers, skiers, and artists to its mountain setting.
The riding has a bilingual character uncommon in rural Quebec, with significant anglophone communities around Lac-Brome and Sutton — a legacy of Loyalist and English-speaking settlement in the late eighteenth century. Retiring Liberal incumbent Denis Paradis had held the seat since 2015, and his decision not to seek re-election opened the riding to a new contest. Water quality in local waterways, including Lake Memphremagog and Missisquoi Bay, was an ongoing environmental concern, as phosphate loading from agricultural runoff threatened aquatic ecosystems. Labour shortages affecting farms, restaurants, and tourism businesses also figured in the 2019 campaign.





