Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles, QC 2019 Federal Election Results Map

Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles — 2019 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles was contested in the 2019 election.

🏆 Pierre Paul-Hus, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 22,484 votes (38.0% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Alain D'Eer (Bloc Québécois) with 16,053 votes (27.2%), defeated by a margin of 6,431 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: René-Paul Coly (Liberal, 21%) and Guillaume Bourdeau (NDP-New Democratic Party, 8%).

Riding information

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Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles

Situated in Quebec City's northeastern quadrant, this riding takes in the borough of Charlesbourg and the eastern section of La Haute-Saint-Charles, including the neighbourhoods of Saint-Émile and Lac-Saint-Charles. While the riding extends into the Laurentian foothills and is roughly sixty percent rural by area, the vast majority of its approximately 107,000 residents live in Charlesbourg's well-established suburban subdivisions. The constituency is overwhelmingly francophone, with about ninety-five percent of residents speaking French as their mother tongue.

Candidates

Pierre Paul-Hus (Conservative) — A political science graduate from Université Laval, Paul-Hus served twenty-two years in the Canadian Army reserves as an infantry officer with the Régiment de la Chaudière. He rose to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, completed operational missions with NATO in Goose Bay, Labrador and with the United Nations in Cyprus, and studied at both the Canadian Army Command and Staff College in Kingston, Ontario and the École Militaire in Paris. In civilian life, he owned PRESTIGE Media Group and served for eleven years as vice-president of Sélections Mondiales des Vins Canada, billed as North America's largest wine competition. First elected in 2015, he served as the Official Opposition's shadow minister for public safety.

Alain D'Eer (Bloc Québécois) — A filmmaker and director from the media industry, D'Eer campaigned on defending the environment, secularism, and the French language. He advocated for extending Quebec City's planned streetcar to the Avenue de la Faune corridor and for improving old-age pensions.

René-Paul Coly (Liberal) — Coly represented the Liberal Party of Canada in the riding.

Guillaume Bourdeau (NDP) — Bourdeau was the New Democratic Party candidate.

Samuel Moisan-Domm (Green Party) — Moisan-Domm carried the Green Party banner.

Joey Pronovost ran for the People's Party of Canada.

About the Riding

Charlesbourg traces its origins to a seventeenth-century seigneury organized in a distinctive star-shaped radial pattern — the Trait-Carré — that remains visible in the local street layout and is designated a provincial heritage site. Once a centre for dairy, poultry, and fruit farming, the area transformed into a residential suburb as Quebec City expanded in the postwar decades, and it was amalgamated into the city in 2002. The northern reaches of the riding include Lac-Beauport, a four-season resort community with skiing and outdoor recreation, and Canadian Forces Base Valcartier, one of the Canadian Army's largest installations and a major regional employer with thousands of military and civilian personnel. Lac Saint-Charles, the primary drinking-water reservoir for Quebec City, lies within the riding and has been the subject of ongoing environmental concern over water quality and algal blooms related to watershed development. Federal issues in the riding centred on defence spending and veterans' services tied to CFB Valcartier, public transit investment for Quebec City's suburbs, and environmental stewardship of local waterways.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings