Dorval—Lachine—LaSalle, QC 2019 Federal Election Results Map

Dorval—Lachine—LaSalle — 2019 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Dorval—Lachine—LaSalle was contested in the 2019 election.

🏆 Anju Dhillon, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 27,821 votes (52.9% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Jean-Frédéric Vaudry (Bloc Québécois) with 8,974 votes (17.1%), defeated by a margin of 18,847 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: Lori Morrison (NDP-New Democratic Party, 12%), Céline Laquerre (Conservative, 11%) and Réjean Malette (Green Party, 6%).

Riding information

Auto generated. Flag an issue.

Dorval—Lachine—LaSalle

Straddling Montreal's south-central waterfront along the St. Lawrence River, Dorval—Lachine—LaSalle takes in the city of Dorval, the small island municipality of L'Île-Dorval, the borough of Lachine, and the western portion of the LaSalle borough. Covering about 51 square kilometres with a population of approximately 110,000, the riding ranks among Montreal's most linguistically diverse constituencies — roughly forty-three percent of residents speak French as their mother tongue, twenty-nine percent English, and the remainder speak languages including Italian, Spanish, Mandarin, Punjabi, and Arabic.

Candidates

Anju Dhillon (Liberal) — Born and raised in Montreal, Dhillon earned an honours bachelor's degree in political science from Concordia University and went on to study law at the Université de Montréal, becoming the first Canadian Sikh to practise law in Quebec. She also holds a Juris Doctor and a Master of Laws from the Université de Sherbrooke and is a certified mediator in civil, commercial, and employment law. Active with the Liberal Party since age thirteen, she was first elected in 2015 and served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for the Status of Women.

Jean-Frédéric Vaudry (Bloc Québécois) — Involved with the Bloc Québécois since 2008, Vaudry served as president of the riding association before running as the party's candidate. His campaign focused on proximity services and local mobility issues in the Dorval–Lachine–LaSalle area.

Lori Morrison (NDP) — A Dorval resident and owner of The Vox Box, an audio production company providing voice work for radio, television, and live events including at the Bell Centre, Morrison was running in her first election campaign. She focused on environmental issues and making life more affordable for families through pharmacare and housing.

Céline Laquerre (Conservative) — Laquerre was the Conservative Party of Canada candidate.

Réjean Malette (Green Party) — Malette represented the Green Party in the riding.

Arash Torbati ran for the People's Party of Canada, Fang Hu ran for the Progressive Canadian Party, and Xavier Watso ran for the Rhinoceros Party.

About the Riding

Montréal–Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, located in Dorval, is Canada's third-busiest airport and the hub of a major aerospace cluster that extends across the West Island. Bombardier's aviation headquarters and other aerospace manufacturers provide thousands of engineering and manufacturing jobs in the area. Dorval itself, established in 1667, is the oldest settlement on the West Island and retains a small-town residential character despite the airport's proximity. The Lachine Canal, which runs through the riding, was once the largest industrial corridor in Canada; after ceasing commercial operations in 1970, it was reopened for recreational boating in 2002 and is now a national historic site bordered by converted loft buildings, cycling paths, and green spaces. Lachine and LaSalle evolved as working-class industrial communities in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and have become increasingly diverse residential neighbourhoods with waterfront parks along the St. Lawrence. During the campaign, local concerns included airport noise and expansion, aerospace-sector employment, public transit connections to downtown Montreal, and affordable housing in a riding facing development pressure.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings