Laurentides—Labelle, QC 2019 Federal Election Results Map

Laurentides—Labelle — 2019 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Laurentides—Labelle was contested in the 2019 election.

🏆 Marie-Hélène Gaudreau, the Bloc Québécois candidate, won the riding with 30,625 votes (46.8% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was David Graham (Liberal) with 21,655 votes (33.1%), defeated by a margin of 8,970 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: Serge Grégoire (Conservative, 8%) and Claude Dufour (NDP-New Democratic Party, 6%).

Riding information

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Laurentides—Labelle

Among Quebec's largest federal ridings by geographic area, Laurentides—Labelle covers nearly 20,000 square kilometres of the Laurentian Mountains northwest of Montreal. The territory stretches from the resort towns of Saint-Sauveur and Sainte-Adèle in the south through Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts and Mont-Tremblant to the forestry hub of Mont-Laurier in the far north.

Candidates

Marie-Hélène Gaudreau (Bloc Québécois) — Before entering politics, Gaudreau had served as director of the Corporation de développement communautaire des Hautes-Laurentides. She also had experience as a political attaché to Bloc Québécois MP Johanne Deschamps, who had previously represented this same riding. Gaudreau held a bachelor's degree in communication and an international certification in management coaching.

David Graham (Liberal) — The incumbent MP, Graham grew up in the Laurentians. Before his 2015 election, he had worked as a political assistant to Liberal MP Scott Simms. In Parliament, Graham championed rural broadband access and cellular coverage, issues of particular urgency in a riding with vast tracts lacking reliable internet service.

Serge Grégoire (Conservative) — Grégoire carried the Conservative banner across this sprawling Laurentian constituency.

Claude Dufour (NDP) — Dufour represented the NDP in a riding where the party had held the seat briefly during the 2011 orange wave under the riding's previous boundaries.

Gaël Chantrel (Green Party) — Chantrel ran for the Green Party in a riding where environmental stewardship and natural resource management carried direct economic implications.

Richard Evanko (People's Party), Ludovic Schneider (Parti Rhinocéros Party), and Michel Leclerc (Independent) also appeared on the ballot.

About the Riding

The riding's character splits between a southern tourism corridor and remote northern communities reliant on the forestry sector. Mont-Tremblant's ski resort, casino, and year-round recreational offerings drive a hospitality economy that extends through the smaller resort towns along the Laurentian Autoroute. Farther north, communities like Mont-Laurier and Rivière-Rouge depend on logging, sawmills, and wood-product manufacturing. The population density barely exceeds six people per square kilometre, creating persistent challenges in health care delivery, school access, and government services for residents in the riding's northern reaches. Route 117, the primary north-south highway, serves as the lifeline connecting isolated communities. Broadband internet availability in rural areas, seasonal employment and employment insurance eligibility, hospital staffing shortages, and forest-industry competitiveness were the defining issues of the 2019 campaign in this constituency.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings