Salaberry—Suroît, QC — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Salaberry—Suroît — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Salaberry—Suroît was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Claude Debellefeuille, the Bloc Québécois candidate, won the riding with 29,975 votes (47.7% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Marc Faubert (Liberal) with 18,682 votes (29.7%), defeated by a margin of 11,293 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Cynthia Larivière (Conservative, 10%) and Joan Gottman (NDP-New Democratic Party, 8%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Salaberry—Suroit
Salaberry—Suroit covers a broad expanse of southwestern Quebec south and west of Montreal, taking in the regional county municipalities of Beauharnois-Salaberry, Le Haut-Saint-Laurent, and a portion of Vaudreuil-Soulanges. Created through the 2012 redistribution and first contested in 2015, the riding spans the industrial town of Beauharnois, the commercial centre of Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, and the rural anglophone townships of Huntingdon and Ormstown along the New York and Ontario borders.
Candidates
Claude DeBellefeuille (Bloc Quebecois) — Born in Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, DeBellefeuille worked as a social worker and served as director general of the Centre d'Action Benevolede Valleyfield before entering politics. She was first elected to Parliament in 2006 in the former riding of Beauharnois—Salaberry, serving two terms and rising to the position of chief whip of the Bloc caucus before losing her seat in the 2011 NDP wave.
Marc Faubert (Liberal) — A native of Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Faubert ran a grassroots campaign and held his nomination assembly at the MUSO (Musee de societe des Deux-Rives). He focused on engaging younger voters in the riding.
Cynthia Lariviere (Conservative) — Lariviere carried the Conservative standard in a riding where the party historically attracted modest support.
Joan Gottman (NDP) — An educator and businesswoman, Gottman founded Quebec's first paint-your-own-ceramics cafe in 1996 and spent a decade developing it into a franchise and manufacturing operation. She ran a carbon-neutral campaign and focused on expanding access to dental and vision care.
Nahed AlShawa (Green Party), Alain Savard (People's Party), and Luc Bertrand (Pour l'Independance du Quebec) also appeared on the ballot.
About the Riding
The Beauharnois generating station, a run-of-the-river hydroelectric facility along the Saint Lawrence Seaway, is the riding's most prominent industrial landmark. Comprising 36 turbines capable of producing up to 1,903 megawatts of power, it is one of the largest generating stations in Quebec and was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1990. Hydro-Quebec's presence in Beauharnois has shaped the town's industrial character for nearly a century.
Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, the riding's commercial hub with a population of approximately 42,000, sits at the junction of Lake Saint-Francois and the St. Lawrence River. The city's economy has diversified from its textile-manufacturing origins into sectors including recycling, agri-food processing, and metallurgy. Agriculture dominates the landscape, with approximately 79 percent of the riding's territory classified as permanent agricultural zone, supporting intensive dairy, grain, and market vegetable operations.
The riding's anglophone minority, concentrated in Huntingdon, Ormstown, and the townships of Le Haut-Saint-Laurent, gives the area a bilingual character unusual for a predominantly francophone rural Quebec constituency. Cross-border proximity to Ontario and New York State shapes the local economy, with seasonal tourism and cross-border commerce contributing to communities along Lake Saint-Francois.





