1973 New Brunswick electoral redistribution
The 1973 New Brunswick electoral redistribution was the most radical redistribution of electoral districts in the history of New Brunswick, Canada. Under this redistribution, New Brunswick changed from a mixture of multi-member districts and single-member districts to a scheme of only single-member districts, from bloc voting electoral system to first past the post.
As the number of members per district had been re-evaluated as recently as 1967, the number of members was not changed, and multi-member districts were simply subdivided to form single-member districts.
Prior to the redistribution, New Brunswick had had the longest and deepest experience of multi-member districts of any province in Canada. The Block voting system in use though denied voters the proportional representation that they might otherwise have enjoyed.[1]
Transition of districts
List of electoral districts
(each district returns one member)
- Albert
- Bathurst
- Bay du Vin
- Campbellton
- Caraquet
- Carleton Centre
- Carleton North
- Carleton South
- Charlotte Centre
- Charlotte-Fundy
- Charlotte West
- Chatham
- Dalhousie
- East Saint John
- Edmundston
- Fredericton North
- Fredericton South
- Grand Falls
- Kent Centre
- Kent North
- Kent South
- Kings Centre
- Kings East
- Kings West
- Madawaska Centre
- Madawaska-les-Lacs
- Madawaska South
- Memramcook
- Miramichi Bay
- Miramichi-Newcastle
- Moncton East
- Moncton North
- Moncton West
- Nepisiguit-Chaleur
- Nigadoo-Chaleur
- Oromocto
- Petitcodiac
- Queens North
- Queens South
- Restigouche East
- Restigouche West
- Riverview
- Saint John-Fundy
- Saint John Harbour
- Saint John North
- Saint John Park
- Saint John South
- Saint John West
- St. Stephen-Milltown
- Shediac
- Shippagan-les-Îles
- Southwest Miramichi
- Sunbury
- Tantramar
- Tracadie
- Victoria-Tobique
- York North
- York South
Preceded by 1967 |
New Brunswick electoral redistributions | Succeeded by 1994 |
References
- Wikipedia: Electoral district (Canada)