Kings West

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Kings West
Nova Scotia electoral district
Kings West provincial electoral district.svg
Provincial electoral district
LegislatureNova Scotia House of Assembly
MLA
 
 
 
Chris Palmer
Progressive Conservative
District created1956
First contested1956
Last contested2021
Demographics
Population (2011)19,495
Electors15,019
Area (km²)1,143
Pop. density (per km²)17.1
Census division(s)Kings County

Kings West is a provincial electoral district in Nova Scotia, Canada, that elects one member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. It includes the towns of Berwick and Kingston, and the village of Greenwood.

Geography[]

The electoral district of Kings West has 1,143 km2 (441 sq mi) of land area.[1]

Members of the Legislative Assembly[]

This riding has elected the following Members of the Legislative Assembly:

Legislature Years Member Party
46th 1956-1960 Hiram Thomas Progressive Conservative
47th 1960-1963 Edward D. MacArthur Liberal
48th 1963-1967 Paul Kinsman Progressive Conservative
49th 1967-1970 Gordon Tidman Progressive Conservative
50th 1970-1971
1971-1974 Frank Bezanson Liberal
51st 1974-1978
52nd 1978-1981 George Moody Progressive Conservative
53rd 1981-1984
54th 1984-1988
55th 1988-1993
56th 1993-1998
57th 1998-1999
58th 1999-2003 Jon Carey Progressive Conservative
59th 2003-2006     Leo Glavine Liberal
60th 2006-2009
61st 2009–2013
62nd 2013–2017
63rd 2017–2021
64th 2021-present Chris Palmer Progressive Conservative

Election results[]

1999 general election[]

1999 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  Progressive Conservative Jon Carey 4,033 49.34
  Liberal Don Clarke 2,346 28.70
  New Democratic Party Jacquie DeMestral 1,629 19.93
Nova Scotia Party Frances Adams 166 2.03

2003 general election[]

2003 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  Liberal Leo Glavine 3,045 36.91
  Progressive Conservative Jon Carey 2,935 35.58
  New Democratic Party Greg Hubbert 2,269 27.51

2006 general election[]

2006 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  Liberal Leo Glavine 3,940 46.67
  Progressive Conservative John Prall 2,801 33.18
  New Democratic Party Greg Hubbert 1,590 18.83
Green Nistal Prem de Boer 112 1.33

2009 general election[]

2009 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  Liberal Leo Glavine 4,996 60.85
  Progressive Conservative Chris Palmer 1,668 20.31
  New Democratic Party Carol Tobin 1,398 17.03
Green Nistal Prem de Boer 149 1.81

2013 general election[]

2013 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  Liberal Leo Glavine 5,890 74.31 +13.46
  Progressive Conservative Jody Alan Frowley 1,275 16.09 -4.22
  New Democratic Party Robert K. (Bob) Landry 603 7.61 -9.42
Green Barbara G. Lake 158 1.99 +0.18

2017 general election[]

2017 provincial election redistributed results[2]
Party Vote %
  Liberal 4,559 52.06
  Progressive Conservative 3,255 37.17
  New Democratic 653 7.46
  Green 270 3.08
  Atlantica 21 0.24
2017 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Leo Glavine 4,190 52.45 -21.86
Progressive Conservative Chris Palmer 3,015 37.74 +21.65
New Democratic Cheryl Burbidge 536 6.71 -0.90
Green Madeline Taylor 247 3.09 +1.10
Total valid votes 7,988 100
Total rejected ballots 18 0.22
Turnout 8,006 53.30
Eligible voters 15,019
Liberal hold Swing -21.76
Source: Elections Nova Scotia[3][4]

2021 general election[]

2021 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Chris Palmer 4,592 49.45 +12.28
Liberal Emily Lutz 3,856 41.52 -10.53
New Democratic Jason Langille 549 5.91 -1.54
Green Sue Earle 216 2.33 -0.76
Atlantica Rick Mehta 74 0.79 +0.55
Total valid votes 9,287 99.73
Total rejected ballots 25 0.27
Turnout 9,312 56.65
Eligible voters 16,439
Progressive Conservative gain from Liberal Swing +11.41
Source: Elections Nova Scotia[5]

References[]

  1. ^ "Find Your Electoral District for the 41st Provincial General Election". enstools.electionsnovascotia.ca. Elections Nova Scotia. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  2. ^ Transposition of Votes from the 2017 Provincial General Election to 2019 Electoral District Boundaries
  3. ^ "Statement of Votes & Statistics, Volume I" (PDF). Elections Nova Scotia. Retrieved July 17, 2021.
  4. ^ "May 30th, 2017 - 40th Nova Scotia Provincial General Election". Elections Nova Scotia. Retrieved July 17, 2021.
  5. ^ "Provincial General Election 2021-08-17- Official Results". Elections Nova Scotia. Retrieved October 7, 2021.


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