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- For the federal electoral district, see Surrey—Newton
Surrey-Newton is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, Canada.
The riding was first created out of the two-member Surrey district in 1986, which had been in existence since 1966. Surrey had always been a battleground between the NDP and Social Credit, trading back and forth between the two parties. The riding was represented by Premier Rita Johnston, who was a prominent Cabinet minister in the Vander Zalm government between 1986 and 1991.
In 1991, Penny Priddy defeated the sitting Premier in a realigning election that saw Social Credit experience massive defeats all across the province. During the NDP government (1991-2001), Priddy emerged as a prominent Cabinet minister in portfolios such as Women's Equality, Tourism and Culture, Health, Labour and Children and Families.
Although the riding was won by the Liberals during their 2001 landslide victory, it has been a relatively safe NDP seat since 2005. The riding is home to a large South Asian community, whose population has exploded in Surrey since the early 1990s. The shift towards the NDP can largely be attributed to the party's inroads in the Indo-Canadian community.
Demographics
Population, 2001 |
50,281 |
Population Change, 1996–2001 |
16.4% |
Area (km²) |
21 |
Pop. Density (people per km²) |
2,388 |
Geography
1999 Redistribution
Surrey-Newton has its entire southern half removed.
History
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Member of Legislative Assembly
Its MLA is Harry Bains. He was first elected in 2005, and was re-elected in 2009 and 2013. He represents the New Democratic Party of British Columbia.
Election results
B.C. General Election 1996: Surrey-Newton |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes |
% |
±% |
Expenditures |
|
NDP |
Penny Priddy |
13,969 |
49.54% |
|
$42,833 |
|
Liberal |
Indra Thind |
9,788 |
34.71% |
|
$54,778 |
|
Progressive Democrat |
Ian Brown |
1,841 |
6.53% |
– |
$100 |
|
Reform |
Liaqat Bajwa |
1,244 |
4.41% |
|
$12,184 |
|
Family Coalition |
Bill Stilwell |
577 |
2.05% |
– |
$890 |
|
Green |
Maureen A. MacDonald |
340 |
1.21% |
– |
$100 |
|
Conservative |
John Keith Bannister |
217 |
0.77% |
|
$931 |
|
Social Credit |
Neil Maharaj |
174 |
0.62% |
– |
$3,600 |
|
Natural Law |
Shane Laporte |
48 |
0.17% |
|
$118 |
Total valid votes |
28,198 |
100.00% |
Total rejected ballots |
244 |
0.86% |
Turnout |
28,442 |
71.33% |
B.C. General Election 2001: Surrey-Newton |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes |
% |
±% |
Expenditures |
|
Liberal |
Tony Bhullar |
6,750 |
49.45% |
|
$51,429 |
|
NDP |
Param Grewal |
3,949 |
28.93% |
|
$32,318 |
|
Green |
David Walters |
1,673 |
12.26% |
– |
$2,471 |
|
Unity |
Paul Joshi |
498 |
3.65% |
|
$4,578 |
|
Marijuana |
Stephen Kawamoto |
364 |
2.20% |
|
$394 |
|
Reform |
Margaret Bridgman |
159 |
0.96% |
|
$1,285 |
Total valid votes |
13,649 |
100.00% |
Total rejected ballots |
92 |
0.67% |
Turnout |
13,741 |
65.51% |
References
External links
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North / Central |
|
Southern Interior |
|
Fraser Valley / South LM |
|
Vancouver / North LM |
|
Vancouver Island |
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See also: |
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North / Central |
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Southern Interior |
|
Fraser Valley / South LM |
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Vancouver / North LM |
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Vancouver Island / South Coast |
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See also: |
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|
North / Central |
|
Southern Interior |
|
Fraser Valley / South LM |
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Vancouver / North LM |
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Vancouver Island / South Coast |
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See also: |
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North / Central |
|
Southern Interior |
|
Fraser Valley / South LM |
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Vancouver / North LM |
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Vancouver Island / South Coast |
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See also: |
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- ‡ – from 1986–1991, was a 2-seat constituency
- † – from 1986–1991, was broken into 3 single-seat constituencies
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