Brampton (electoral district)

Brampton was a federal electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that was represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1988 to 1997. This riding was created in 1987, from Brampton—Georgetown riding, and was abolished in 1996, when it was redistributed between Brampton Centre and Brampton West—Mississauga ridings.

It consisted of that part of the City of Brampton lying west of Dixie Road.

It was briefly a riding represented in the Ontario Legislative Assembly from 1975 to 1985. It was represented by Premier Bill Davis.

History

Incumbent John McDermid was made the Minister of Housing two weeks before the 1988 federal election was called, shortly after negotiating the Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement.[1]

Three weeks after the election was called, Liberals nominated Harbhajan Pandori, a 41-year-old computer analyst for Canadian Tire. He was a resident of Mississauga, and "president of the large Sikh temple." He campaigned against the proposed federal sales tax (the GST) and "supermailboxes" in new subdivisions.[1] NDP candidate John Morris focused on campaigning against free trade.[1]

Electoral history

Canadian federal election, 1988
Party Candidate Votes
Progressive ConservativeJohn McDermid29,473
LiberalHarbhajan Pandori14,047
New DemocraticJohn Morris10,284
Christian HeritageDon Eddie2,698
LibertarianGeorge Dance593
Canadian federal election, 1993
Party Candidate Votes
  Liberal Colleen BEAUMIER 35,203
ReformErnie MCDONALD18,196
  Progressive Conservative Susan FENNELL 12,134
  New Democratic Party John MORRIS 1,925
  Natural Law Maxim NEWBY 455
Marxist–LeninistAmarjit DHILLON245

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Stevie Cameron, "Brampton's new housing minister running hard to stay in the House", The Globe and Mail, 14 November 1988, A10.


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