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The 1988–1997 edition of this riding was created in 1987 from parts of Burnaby and New Westminster—Coquitlam ridings. The riding consisted of the City of New Westminster and the southern part of the District Municipality of Burnaby. It was abolished in 1996 when it was merged into New Westminster—Coquitlam—Burnaby.
New Westminster-Coquitlam will be a provincial electoral district in British Columbia, Canada. It was established in 2023 in preparation for the 43rd British Columbia general election . It mostly includes areas from the former New Westminster riding, and parts of the adjusted Coquitlam-Maillardville electoral district.
Map of the 87 current provincial electoral districts used in the 2020 British Columbia general election.Click to expand. This is a list of the 87 provincial electoral districts (also informally known as ridings in Canadian English) of British Columbia, Canada, [1] as defined by the 2015 electoral redistribution which first came into effect for the 2017 British Columbia general election.
The Coquitlam–Maillardville district encompasses most of land of the City of Coquitlam except for the city centre, Westwood Plateau, and a small corner in the northwest that belongs to the Port Moody-Coquitlam electoral district.
Burnaby Centre; Burnaby East; Burnaby-New Westminster; Burnaby North; Burnaby South-Metrotown; Cariboo-Chilcotin; Chilliwack-Cultus Lake; Chilliwack North; Columbia River-Revelstoke; Coquitlam-Burke Mountain; Coquitlam-Maillardville; Courtenay-Comox; Cowichan Valley; Delta North; Delta South; Esquimalt-Colwood; Fraser-Nicola; Juan de Fuca ...
New Westminster, 1871–2024; New Westminster City, 1871–1912; The New Westminster riding originally included all of the Lower Mainland outside of the City of New Westminster, such that all Fraser Valley and Vancouver ridings are derivatives of the New Westminster riding, which became a three-member renamed Westminster for the 1890 election before being partitioned into four ridings.
The riding was created in 2003 from parts of New Westminster—Coquitlam—Burnaby, Vancouver South—Burnaby, and Burnaby—Douglas.. According to the electoral boundaries set out by the 2012 Federal Electoral Boundaries Commission for British Columbia, the riding was dissolved, with various parts joining the new ridings of Burnaby South, New Westminster—Burnaby and Steveston—Richmond East.
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