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Under the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution the riding will be renamed New Westminster—Burnaby—Maillardville. [5] In the next Canadian federal election the seat will gain much of the Maillardville area from Port Moody—Coquitlam and lose all of its territory in Burnaby west of Canada Way to either Burnaby Central or Vancouver ...
Burnaby-New Westminster is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. [1] Created under the 2021 British Columbia electoral redistribution, the riding will first be contested in the 2024 British Columbia general election. It was created out of parts of Burnaby-Edmonds, New Westminster and Burnaby-Lougheed.
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.
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.
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 ...
An additional district, Burnaby Centre, was proposed for the Burnaby–New Westminster–Tri-Cities area. New Westminster was found to have a population too large for a single riding but too small for two ridings. [9] The initial report split the city into 5 ridings, sharing 2 electoral districts with Burnaby and 1 electoral district with Richmond.
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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.