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2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators election
Westchester County
← 2015 November 7, 2017 2019 →

All 17 seats on the Westchester County Board of Legislators
9 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Democratic Catherine Parker 65.4 12 +3
Republican John Testa 29.2 4 −3
Conservative Margaret Cunzio 4.3 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

The 2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators elections were held on 7 November 2017 in conjunction with the 2017 Westchester County Executive election. The elections resulted in major gains for the Democratic Party[1] with the party flipping three previously Republican seats and control of the County Legislature from a Republican led Coalition. Benjamin Boykin became chair of the board and Catherine Parker Majority leader. Lohud attributed the major Democratic gains in heavily Democratic Westchester County as a reaction to the election of Donald Trump at the 2016 United States presidential election. The Democratic vote increased 6.71% as compared with the 2015 board of legislator elections. Democrats gained one seat they had previously left uncontested, the Peekskill based District 1 in addition to gaining Districts 2 and 10 by increasing their vote share by 8.13% and 5.48% respectively.

Electoral System

[edit]

Members of the Board of Legislators are elected every two years during the off-year elections. Elections are conducted using first-past-the-post in 17 single member districts. Like all partisan elections in New York, fusion tickets are used.

Results

[edit]
2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators Election Results[2]
Party Candidates Votes % % +/– Seats Seats +/–
Democratic 16 123,701 65.39% Increase 6.71% 12 Increase 3
Republican 9 55,310 29.24% Decrease 6.81% 4 Decrease 3
Conservative 1 8,117 4.29% Increase 0.11% 1 Steady
Independence 1 1,017 0.54% New 0 New
Working Families 1 650 0.34% New 0 New
Write-in N/A 380 0.20% Decrease 0.17% 0 0
Valid votes 28 189,175 84.12% Increase 4.92% 17 Steady
Blank votes 35,724 15.88% Decrease 4.92%
 Registered voters/Turnout 598,126[3] 37.6% Increase 14.4%[4]
Source: Westchester County Board of Elections results

*Results are added up for the party each candidate is a member of, not fusion tickets.

Popular vote
Democratic
65.39%
Republican
29.24%
Other
5.37%

By district

[edit]

BOLD represents a flip and ITALICS represent a new legislator of the same party.

District Incumbent Party +/- D%[a] Elected Legislator Party
1 John G. Testa Rep +43.86% John G. Testa Rep
2 Francis T. Corcoran Rep +8.13% Kitley Covill Dem
3 Margareta A. Cunzio Rep +0.88% Margareta A. Cunzio Rep
4 Michael B. Kaplowitz Dem –0.01% Michael B. Kaplowitz Dem
5 Benjamin Boykin II Dem +0.45% Benjamin Boykin II Dem
6 David B. Gelfarb Rep +53.03% Nancy E. Barr Dem
7 Catherine F. Parker Dem +7.04% Catherine F. Parker Dem
8 Alfreda A. Williams Dem +0.27% Alfreda A. Williams Dem
9 Catherine A. Borgia Dem –1.72% Catherine A. Borgia Dem
10 Sheila M. Marcotte Rep +5.48% Damon R. Mather Dem
11 James Maisano Rep N/A James Maisano Rep
12 MaryJane C. Shimsky Dem +0.06 MaryJane C. Shimsky Dem
13 Lyndon D. Williams Dem +0.09 Lyndon D. Williams Dem
14 Bernice Spreckman Rep –0.32 David J. Tubiolo Rep
15 Gordon A. Burrows Rep +6.58 Gordon A. Burrows Rep
16 Ken Jenkins Dem –15.34 Christopher A. Johnson Dem
17 Jose I. Alvadrado Dem +5.19 Jose I. Alvadrado Dem

Close races

[edit]

Districts where the margin of victory was under 10%:

  1. District 6, 6.10%
  2. District 10, 6.14% (gain)
  3. District 15, 7.88%

See also

[edit]


2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators election
Westchester County
← 2015 November 7, 2017 2019 →

All 17 seats on the Westchester County Board of Legislators
9 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Democratic Catherine Parker 65.4 12 +3
Republican John Testa 29.2 4 −3
Conservative Margaret Cunzio 4.3 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

The 2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators elections were held on 7 November 2017 in conjunction with the 2017 Westchester County Executive election. The elections resulted in major gains for the Democratic Party[5] with the party flipping three previously Republican seats and control of the County Legislature from a Republican led Coalition. Benjamin Boykin became chair of the board and Catherine Parker Majority leader. Lohud attributed the major Democratic gains in heavily Democratic Westchester County as a reaction to the election of Donald Trump at the 2016 United States presidential election. The Democratic vote increased 6.71% as compared with the 2015 board of legislator elections. Democrats gained one seat they had previously left uncontested, the Peekskill based District 1 in addition to winning Districts 2 and 10 with their vote share increasing 8.13% and 5.48% respectively.

Electoral System

[edit]

Members of the Board of Legislators are elected every two years during the off-year elections. Elections are conducted using first-past-the-post in 17 single member districts. Like all partisan elections in New York, fusion tickets are used.

Results

[edit]
2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators Election Results[6]
Party Candidates Votes % % +/– Seats Seats +/–
Democratic 16 123,701 65.39% Increase 6.71% 12 Increase 3
Republican 9 55,310 29.24% Decrease 6.81% 4 Decrease 3
Conservative 1 8,117 4.29% Increase 0.11% 1 Steady
Independence 1 1,017 0.54% New 0 New
Working Families 1 650 0.34% New 0 New
Write-in N/A 380 0.20% Decrease 0.17% 0 0
Valid votes 28 189,175 84.12% Increase 4.92% 17 Steady
Blank votes 35,724 15.88% Decrease 4.92%
 Registered voters/Turnout 598,126[7] 37.6% Increase 14.4%[8]
Source: Westchester County Board of Elections results

*Results are added up for the party each candidate is a member of, not fusion tickets.

Popular vote
Democratic
65.39%
Republican
29.24%
Other
5.37%

By district

[edit]

BOLD represents a flip and ITALICS represent a new legislator of the same party.

District Incumbent Party +/- D% Elected Legislator Party
1 John G. Testa Rep +43.86% John G. Testa Rep
2 Francis T. Corcoran Rep +8.13% Kitley Covill Dem
3 Margareta A. Cunzio Con +0.88% Margareta A. Cunzio Con
4 Michael B. Kaplowitz Dem –0.01% Michael B. Kaplowitz Dem
5 Benjamin Boykin II Dem +0.45% Benjamin Boykin II Dem
6 David B. Gelfarb Rep +53.03% Nancy E. Barr Dem
7 Catherine F. Parker Dem +7.04% Catherine F. Parker Dem
8 Alfreda A. Williams Dem +0.27% Alfreda A. Williams Dem
9 Catherine A. Borgia Dem –1.72% Catherine A. Borgia Dem
10 Sheila M. Marcotte Rep +5.48% Damon R. Mather Dem
11 James Maisano Rep N/A James Maisano Rep
12 MaryJane C. Shimsky Dem +0.06% MaryJane C. Shimsky Dem
13 Lyndon D. Williams Dem +0.09% Lyndon D. Williams Dem
14 Bernice Spreckman Rep –0.32% David J. Tubiolo Rep
15 Gordon A. Burrows Rep +6.58% Gordon A. Burrows Rep
16 Ken Jenkins Dem –15.34% Christopher A. Johnson Dem
17 Jose I. Alvadrado Dem +5.19% Jose I. Alvadrado Dem

Close races

[edit]

Districts where the margin of victory was under 10%:

  1. District 6, 6.10% (gain)
  2. District 10, 6.14% (gain)
  3. District 15, 7.88%

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Democratic share change vs 2015 elections"



2019 elections

2023 Westchester County local elections

← 2021 7 November 2023 2025 →

All 76 local town council seats & 36 city council seats
  First party Second party Third party
 
Party Democratic Republican Others
Last election 80 seats 26 seats 6 seats
Seats won 73 30 9
Seat change Decrease 7 Increase 4 Increase 3














2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators election
Westchester County
← 2015 November 7, 2017 2019 →

All 17 seats on the Westchester County Board of Legislators
9 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Democratic Catherine Parker 65.4 12 +3
Republican John Testa 29.2 4 −3
Conservative Margaret Cunzio 4.3 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

The 2013 Westchester County Board of Legislators elections were held on 7 November 2017 in conjunction with the 2017 Westchester County Executive election. The elections resulted in major gains for the Democratic Party[9] with the party flipping three previously Republican seats and control of the County Legislature from a Republican led Coalition. Benjamin Boykin became chair of the board and Catherine Parker Majority leader. Lohud attributed the major Democratic gains in heavily Democratic Westchester County as a reaction to the election of Donald Trump at the 2016 United States presidential election. The Democratic vote increased 6.71% as compared with the 2015 board of legislator elections. Democrats gained one seat they had previously left uncontested, the Peekskill based District 1 in addition to winning Districts 2 and 10 with their vote share increasing 8.13% and 5.48% respectively.

Electoral System

[edit]

Members of the Board of Legislators are elected every two years during the off-year elections. Elections are conducted using first-past-the-post in 17 single member districts. Like all partisan elections in New York, fusion tickets are used.

Results

[edit]
2017 Westchester County Board of Legislators Election Results[10]
Party Candidates Votes % % +/– Seats Seats +/–
Democratic 16 123,701 65.39% Increase 6.71% 12 Increase 3
Republican 9 55,310 29.24% Decrease 6.81% 4 Decrease 3
Conservative 1 8,117 4.29% Increase 0.11% 1 Steady
Independence 1 1,017 0.54% New 0 New
Working Families 1 650 0.34% New 0 New
Write-in N/A 380 0.20% Decrease 0.17% 0 0
Valid votes 28 189,175 84.12% Increase 4.92% 17 Steady
Blank votes 35,724 15.88% Decrease 4.92%
 Registered voters/Turnout 598,126[11] 37.6% Increase 14.4%[12]
Source: Westchester County Board of Elections results

*Results are added up for the party each candidate is a member of, not fusion tickets.

Popular vote
Democratic
65.39%
Republican
29.24%
Other
5.37%

By district

[edit]

BOLD represents a flip and ITALICS represent a new legislator of the same party.

District Incumbent Party +/- D% Elected Legislator Party
1 John G. Testa Rep +43.86% John G. Testa Rep
2 Francis T. Corcoran Rep +8.13% Kitley Covill Dem
3 Margareta A. Cunzio Con +0.88% Margareta A. Cunzio Con
4 Michael B. Kaplowitz Dem –0.01% Michael B. Kaplowitz Dem
5 Benjamin Boykin II Dem +0.45% Benjamin Boykin II Dem
6 David B. Gelfarb Rep +53.03% Nancy E. Barr Dem
7 Catherine F. Parker Dem +7.04% Catherine F. Parker Dem
8 Alfreda A. Williams Dem +0.27% Alfreda A. Williams Dem
9 Catherine A. Borgia Dem –1.72% Catherine A. Borgia Dem
10 Sheila M. Marcotte Rep +5.48% Damon R. Mather Dem
11 James Maisano Rep N/A James Maisano Rep
12 MaryJane C. Shimsky Dem +0.06% MaryJane C. Shimsky Dem
13 Lyndon D. Williams Dem +0.09% Lyndon D. Williams Dem
14 Bernice Spreckman Rep –0.32% David J. Tubiolo Rep
15 Gordon A. Burrows Rep +6.58% Gordon A. Burrows Rep
16 Ken Jenkins Dem –15.34% Christopher A. Johnson Dem
17 Jose I. Alvadrado Dem +5.19% Jose I. Alvadrado Dem

Close races

[edit]

Districts where the margin of victory was under 10%:

  1. District 6, 6.10% (gain)
  2. District 10, 6.14% (gain)
  3. District 15, 7.88%

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Westchester County election results: 9 takeaways". 8 November 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "2017 General Election Canvass Book" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.
  3. ^ "2017 Enrollment Active" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "2015 Enrollment Active | Westchester County Board of Elections" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "Westchester County election results: 9 takeaways". 8 November 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "2017 General Election Canvass Book" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.
  7. ^ "2017 Enrollment Active" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ "2015 Enrollment Active | Westchester County Board of Elections" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "Westchester County election results: 9 takeaways". 8 November 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ "2017 General Election Canvass Book" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.
  11. ^ "2017 Enrollment Active" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ "2015 Enrollment Active | Westchester County Board of Elections" (PDF). Westchester County Board of Elections.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)



List of Administrative Division of Vatolean

[edit]
Name Municipality center Nation Population Council Members
Avannaata Ilulissat Greenland 10,726[1] 11
Kujalleq Qaqortoq Greenland 6,439 9
Qeqertalik Aasiaat Greenland 6,340[2] 9
Qeqqata Sisimiut Greenland 9,378 9
Sermersooq Nuuk Greenland 23,123 17
Eysturoy Faroe Islands 9,451 9
Norðoyar Faroe Islands 5,821 9
Sandoy Faroe Islands 1,325 5
Streymoy Faroe Islands 21,601 17
Suðuroy Faroe Islands 4,676 7
Sundalagið Faroe Islands 2,334 7
Vágar Faroe Islands 3,076 7
Dithmarschen Schleswig-Holstein 135,252 27
Herzogtum Lauenburg Schleswig-Holstein 203,712 29
Nordfriesland Schleswig-Holstein 169,043 27
Ostholstein Schleswig-Holstein 203,606 29
Pinneberg Schleswig-Holstein 322,130 31
Plön Schleswig-Holstein 131,266 27
Rendsburg-Eckernförde Schleswig-Holstein 278,979 29
Schleswig-Flensburg Schleswig-Holstein 206,038 29
Segeberg Schleswig-Holstein 284,988 29
Steinburg Schleswig-Holstein 132,419 27
Stormarn Schleswig-Holstein 247,973 29
Kiel Schleswig-Holstein 247,717 29
Lübeck Schleswig-Holstein 218,095 29
Neumünster Schleswig-Holstein 79,502 25
Flensburg Schleswig-Holstein 92,550 25
New Zealand
St. John Metropolitan Region St. John Vinland
Avalon Peninsula Vinland
Eastern Vinland Vinland
Central Vinland Vinland
West Vinland Vinland
Markland Markland City Markland
Arctic Bay Helluland 994
Clyde River Helluland 1,181
Iqaluit[a] Helluland 7,429
Kimmirut[b] Helluland 426
Kinngait[c] Helluland 1,396
Pangnirtung Helluland 1,504
Pond Inlet Helluland 1,555
Qikiqtarjuaq[d] Helluland 593
Copenhagen Municipality Copenhagen Denmark
Frederiksberg Municipality Frederiksberg Denmark
Outer Copenhagen County Glostrup Denmark
Frederiksborg County Hillerød Denmark
Roskilde County Roskilde Denmark
West Zealand County Sorø Denmark
Storstrøm County Nykøbing Denmark
Funen County Odense Denmark
South Jutland County Aabenraa Denmark
Ribe County Ribe Denmark
Vejle County Vejle Denmark
Ringkjøbing County Ringkøbing Denmark
Viborg County Viborg Denmark
North Jutland County Aalborg Denmark
Aarhus County Århus Denmark
Bornholm Rønne Denmark
Danish Virgin Islands Charlotte Amalie Virgin Islands 87,146 25
Arendelle
Capital Region Reykjavík Iceland 240,882 29
Southern Peninsula Keflavík Iceland 29,108 17
Western Region Borgarnes Iceland 17,019 13
Westfjords Ísafjörður Iceland 7,205 9
Northwestern Region Sauðárkrókur Iceland 7,405 9
Northeastern Region Akureyri Iceland 31,161 17
Eastern Region Egilsstaðir Iceland 11,031 11
Southern Region Selfoss Iceland 32,437 17
Population Councillors
<500 3
501–1,000 5
1,001–5,000 7
5,001–10,000 9
10,001–15,000 11
15,001–20,000 13
20,001–50,000 17
50,001–75,000 21
75,001–100,000 25
>100,001 +1 per each 100,000 inhabitants or fraction

+1 if total is an even number

Politics of Vatolean

[edit]

Iceland

[edit]

Althing

Vinland

[edit]

Vinland Parliament

Markland

[edit]

Markland Parliament

Helluland

[edit]

Helluland Parliament

Greenland

[edit]

Inatsisartut

Denmark

[edit]

Folketing

Schleswig-Holstein

[edit]

Landtag

Faroe Island

[edit]

Løgting

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Independence Party48,70824.39160
Progressive Party34,50117.2713+5
Left-Green Movement25,11412.578–3
Social Democratic Alliance19,8259.936–1
People's Party17,6728.856+2
Pirate Party17,2338.6360
Reform Party16,6288.335+1
Centre Party10,8795.453–4
Icelandic Socialist Party8,1814.100New
Liberal Democratic Party8450.420New
Responsible Future1440.070New
Total199,730100.00630
Source: Statistics Iceland

2023 Westchester County elections

[edit]

Bedford

[edit]

Cortlandt

Eastchester

Village of Tuckahoe

Greenburgh

Village of Ardsley

Village of Dobbs Ferry

Village of Irvington

Village of Tarrytown

Village of Hastings

Village of Harrison

Lewisboro

Mamaroneck

Village of Mamaroneck

Village of Larchmont

Mt. Kisco

Mt. Pleasant

New Castle

North Castle

Ossining

Pelham

Pound Ridge

Rye

Rye Town

Scarsdale

Somers

Yorktown

Mt. Vernon

New Rochelle

Peekskill

White Plains

Yonkers

`







Coastal Transit Commuter Rail

[edit]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coastal Transit Commuter Rail
Overview
OwnerIsland Transit
LocaleCoast Island
Transit typeRegional / commuter rail
Number of lines8
Number of stations56
Daily ridership88,000 (Q3 2023)
Annual ridership10,000,000 (2021)
Operation
Began operation1968; 56 years ago (1968) (as Public Operations)
Operator(s)CT Transit
Reporting marksCTCR
Number of vehicles25 Locomotives
Technical
System length250 mi (400 km)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Top speed90 mph (140 km/h)

Coastal Commuter Rail also referred to just as "Coastal" is a commuter rail system on Coast Island with 8 lines, over 300 trains on weekdays, an average weekday ridership of 88,000, and a total of 18,650,000 passenger trips in FY 2019. Coastal Commuter Rail is owned by the Coast Island Government and operations are controlled by Island Transit under the Coastal Transit banner. Coastal Commuter Rail services

There are 56 stations and more than 250 miles (400 km) of track on its eight commuter lines. As of 2023 Coastal is currently planning to open 6 new stations by 2030.

Trains originate at two major terminals, New Haven Union Station and Chester. The service between the two terminates is provided by the Guilford Line which is the busiest line in the system.

Operations & History

[edit]

Coastal has eight commuter lines. Most trains operate in push-pull mode with minor exceptions. The cab car is usually on the north end of the train. This is to allow for the prevention of noise in New Haven and South Side stations. Train lengths can vary from two to four cars. The Coast Island Government oversees all Coastal operations as they are vital for the nation's economy.

Station service legend
Stops all times Stops all times
Stops rush hours only Stops rush hours only
Stops rush hours in the peak direction only Stops rush hours in the peak direction only
Time period details
Disabled access Station is compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act
Disabled access ↑ Station is compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act
in the indicated direction only
Disabled access ↓
Elevator access to mezzanine only
Line Terminus Express Service Stations Division Former Operator
Guilford Line New Haven Guilford (electric service)

Chester (diesel service)

Guilford Stops rush hours in the peak direction only

Chester Stops all times

16 Eastern New Haven
Newcastle Line New Haven Hampton (rush hour short turn)

Southport (southern terminus)

Southport Stops rush hours in the peak direction only Eastern Castleton & NH RR
Farmington Line New Haven Croydon (rush hour short turn)

Farmington (southern terminus)

Farmington Stops rush hours in the peak direction only (1 AM)[e] Eastern Coast Island Central
Camden Line New Haven Worcester Ave (off peak short turn)

Southlake (southern terminus)

Southlake Stops rush hours in the peak direction only (1 AM)[f] Eastern New Haven
Exeter Line New Haven Exeter No Eastern Coast Island Central
Chester Line Monroe Chester Monroe Stops rush hours in the peak direction only (1 AM)[g] Western Coast Island Central
Lewisville Line Lewisville W. Salem (off peak)

Chester (peak)

No Western Coast Island Central
Lincoln Line Portland Chester Portland Stops rush hours in the peak direction only Western Islands RR

Stations

[edit]
A Farmington Line Train awaits it's departure from New Haven.

As of July 2023, there are 56 stations. Since Coastal's opening in 1968 nine stations have closed (West Chester, Chester Heights, Auburn College, and Southampton and the Jefferson branch) 12 additional stations are have opened since the start of service including the Exeter Line and Monroe Line north of West Salem. Several new stations are planned or under construction. Stations range from one door long platforms with bus shelters like Crystal Lake to grand city terminals like New Haven or Chester. The standard station is three cars long to handle the average Coastal train length. About half of stations have high level platforms and 40 stations are accessible. Most accessible stations have full-length high platforms for accessible boarding on all cars; others only have "mini-high" platforms about 10 feet (3.0 m) long allowing for level boarding from one door with the rest of the platform length not accessible. Coastal is currently planning to making nine stations accessible.

Fares

[edit]

Coastal fares are based on zone travel. Travel within one zone is $1.50 and travel between each zone is an additional $1.00. The Coastal system is made out of 8 zones based off distance from New Haven. Stations is bold are accessible.

Zone 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Guilford Line New Haven, South Side Westbrook, Salisbury, Jefferson, Harmon Greenfield, East Chester, Guilford Vernon, Vernon Heights, Madison, Auburndale Cedar Hill, Fairport, Chester
Newcastle Line New Haven, East Haven Newcastle, Essex Hampton, Westport Southport ↓Transfer for service to points north
Farmington Line New Haven, North Haven Hamilton, Croydon, Franklin Forest Kingsville, Farmington
Camden Line New Haven, South Side, Worcester Ave Goose Creek Camden, Southlake
Exeter Line New Haven Crystal Lake Exeter
Chester Line Chester, Chester Gardens, Lee Anderson, Oakland, West Salem Monmouth, Monmouth Grove Brookfield, Carrolton Monroe
Lewisville Line Chester, Chester Gardens, Lee Anderson, Oakland, West Salem Riverhead, Lewisvile
Lincoln Line Chester, Chester Gardens Lincoln, East Lincoln, Shoreline North Shore, Glendale Dublin, Dover, Dublin Height, Portland

COVID-19 pandemic

[edit]

Starting just weeks prior to the start of the Covid-19 pandemic on Coast Island service on most lines was reduced to accommodate work on both Westbrook and Havens Interlockings. On 16 March 2020, Coastal announced a plan to operate a weekend schedule seven days a in anticipation of reduced ridership during the COVID-19 pandemic. At the beginning of April, service was again cut to "essential levels" with greatly reduced service on all lines and buses replacing train service on the Exeter Line. Starting in July 2021 service would begin to be restored and returned to around pre-pandemic levels on all lines in 2023. According to Coastal's monthly report, ridership had reached 95% of pre-pandemic levels in June 2023.

Infrastructure

[edit]

Eastern Division

[edit]

Propulsion systems

[edit]

All service on the Camden, Exeter, Farmington, and Newcastle Lines are powered by diesel locomotives and coaches. Services on these lines mainly use a mix of GP40-2H, P42DC, and F40PH locomotives paired with Mafersa, Shoreliner, and Budd Coaches. Guilford Line services originating west of Guilford use diesel power similar to those used on other Eastern Division lines, while most Guilford Line trains originating at, or to the east of Guilford use 25 kV 60 Hz overhead catenary with EP-5, FL9, P32AC-DM, Metroliner, and Silverliner Vs.

Signaling and safety appliances

[edit]

The Camden, Chester-Lewisville, Farmington, Guilford, and Newcastle Lines use cab signaling with color position light (also known as CPLs). Trains on the Exeter and Lincoln Lines use absolute block signals and lack cab signaling. Major interlockings are control by towers near Chester Gardens (also control Salem Interlocking, Chester, Auburndale, Guilford, New Haven (controls the eastern division minus the Guilford Line).

Rolling stock

[edit]

Current

[edit]

Coastal uses the following rolling stock for its commuter rail operations:

Plans

[edit]

Eastern Division

[edit]

Camden Line

[edit]

Coastal plans to increase frequency on the Camden Line

Notes

[edit]

Next Coast Island general election

[edit]

The Next Coast Island general election is scheduled to be held on or before 1 September 2024 to elect all 51 members of the Coast Island House of Representatives. The Labor Party Minority government under Prime Minister Harper Chen will being running for re-election against Liberal Leader Sophie Bennett and Greens Leader Oliver Thompson.

Pre-election parliament

[edit]
Member Party Electorate County Years in office
Emma Smith   Labor Newcastle Castleton 2008
Benjamin Hughes   Liberal Hampton Castleton 2005
Sophie Bennett   Liberal Northport Castleton 2021
Emily Walsh   Liberal Dublin Dublin 2021
Declan O'Rourke   Labor Farmington Northeast 2002
Sienna Patel   Labor Croydon Northeast 2002
Connor Murphy   Labor Farmingdale Northeast 2005
Olivia Sinclair   Liberal Wessex Bay Wessex 1999
Liam Connolly   Labor Salem-Riverhead Wessex 2005–2022
Ella Roberts   Liberal Wessex 2022–present
Nathan Reynolds   Liberal Port Dover Wessex 2002
Oliver Hughes   Greens Monmouth Wessex 2010
Olivia Harrison   Liberal North Wessex Wessex 1999
Elijah Thompson   Labor Wessex City Wessex 2002
Sophia Campbell   Liberal Wessex Junction Wessex 2021
Olivia Harrison   Liberal Camden Guilford 2021
Daniel Murphy   Labor Vernon Guilford 2002
Olivia Reynolds   Labor Vernon Heights Guilford 1999
Elijah Thompson   Labor Madison Guilford 2002
Xavier Hughes   Labor Guilford Road Guilford 2021
Olivia Sinclair   Liberal Greenfield Guilford 2021
Benjamin Thompson   Labor Guilford Guilford 2010
Benjamin Thompson   Liberal North Guilford Guilford 1990–2002, 2010–present
Xavier Nguyen   Liberal Hathorn-Australia Guilford 1987
Ethan Harrison   Labor Lincoln Chester 2018
Jackson Andrews   Liberal North Chester Chester 2021
Alexander Hughes   Liberal Anderson Chester 2015
Nathan Reynolds   Liberal Oakland-Farm Town Chester 1996
Oliver Thompson   Greens University Chester 2013
Declan Harris   Labor Auburndale Chester 2021
Harrison Mitchell   Liberal Auburn Hill Chester 2017
Sophie Reynolds   Liberal 2022–present
Lucas Anderson   Liberal Fairport East Chester 2015
Helen Martinez   Liberal Fairport Chester 2021
Jimmy Donaldson   Progressive North Island Chester 2018
Miguel Gonzalez   Labor Chester Square Chester 2018
Maya Cruz   Independent Newington Chester 2021
Lucas Bennett   Liberal Exeter New Haven 2021
Alejandro Rodriguez   Labor Harmon New Haven 2014
Declan Murphy   Liberal Jefferson Bay New Haven
  • 2010–2018;
  • 2021–present
Mateo Russo   Labor Sailsbury New Haven 2018
Harper Chen   Labor Jefferson Center New Haven 2005–present
Isabella Conti   Liberal East Port New Haven 2021
Alejandro Ramirez   Labor Westbrook New Haven 2013
Jamal Campbell   Labor Salisbury North New Haven 2018
Malik Khan   Greens Worcester New Haven 2018
Marco Rossi   Labor North Haven New Haven 2018
Andreas Papadopoulos   Liberal Crystal Lake New Haven 2019
Ivan Petrov   Labor Southtown New Haven 2013
Alejandro Kowalski   Labor Elmont-Easton New Haven 2018
Daniel Alvarez   Labor Tom's River New Haven 2021
Liam O'Connor   Labor Belmont New Haven 2013
Alejandro Silva   Labor Downtown New Haven 2005

Opinion Polling

[edit]
Polling firm Last date

of polling[1]

Labor Liberal Green Pro Others Lead
CBC October 2023 35 38 18 3 6 3
IBC 1 September 2023 27 40 15 6 12 13
CBC April 2023 38 32 19 4 7 6
CBC October 2022 42 28 18 5 7 14
20 August 2022 - Liberals win Salem-Riverhead and Auburn Hill by-elections.
CBC April 2022 41 30 16 5 8 11
IBC 17 January 2022 36 27 19 3 15 9
CBC October 2021 38 32 14 6 10 6
15 September 2021 - Sophie Bennett elected leader of the Liberal Party.
2021 general election 7 August 2021 33.6 33.0 14.9 4.0 14.5 0.6


2021 Coast Island general election

[edit]
2021 Coast Island general election
← 2018 7 August 2021 2024 →

All 51 seats in the House of Representatives
26 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Labor Harper Chen 33.6 25 −7
Liberal Alexander Hughes 33.0 21 +4
Greens Oliver Thompson 14.9 3 +1
Progressive Jimmy Donaldson 4.0 1 +1
Independents Maya Cruz 2.5 1 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

The 2021 Coast Island general election was held on 7 August 2021 to elect the 51 members of Coast Island House of Representatives with 199 polling centers being establish across the country. The election resulted first-term majority government led by Prime Minister Harper Chen falling into minority by just one seat but remaining in government. The Liberal Party under Alexander Hughes came in second and remained the official opposition. The Greens received a historic strong result with the party winning a third seat and 14.9% of the popular vote under leader Oliver Thompson. The Progressive Parties' lone MP, former Labor member Jimmy Donaldson was re-elected. Independent Maya Cruz won the seat of Newington.


The swings against Labor were strongest in Chester, Wessex, Dublin, and Castelton Counties with the Liberals surprising many by outright wining Chester County and Dublin County with the party winning each county for the first time since 1999 and 1978 respectively. Labor remained strong in New Haven, Guilford, and Northeast Counties were the parties vote share and seat count remained largely unchanged. Alexandra Chang of CBC News noted that the swing against Labor on the West Coast was likely due to white working class voters shifting to the Liberals while better off suburbanites in Guilford and Northeast Counties stayed with Labor due to Chen being see as trustworthy and strong on economic issues. The Labor Party's 33.6% vote share was the lowest winning share of any party. The Greens support at this election came mainly from younger and more diverse areas with the party holding it's seats of Worcester and University in addition to gaining the seat of Monmouth from Labor.

Results

[edit]

Overall result

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Labor 148,497 33.6 –9.4 25 Decrease 7
  Liberal 145,950 33.0 +3.5 21 Increase 4
  Greens 65,909 14.9 +6.0 3 Increase 1
  Christian Democrats 25,595 5.8 +4.6 0 Steady
  National 22,299 5.0 –4.9 0 Steady
  Progressive 17,678 4.0 +3.3 1 Increase 1
  Independents 11,193 2.5 –0.1 1 Increase 1
  Animal Justice 3,877 0.9 –1.6 0 Steady
  Libertarians 1,412 0.3 −0.1 0 Steady
 Total 442,410 100.00 51 Steady
 Registered voters / turnout 67.5 +10.4

Results by County.

[edit]
Party New Haven Chester Guilford Wessex Northeast Dublin Castleton
% Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats % Seats
  Labor 41.9 11 27.4 3 33.8 5 24.9 2 42.9 3 36.0 0 33.1 1
  Liberal 27.2 4 35.4 6 33.0 4 39.3 4 24.6 0 38.4 1 37.9 2
  Greens 17.4 1 13.4 1 13.3 0 15.6 1 15.5 0 11.5 0 11.0 0
  Christian Democrats 6.5 0 8.0 0 4.3 0 4.0 0 3.2 0 3.0 0 5.0 0
  National 3.6 0 4.2 0 5.8 0 10.0 0 6.0 0 1.8 0 1.8 0
  Progressive 1.1 0 6.7 1 5.4 0 3.8 0 3.4 0 4.8 0 5.6 0
  Independents 2.2 0 5.0 1 3.9 0 Did Not Contest
  Animal Justice 0.2 0 No Contest 0.6 0 2.5 0 2.3 0 2.5 0 3.0 0
  Libertarians Did Not Contest 2.1 0 2.0 0 2.6 0
 Total 100.00 16 100.00 12 100.00 9 100.00 7 100.00 3 100.00 1 100.00 3
 Registered voters / turnout 64.3 68.5 68.3 68.2 70.2 71.6 73.7

Seats changing hands.

[edit]
Seat 2018 Swing 2021
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Dublin   Labor Aiden Murphy 5.1 7.5 2.4 Emily Walsh Liberal  
East Port   Labor Marco Rossi 4.8 12.0 7.2 Isabella Conti Liberal  
Fairport   Labor Michael Johnson 1.1 33.8 32.7 Helen Martinez Liberal  
Guilford Road   Liberal Isabella Thompson[h] 0.7 3.4 2.7 Xavier Hughes Labor  
Jefferson Bay   Labor Maria Garcia 3.8 24.6 20.8 Declan Murphy Liberal  
Monmouth   Labor Rachel Thompson 17.9 27.7 7.8 Oliver Hughes Greens  
Newington   Labor Alejandro Santos 45.0 61.9 16.9 Maya Cruz Independent  
North Island   Labor Jimmy Donaldson 27.6 28.8 1.2 Jimmy Donaldson Progressive  
Northport   Labor Liam O'Connor 23.1 39.8 16.7 Sophie Bennett Liberal  

2023 Coast Island local elections

[edit]
2023 Coast Island local elections
← 2020 28 January 2023 2026 →

All 609 seats on 45 town & city councils
8 county councils
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Labor Harper Chen 35 −6
Liberal Sophie Bennett 30 −1
Greens Oliver Thompson 12 +2
Independents 10 +1
Others 13 +4
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.




Population Councillors
<100 3
100–250 5
251–1,000 7
1,001–2,000 9
2,001–5,000 11
5,001–10,000 13
10,001–20,000 17
20,001–50,000 21
50,001–100,000 25
>100,001 +1 per each 100,000 inhabitants or fraction

+1 if total is an even number

Results

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Independents 1,3921,42 33.73 –2.05 776 Decrease 86
  Labor 1,071,688 26.67 +1.05 188 Increase 3
  Liberal 703,796 17.52 –7.99 127 Decrease 13
  Greens 355,196 8.84 +0.21 65 Increase 11
  Independent Liberal 95,602 2.38 +1.08 7 Increase 2
  Our Local Community 72,942 1.81 +0.08 10 Increase 6
  Clover Moore Independent Team 47,877 1.19 –1.41 4 Decrease 1
  Your Northern Beaches 46,355 1.15 –8.00 6 Steady
  Shoalhaven Independents 27,254 0.68 –0.63 4 Decrease 1
  Lake Mac Independents 24,922 0.62 –0.48 3 Steady
  Women's Party 18,774 0.47 +0.47 3 Increase 3
  Residents and Ratepayers 16,607 0.41 +0.41 4 Increase 4
  Independent National 16,140 0.40 9
  Small Business 12,244 0.30 +0.30 1 Increase 1
  Shooters, Fishers and Farmers 12,053 0.30 +0.12 5 Increase 3
  Residents First Woollahra 10,951 0.27 –0.07 5 Steady
  Liverpool Community Independents 10,803 0.27 –0.48 2 Steady
  Animal Justice 9,724 0.24 +0.20 1 Increase 1
  Lorraine Wearne Independents 9,423 0.24 +0.05 1 Steady
  Community First Team 7,561 0.19 –0.22 1 Steady
  Sustainable Australia 7,308 0.18 +0.18 2 Increase 2
  Serving Mosman 6,870 0.17 –0.09 4 Increase 1
  Good For Manly 6,629 0.17 –0.48 1 Steady
  Ben Shields Team 5,687 0.14 +0.01 1 Steady
  Totally Locally Committed 4,809 0.12 –0.33 1 Decrease 1
  Liberal Democrats 4,376 0.11 −0.09 0 Decrease 1
  Strathfield Independents 4,120 0.10 +0.03 2 Increase 1
  Nella Hall Independents 3,298 0.09 –0.07 1 Steady
  Independent Labor 2,892 0.08 –0.15 1 Decrease 3
  Our Sustainable Future 2,769 0.07 –0.19 1 Steady
  Socialist Alliance 2,612 0.07 +0.05 0 Steady
  Australia First 2,549 0.06 –0.10 0 Steady
  Kogarah Residents Association 919 0.02 –0.14 0 Decrease 1
  Arts 536 0.01 +0.01 0 Steady
  Science 536 0.01 +0.01 0 Steady
  Communist League 116 0.01 +0.01 0 Steady
  Independent One Nation 46 0.00 –0.16 0 Decrease 1
 Total 4,018,048 100.00
 Registered voters / turnout 4,838,137 83.05 +6.45

Auburndale

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Liberal 3,443 28.06 5 Decrease 1
  Greens 2,806 22.87 5 Increase 1
  Independents 2,656 21.65 5 Increase 1
  Labor 2,397 19.54 5 Decrease 1
  Our Local Community 524 4.27 1 Steady
  Animal Rights Party 217 1.77 0 Steady
  National 130 1.06 0 Steady
  Freedom 80 0.65 0 Steady
  Independent Labor 17 0.14 0 Steady
 Total 12,270 100.00 21
 Registered voters / turnout

Ward Results

[edit]

Astoria Ward

[edit]

Labor candidate Mia Santiago defeated Liberal Carl Hall for the second seat.

Astoria Ward
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Greens Severina Samuelsson (elected) 556 42.7
Labor Mia Santiago (elected) 233 17.9
Liberal Carl Hall 131 10.1
Greens Maya Carter 122 9.4
Liberal Chrysanta Tosetti 84 6.4
Labor Grozda Alesci 79 6.1
Animal Rights Party Emilio Torres 71 5.4
Independent Miranda Wright 27 2.1
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,303 71.8

Auburn Ward

[edit]

Green Alejandro Martinez defeated Liberal Incumbent Ethan Johnson.

Auburn
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Rhys Johnson (elected) 377 30.9
Liberal Ethan Johnson 301 24.7
Greens Alejandro Martinez (elected) 278 22.8
Labor Sofia Ramirez 108 8.8
Independent Hans Schneider 59 4.8
Greens Isabella De Luca 57 4.7
Independent Natalia Fernandez 41 3.4
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,221 81.5

Auburn Farm's Ward

[edit]

Independent councilor Jamal Johnson retained his seat.

Auburn Farm's
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Jamal Johnson (elected) 408 83.1
Liberal Lucia Ferrari 54 11.0
Independent Nikolai Volkov 29 5.9
Registered electors 621

Auburn Hill Ward

[edit]

Councilor Gionvanni Russo was re-elected

Auburn Hill
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Giovanni Russo (elected) 316 81.0
Greens Aaliyah Wagner 34 8.7
Labor Valentina Gonzalez 19 4.9
Independent Sofia Lombardi 17 4.4
Animal Rights Party Tyrone Olsen 4 1.0
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 390 92.6

Auburndale

[edit]

Former Labor council member Marco Santoro was elected as an Independent.

Auburndale
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Eriksson Lund (elected) 548 28.2
Labor Aaliyah Thompson (elected) 357 18.4
Greens Alessandra Rizzo (elected) 297 15.3
Independent Marco Santoro (elected) 270 13.9
Liberal Ivana Petrov 205 10.6
Greens Mateo Rodriguez 87 4.5
Labor Diego Lopez 70 3.6
Independent Liesl Martinez 67 3.4
Liberal Amir Rodriguez 28 1.4
Animal Rights Natalia Fernandez 14 0.7
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,943 66.7

Brunswick East Ward

[edit]

Councilors Dominic Santoro and Bianca Russo were re-elected.

Auburn Hill
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Dominic Santoro (elected) 425 35.4
Liberal Bianca Russo (elected) 284 23.7
Greens Alessandra Rizzo 268 22.4
Liberal Connor Thompson 198 16.5
National Ava Patel 24 2.0
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,199 68.9

College District Ward

[edit]

Independent Valentina Santos defeated Green Incumbent Matteo Esposito.

College District
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Greens Matteo Santoro (elected) 379 16.1
Labor Alejandro Herrera (elected) 338 14.4
Independent Valentina Santos (elected) 269 11.5
Greens Matteo Esposito 247 10.5
Liberal Bianca Rossi 242 10.3
Independent Isabella Costa 195 8.3
Independent Lucas Schmidt 186 7.9
Independent Niklas Bergstrom 172 7.3
Animal Rights Mikhail Ivanov 128 5.4
Independent Aaliyah Washington 97 4.1
Freedom Javier Morales 80 3.4
Independent James Martin 15 0.6
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 2,349 86.3

Derry Ward

[edit]

Derry Representative Mariana Fernandez was elected, replacing Independent Natalia Lopez.

Derry
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Mariana Fernandez (elected) 434 60.5
Liberal Alejandro Herrera 283 39.5
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 717 89.1
Independent hold Swing

Green's Hill Ward

[edit]

Green's Hill Councilor, Independent Viktor Sokolov, was re-elected.

Green's Hill
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Viktor Sokolov (elected) 115 31.9
Our Local Community Lucia Rodriguez 99 27.5
Liberal Henrik Nielsen 74 20.6
Independent Amara Johnson 72 20.0
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 360 51.5

Hunt's River

[edit]

Matthias Berg of Our Local Community was re-elected.

Hunt's River
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Our Local Community Matthias Berg (elected) 331 41.0
Liberal Andrei Popovic 110 13.6
National Elena Martinez 106 13.1
Greens Amara Johnson 104 12.9
Labor Aisha Carter 51 6.3
Independent Camila Silva 42 5.2
Independent Maximilian Weber 21 2.6
Independent Labor Niklas Lundqvist 17 2.1
Independent Maya Thompson 15 1.9
Independent Valeria Johnson 10 1.2
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 807 82.9
Party total votes
Independent 88 10.9
Labor 68 8.4

London Ward

[edit]

Outgoing Labor councilor Layla Jackson was replaced by Green Sofia Alvarez.

London
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Anton Petrov (elected) 416 40.5
Greens Sofia Alvarez (elected) 284 27.6
Liberal Nikolai Volkov 135 13.1
Labor Alessandra Romano 100 9.7
Greens Lars Hansen 93 9.0
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,028 74.0

Port View

[edit]

Sitting Independent Councilor Isabella Marquez lost re-election to Liberal Dimitri Kuznetsov.

Port View
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Dimitri Kuznetsov (elected) 205 41.7
Independent Isabella Marquez 124 25.2
Our Local Community Jake Marshall 94 19.1
Labor Enton Ford 69 14.0
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 492 83.4

Brookfield

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Liberal 1,155 48.21 10 Increase 1
  Labor 361 15.61 2 Steady
  Independents 340 14.70 0 Decrease 1
  Greens 255 11.02 1 Steady
  Carrolton United 218 9.42 2 Steady
  Liberal Democrats 4,376 1.04 0 Steady
 Total 4,018,048 100.00
 Registered voters / turnout 4,838,137 83.05 +6.45

Monroe Bank

[edit]

Valentina Gomez of the Liberal Party defeated sitting member Independent Stella Everly.

Monroe Bank
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Erik Johansson (elected) 154 17.7
Liberal Rafael Fernandez (elected) 119 13.7
Liberal Valentina Gomez (elected) 104 12.0
Liberal Ivan Petrovic (elected) 101 11.6
Greens Mia Brown (elected) 95 10.9
Liberal Lucas Montgomery 84 9.7
Independent Stella Everly 78 9.0
Independent Xavier Santiago 55 6.3
Greens Daphne Russo 43 4.9
Independent Nathaniel Cole 19 2.2
Independent Tim Lopez 17 2.0
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 869 84.2

Brookfield

[edit]
Brookfield
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Leila Patel (elected) 150 22.8
Liberal Dominic Archer (elected) 150 22.8
Labor Luna Vasquez (elected) 104 15.8
Independent Declan Sawyer 82 12.5
Liberal Aurora Chen 54 8.2
Greens Asher Donovan 36 5.5
Greens Freya Gallagher 27 4.1
Libertarian Amara Singh 24 3.6
Independent Jonah Bennett 18 2.7
Independent Serena Castillo 13 2.4
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 658 95.4

Carrolton Ward

[edit]

The Carrolton United Party gained the seat held by Liberal Samuel Ruiz.

Carrolton
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Carrolton United Zoe Costa (elected) 112 40.0
Labor Hudson Fletcher 72 25.7
Carrolton United Lila Patel (elected) 59 21.1
Liberal Samuel Ruiz 24 8.6
Greens Eva Andersen 13 4.6
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 280 57.0

Washington Ward

[edit]

The Liberal Party gained the seat held by Carrolton United councilor Logan Williams.

Washington
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Benjamin Donovan (elected) 105 40.1
Liberal Nova Ibrahahim (elected) 73 27.9
Carrolton United Logan Williams 47 17.9
Labor Scarlett Kaur 23 8.8
Greens Atticus Patel 14 5.3
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 262 72.4

National Beach Ward

[edit]

Liberal Councilor Elodie Malik was re-elected.

National Beach
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Elodie Malik (elected) 147 60.2
Independent Esme Khan 58 23.8
Greens Caleb O'Connor 27 11.1
Labor Ruby Morales 12 4.9
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 244 93.5

Camden

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Liberal 435 26.69 3 Steady
  Camden Party 356 21.84 3 Increase 1
  Independents 289 17.73 1 Steady
  Labor 259 15.89 2 Steady
  Greens 244 14.97 2 Steady
  National 47 2.88 0 Decrease 1
 Total 100.00 11
 Registered voters / turnout

Camden Lakes Ward

[edit]

National Party Councilor Roman Mitchell lost re-election to Labor candidate Nora Chen.

Camden Lakes
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Caleb Williams (elected) 234 28.8
Camden Party Isla Alvarez (elected) 120 14.8
Greens Wyatt Davis (elected) 113 13.9
Liberal Elena Sato 80 9.8
Liberal Elias Torres (elected) 63 7.7
Labor Nora Chen (elected) 63 7.7
National Roman Mitchell 47 5.8
Liberal Genevieve Patel 45 5.5
Labor Xavier Lopez 20 2.5
Independent Dahlia Gupta 16 2.0
Greens Jonah Campbell 12 1.5
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 813 91.7

Camden Ward

[edit]

The seat's Labor councilor Calliope Singh lost re-election to Camden Party Candidate Zara Tran.

Camden
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Camden Party Rosalie Kim (elected) 190 23.3
Liberal Leo Perez (elected) 153 18.7
Labor Ophelia Huynh (elected) 108 13.2
Liberal Asher Taylor (elected) 94 11.5
Greens Everett Cooper (elected) 60 5.6
Camden Party Zara Tran (elected) 46 5.6
Labor Calliope Singh 43 5.3
Greens Nathaniel Carter 40 4.9
Independent Delilah Patel 39 4.8
Labor Grayson Park 25 3.1
Greens Valentina Das 19 2.3
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 817 68.0

Chester

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Labor 8,586 37.12 11 Decrease 2
  Liberal 4,059 17.55 5 Decrease 3
  Chester Alliance 3,770 16.30 4 Increase 2
  Greens 2,218 9.59 2 Increase 1
  Independents 1,942 8.40 0 Steady
  Christian Democrats 1,407 6.08 1 Steady
  Animal Rights 675 2.92 0 Steady
  Maya Cruz Networks 472 2.04 1 Increase 1
  Progressive 335 1.45 1 Increase 1
 Total 23,129 100.00 25
 Registered voters / turnout

North Island

[edit]

Labor Councillors Jasper Patel and Liberal Party Dahila Das lost their seats to Progressive Serena Clarke and Green Rafaela Santos.

North Island
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor 1. Elodie Wong (elected)
2. Oliver Foster (elected)
3. Celeste Patel (elected)
4. Elijah Brown (elected)
5. Seraphina Patel (elected)
6. Jasper Patel
7. Adelaide Das
4,639 59.2
Chester Alliance 1. Logan Kim (elected)
2. Elara Patel
951 12.1
Liberal 1. Finnegan Singh (elected)
2. Dahlia Das
3. Samuel Lee
4. Nora Shah
5. Roman White
6. Genevieve Patel
502 6.4
Greens 1. Rafaela Santos (elected)
2. Theo Martinez
3. Luna Rodriguez
4. Dante Rivera
497 6.3
Progressive Serena Clarke (elected) 335 4.3
Independent Mateo Fernandez 316 4.0
Animal Rights Esmeralda Silva 303 3.9
Christian Democrats 1. Nico Rossi
2. Isadora Costa
295 3.8
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 7,838 88.6

Southwest

[edit]

Valentina Perez and Maya Patel defeated Ellas Khan and Valentina Ruiz.

Southwest
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor 1. Camila Alvarez (elected)
2. Luca Gonzalez (elected)
3. Valentina Ruiz
4. Santiago Herrera
5. Isabella Lopez
6. Lorenzo Ramirez
1,962 35.2
Chester Alliance 1. Diego Chavez (elected)
2. Maya Patel (elected)
3. Tomas Cruz
1,301 23.3
Liberal 1. Sofia Nguyen (elected)
2. Elias Khan
3. Ana Morales
4. Javier Gomez
5. Valeria Morales
6. Matias Cohen
991 17.8
Maya Cruz Network Valentina Perez (elected) 472 8.5
Greens 1. Nicolas Nguyen
2. Mariana Santos
3. Rafael Garcia
331 5.9
Independent 1. Lucia Hernandez
2. Esteban Flores
270 4.8
Animal Rights 1. Emilia Khan
2. Emiliano Rojas
191 3.4
Christian Democrats Elena Ortiz 63 1.1
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 5,581 93.1

Chester Square

[edit]

Xavier Montromgery defated Selena Donovan.

Chester Square
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor 1. Luna Harrington (elected)
2. Felix Santiago (elected)
3. Aurora Manning
4. Dante Chambers
1,009 27.0
Greens 1. Celeste Chang (elected)
2. Jasper Martinez
3. Esme Hawthorne
4. Sterling Patel
796 21.3
Chester Alliance 1. Xavier Montgomery (elected)
2. Freya Montgomery
3. Nolan Harrington
4. Amara Caldwell
991 17.8
Liberal 1. Selena Donovan
2. Maximus Archer
3. Phoenix Hayes
4. Seraphina Russo
400 10.7
Independent 1. Zephyr Montgomery
2. Orion Blackwell
3. Isla Cunningham
4. Nova Middleton
344 9.2
Independent Silas Jefferson 297 7.9
Christian Democrats 1. Leilani Donovan
2. Lyra Bishop
274 7.3
Animal Rights Juniper Thornton 29 0.8
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 3,739 93.0

Tealport

[edit]
Tealport
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal 1. Lucas Foster (elected)
2. Serena Nguyen
3. Gabriel Ramirez
929 29.0
Labor 1. Stella Hoffman (elected)
2. Elijah Chang
3. Aurora Alvarez
534 16.7
Chester Alliance 1. Amara Patel
2. Leo Donovan
3. Maya Singh
527 16.5
Greens 1. Sebastian Silva
2. Natalia Wang
3. Mateo Rodriguez
380 11.9
Christian Democrats Sofia Fernandez (elected) 372 11.6
Independent Dante Khan 183 5.7
Animal Rights Damian Martinez 152 4.7
Independent 1. Luna Khan
2. Matteo Russo
126 3.9
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 3,203 91.9

Fairport West

[edit]
Faiport West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Luna Chavez (elected) 517 45.5
Christian Democrats Xavier Tran 323 28.4
Labor Kieran Hayes 170 15.0
Greens Jocelyn Patel 126 11.1
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,136 89.0

Eastchester

[edit]
Eastchester
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Eamon Foster (elected) 600 66.2
Independent Delphine Wang 307 33.8
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 907 62.3
Liberal hold Swing

Trunkville

[edit]
Trunckville
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Ciaran Lopez (elected) 272 40.3
Liberal Aoife Gomez 120 18.2
Independent Eoin Martinez 99 15.0
Greens Saoirse Tran 88 13.4
Christian Democrats Alastair Garcia 80 12.1
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 659 85.8

Chester Heights

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Liberal 1,078 37.07 5 Increase 1
  Labor 955 32.84 4 Decrease 2
  Independents 707 24.31 2 Increase 1
  Greens 161 5.54 0 Steady
  Christian Democrats 7 0.24 0 Steady
 Total 2,908 100.00 11
 Registered voters / turnout

North Bridge

[edit]

Former Labor Councilor Tadhgan Perez was elected as an Independent.

North Bridge
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Rónán Rodriguez (elected) 420 27.9
Independent Cliodhna Foster (elected) 313 20.8
Independent Tadhgan Perez (elected) 209 13.9
Liberal Deirdre Khan (elected) 163 10.8
Liberal Eithne Nguyen (elected) 131 8.7
Independent Daire Silva 111 7.4
Labor Nuala Santos (elected) 80 5.3
Liberal Eithne Nguyen 32 2.1
Greens Daithí Morales 22 1.5
Greens Síofra Alvarez 19 1.3
Liberal Blathnaid Ramos 3 0.2
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,503 95.4

Bridgeton

[edit]

Liberal Síle Hernandez replaces incumbent Labor councilor William Fernando.

Bridgeton
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Cian Kim (elected) 224 30.1
Liberal Síle Hernandez (elected) 195 26.2
Labor Eavan Martinez (elected) 191 25.6
Independent Ruairi Tran 62 8.3
Labor Fiadh Garcia 35 4.7
Greens Grainne Silva 28 3.8
Labor Diarmaid Nguyen 10 1.3
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 745 87.3

Old Chester

[edit]

Both sitting councillors were re-elected.

Old Chester
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Ailbhe Santos (elected) 128 28.4
Liberal Fionnuala Patel 101 22.4
Greens Síomha Kim 92 20.4
Labor Lorcán Fernandez (elected) 67 14.9
Labor Aoibhín Wang 44 9.8
Independent Fionnghuala Rodriguez 12 2.7
Christian Democrats Mairéad Lopez 7 1.6
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 451 86.1

Corridor

[edit]
Corridor
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Adam Johnson (elected) 108 51.7
Liberal Gabriel Martinez 101 48.3
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 209 76.3
Labor hold Swing

Croydon

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing Seats Change
  Labor 2,603 49.27 11 Decrease 1
  Liberal 1,070[i] 20.25 2 Increase 1
  Greens 811 15.35 2 Steady
  Independents 610 11.55 2 Steady
  Christian Democrats 189 3.58 0 Steady
 Total 5,283 100.00 17
 Registered voters / turnout

Hamilton

[edit]

All sitting members were re-elected.

Hamilton
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Liam Johnson (elected) 269 27.9
Labor Noah Williams (elected) 181 18.8
Greens Emma Smith (elected) 137 14.2
Labor William Jones 110 11.4
Christian Democrats Isabella Miller 98 10.2
Greens Ava Garcia 95 9.9
Liberal James Davis 74 7.7
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 964 92.6

West Croydon

[edit]

Liberal Benjamin Taylor defeated Labor councilor Lucas Davis.

West Croydon
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Benjamin Taylor (elected) 496 42.2
Independent Charlotte Martinez (elected) 298 25.4
Independent Elijah Anderson (elected) 167 14.2
Labor Mia Hernandez (elected) 112 9.5
Labor Lucas Davis 55 4.7
Greens Amelia Rodriguez 37 3.1
Independent Mason Martinez 10 0.9
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,175 66.5

Croydon

[edit]

Outgoing Labor councilor Jacob Walker was replaced by Evelyn Wilson.

Croydon
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Harper Gonzalez (elected) 338 25.7
Greens Ethan Perez (elected) 299 22.8
Labor Evelyn Wilson (elected) 260 19.8
Labor Alexander Rodriguez 190 14.5
Greens Abigail Lopez 115 8.8
Independent Logan Lee 84 6.4
Liberal Emily Moore 28 2.1
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,314 74.4

Old Croydon

[edit]

All sitting members were re-elected.

Old Croydon
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Camila Perez (elected) 237 21.1
Labor Michael Hill (elected) 207 18.5
Labor Sofia Rivera (elected) 183 16.3
Liberal Daniel Ramirez (elected) 172 15.3
Liberal Avery Sanchez 137 12.2
Greens Jackson Clark 94 8.4
Christian Democrats Victoria Young 91 8.1
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 1,121 63.5

Miltown

[edit]

Labor Councilor Sebastian Lewis was re-elected against Liberal backed Independent Scarlett Torres.

Miltown
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Sebastian Lewis (elected) 195 79.3
Independent Scarlett Torres 51 20.7
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 246 82.0
Labor hold Swing

Inland Isle

[edit]

Liberal candidate Aiden Nguyen was disendorsed.

Inland Isle
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Matthew Wright (elected) 177 38.2
Liberal Aiden Nguyen 104 22.5
Labor Luna Scott (elected) 89 19.2
Liberal Riley King 59 12.7
Greens Carter Green 34 7.3
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 463 58.2

Crystal Lake

[edit]
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Liberal 227 59.1 4 Decrease 1
  Labor 49 12.8 1 Steady
  Animal Rights 48 12.5 1 Increase 1
  Christian Democrats 41 10.7 1 Increase 1
  Greens 19 4.9 0 Decrease 1
 Total 384 100.00 7
 Registered voters / turnout
Crystal Lake
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal 1. Theo Donovan (elected)
2. Jasper Nguyen (elected)
3. Sofia Gonzalez (elected)
4. Mateo Hernandez (elected)
5. Camila Lopez
6. Juan Rivera
7. Lucia Perez
227 59.1
Labor 1. Carlos Diaz (elected)
2. Valentina Santos
3. Elena Rossi
49 12.8
Animal Rights Party Elara Patel (elected) 48 12.5
Christian Democrats Alejandro Dimitrov (elected) 41 10.7
Greens Isabella Kovac 19 4.9
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 384 92.3

Dublin

[edit]

East Croydon

[edit]

Exeter

[edit]

Fairport

[edit]

Farm Town

[edit]

Farmingdale

[edit]

Farmington

[edit]

Franklin

[edit]

Glendale

[edit]

Goose Lake

[edit]

Greenfield

[edit]

Guilford

[edit]

Hampton

[edit]

Harmon

[edit]

Jefferson

[edit]

Johnson

[edit]

Lee

[edit]

Lewisville

[edit]

Lincoln

[edit]

Madison

[edit]

Monmouth

[edit]

Monroe

[edit]

New Haven

[edit]

Newcastle

[edit]

Newington

[edit]

North Chester

[edit]

North Shore

[edit]

North Wessex

[edit]

Northport

[edit]

Oakland

[edit]

Portland

[edit]

Riverhead

[edit]

Salem

[edit]

Shoreline

[edit]

Southlake

[edit]

Vernon

[edit]

Wessex

[edit]

2021 New Haven County election

[edit]
2023 Coast Island local elections
← 2020 6 April 2024 2026 →

All 609 seats on 45 town & city councils
8 county councils
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Labor Harper Chen 35 −6
Liberal Sophie Bennett 30 −1
Greens Oliver Thompson 12 +2
Independents 10 +1
Others 13 +4
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Party Votes % Swing[7] Seats Change
  Liberal 1 Increase 1
  Labor 0 Decrease 1
  Greens 0 Steady
  Independents
  Independent Liberal
  Our Local Community
  Clover Moore Independent Team
  Your Northern Beaches
  Shoalhaven Independents
  Lake Mac Independents
  Women's Party
  Residents and Ratepayers
  Independent National
  Small Business
  Shooters, Fishers and Farmers
  Residents First Woollahra
  Liverpool Community Independents
  Animal Justice
  Lorraine Wearne Independents
  Community First Team
  Sustainable Australia
  Serving Mosman
  Good For Manly
  Ben Shields Team
  Totally Locally Committed
  Liberal Democrats
  Strathfield Independents
  Nella Hall Independents
  Independent Labor
  Our Sustainable Future
  Socialist Alliance
  Australia First
  Kogarah Residents Association
  Arts
  Science
  Communist League
  Independent One Nation
 Total 4,018,048 100.00
 Registered voters / turnout 4,838,137 83.05 +6.45

Belmont

[edit]
Belmont
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Luna Cruz 3,149 48.3
Labor Maximus Alvarez 2,260 34.5
Greens Seraphina Ramos 1,112 17.1
Total formal votes
Informal votes
Turnout 6,521
Two-party-preferred result
Liberal Luna Cruz 3,291 50.5
Labor Maximus Alvarez 3,230 49.5
Liberal gain from Labor Swing

Crystal Lake

[edit]

Downtown

[edit]

East Port

[edit]

Elmont-Easton

[edit]

Exeter

[edit]

Harmon

[edit]

Jefferson

[edit]

Jefferson Bay

[edit]

North Haven

[edit]

Tom's River

[edit]

Salisbury

[edit]

Salisbury North

[edit]

Southtown

[edit]

Westbrook

[edit]

Worcester

[edit]

List of towns & cities on Coast Island

[edit]
Name Pop.

(2023)

County Type Form of

government

Councilors Wards
New Haven 153,859 New Haven City Mayor-council 27 North Haven, East Port, Belmont, Elmont, North Yards, Haven Yards, Worcester, Westbrook, Southtown, South Westbrook, Downtown, Crystal Lake, Creekville, Salisbury North, University, Tom's River, Easton, Lake East
Chester 51,685 Chester City Mayor-council 25 Chester Square, Southwest, Fairport West, North Island, Eastchester, Trunkville, Tealport
Guilford 46,037 Guilford City Mayor-council 21 Guilford, Old White Horse, Green, North Greenfield, Paterson, Hawthorn, Australia, Bayview
Wessex 36,624 Wessex City Mayor-council 21 Wessex City, Wessex Junction, Freeport, Port of Monroe, Stratport
Auburndale 32,504 Chester City Mayor-council 21 Auburndale, Brunswick East, Port View, College District, London, Derry, Astoria, Hunt's River, Auburn, Auburn Hill, Green's Hill, Auburn Farm's.
Jefferson 30,566 New Haven City Mayor-council 21 Jefferson Bay, Salisbury, Ferry, Jefferson Center, Metroplex, Central Bay, Goose-on-Sea
Monmouth 29,630 Wessex City Mayor-Representative town meeting 21 City of Monmouth, Monmouth Grove, Wagga, Brushwick, Port Dover
Vernon 23,507 Guilford City Mayor-council 21 Vernon, Vernon Heights, Vernon River, Vernon Lake, Fleetown
Fairport 19,900 Chester City Mayor-council 17 Fair River, Fairport, Cedar Gardens, Cedar Hill
Greenfield 18,813 Guilford City Mayor-council 17 Greenfield, North Greenfield, Guilford Road, Greenfield Sound
North Chester 16,623 Chester City Mayor-council 17 Chester Gardens, Forest Hills, Auburnville
Newcastle 14,376 Castleton Town Mayor-council 17 East Haven, River Haven, Castle Head, Essex
Croydon 13,617 Northeast City Mayor-council 17 Hamilton, West Croydon, Croydon, Old Croydon, Miltown, Inland Isle
Farmington 12,877 Northeast City Mayor-council 17 Farmington, Kingsville, East Farmingdale, King's Hill, North River, Seaside Cove, Glen Isle, Riverford
Hampton 11,391 Castleton Town Mayor-council 17 North Hampton, Hampton, Westport, Southport
Lee 10,549 Chester City Mayor-council 17 Lee, West Shore, Oakland South, North Chester, Anderson, West Anderson
Madison 9,594 Guilford Town Mayor-council 13 Madison, College East, North Village, Old Madison
Harmon 9,288 New Haven Town Mayor-council 13 Riverside, Harmon, North Bradford, Bradford
North Wessex 8,806 Wessex Town Council-manager 13 West Farmington, Riverport, Portsmouth
Oakland 8,566 Chester City Mayor-council 13 San Park, Oceanside, North Anderson, County
Lincoln 8,504 Chester City Mayor-council 13 East Lincoln, Lincoln Center, South Shore, Shore
Exeter 8,142 New Haven Town Mayor-council 13 Exeter, Central Highway, South Exeter
Franklin 6,476 Northeast Town Council-manager 13 Forest, Franklin, Railtown, Weston
Chester Heights 6,450 Castleton Town Council-manager 13 North Bridge, Bridgeton, Corridor Valley, Old Chester
Farmingdale 6,248 Northeast Town Council-manager 13 East Farmingdale, City Green's, Northeast, Lin Town, Green's Place
Southlake 5,977 Guilford Town Mayor-council 13 Southlake, Newville, Aston, Greenville, Southtown
Brookfield 5,669 Wessex Town Mayor-council 13 Monroe Bank, Brookfield, Carrollton, Washington, National Beach
Monroe 5,000 Wessex Town Mayor-council 11 Monroe Manor, Scarsdale, Monroe Square, Wessex Bay
Newington 4,916 Chester Town Mayor-council 11 Newington Island, East Island, Little Island
Northport 4,707 Castleton Town Council-manager 11 Arora, Newport, Main Street, Port Croydon, Seatown
North Shore 4,336 Dublin Town Mayor-council 11 North Shore Central, West North Shore
Salem 4,200 Wessex Town Council-manager 11 West Salem, Salem City, Crystal Town
Camden 3,816 Guilford Town Mayor-council 11 Camden Lakes, Camden
Lewisville 2,668 Wessex Town Council-manager 11 Lewisville, South Junction
Dublin 2,171 Dublin Town Mayor-council 11 Dublin, Dublin Heights, Dover, West Dover
Glendale 1,080 Dublin Town Mayor-council 9 Glen Island, Glendale, East Shore
Crystal Lake 832 New Haven Town Council-manager 7 North Lake, Exeter South, Riverfront, National Park
Shoreline 679 Chester Town Mayor-council 7 Shoreport, Shoreline, North Shoreline
East Croydon 653 Northeast Town Council-manager 7 Castleton Isle, East Croydon, West Chester
Johnson 538 Northeast Town Council-manager 7 Johnson
Farm Town 506 Chester Town Council-manager 7 Farmtown, Fork Lake
Riverhead 231 Wessex Town Council-manager 5 Riverhead
Goose Lake 221 New Haven Town Council-manager 5 Goose Creek, West Salisbury, Lake
Westfield 109 Wessex Town Council-manager 5 Eastfield, Town
Portland 108 Dublin Town Council-manager 5 West Oceanside, Portland

2021 Hillsborough by-election

[edit]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2021 Hillsborough by-election

← 2020 13 June 2021 Next →

Hillsborough constituency
 
Grn
Candidate Al Baldasaro Rebecca Perkins Kwoka Amanda Bouldin
Party Conservative Greens Labor


Incumbent MP

Dick Hinch
Conservative



The 2021 Hillsborough by-election was a by-election held in the New England parliamentary constituency of Hillsborough following the death of the sitting Member of Parliament (MP) and Conservative Shadow Minister, Dick Hinch.

The by-election resulted in the election of Conservative Party Candidate Al Baldasaro to represent the seat in the New England House of Representatives. Despite a slight slip in the Conservative Party vote share, the results were seen as a success for the Conservatives as the party proved it could hold it's own in rural New England against the up and coming Greens.

Results

[edit]
By-election 2021: Hillsborough
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Al Baldasaro 59,074 48.1 –0.3
Greens Rebecca Perkins Kwoka 35,302 28.8 –8.1
Labor Amanda Bouldin 21,032 17.1 +4.8
Independent William Marsh 5,004 4.1 New
People's Alliance Jilletta Jarvis 2,279 1.9 –0.5
Majority 23,772 19.3 +7.8
Turnout 122,691 70.1 –4.3

Previous result

[edit]
2020 general election: Hillsborough
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Dick Hinch 63,005 48.4
Greens Andru Volinsky 48,017 36.9
Labor David Woodbury 16,004 12.3
People's Alliance Jilletta Jarvis 3,132 2.4
Majority 11,303 11.5 +6.7
Turnout 130,158 74.4
Conservative hold Swing

See also

[edit]


2021 West Nova by-election

[edit]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2021 West Nova by-election

← 2020 6 June 2021 Next →

West Nova constituency
Turnout41.6% Decrease 17.0%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Lab
Lib
Candidate Gordon Wilson Peter MacKay Lisa Norman
Party Labor Conservative Liberal
Popular vote 31,038 30,319 5,415
Percentage 42.6% 41.6% 7.4%
Swing Decrease 0.3% Decrease 10.7% Increase 5.3%

Location of West Nova within Nova Scotia

MP before election

Chris d'Entremont
Conservative

Elected MP

Gordon Wilson
Labor

The 2021 West Nova by-election was a by-election held in the New England parliamentary constituency of West Nova following the resignation of the sitting Member of Parliament (MP), Chris d'Entremont. It was held on 6 June 2021.

This was the first by-election to the parliament elected in 2020.

The Labor candidate, Gordon Wilson, won the by-election with 42.6% of the vote and a swing from the Conservatives of almost 6%. The Labor Party won in the constituency with a majority of 719 votes.

Background

[edit]

Constituency

[edit]

The constituency was created in 1966 from Annapolis—Kings and Yarmouth. The boundaries of this constituency will remain unchanged as per the 2017 federal electoral redistribution. West Nova was a safe Conservative seat until the 2020 general election.

Results

[edit]
By-election 2021: West Nova
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Gordon Wilson 31,038 42.6 –0.3
Conservative Peter MacKay 30,319 41.6 –10.7
Liberal Lisa Norman 5,415 7.4 +5.3
People's Alliance William Archer 2,541 3.5 New
Greens Judy N. Green 1,776 2.4 +0.0
Atlantica Kent Robinson 918 1.3 Mew
Independent Ian Thurber 467 0.6 New
Independent Harold Neil 332 0.5 New
Majority 719 1.0 New
Turnout 72,806 41.6 –17.0
Labor gain from Conservative Swing +5.5

Previous result

[edit]
2020 general election: West Nova
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Chris d'Entremont 62,791 52.3 –5.9
Labor Colin Fraser 51,488 42.9 +1.0
Greens Judy N. Green 2,898 2.4 New
Liberal Matthew Dubois 2,526 2.1 New
Independent Gloria Cook 308 0.3 New
Majority 11,303 9.6 –5.6
Turnout 120,011 68.6
Conservative hold Swing –3.5

See also

[edit]

Attleboro (New England Parliament constituency)

[edit]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Attleboro
County constituency
for the House of Commons
Electorate175,000
Current constituency
Member of ParliamentBarney Frank (Labor)

Attleboro is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the New England Parliament by Barney Frank of the Labor Party.

Boundaries

[edit]

2017–present: Brockton, Easton, Norton, Mansfield, North Attleboro, and Attleboro (Northern Parts).

2021–?: Brockton, Easton, Norton, Mansfield, North Attleboro, and Attleboro.

Members of Parliament

[edit]
Election Member Party
2017 Barney Frank Labour

Elections

[edit]

Elections in the 2020s

[edit]
General election 2020: Attleboro
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Barney Frank 132,502 100.0
Majority 132,502 100.0
Turnout 136,896 75.7
Labour hold Swing

Freeport (New England Parliament constituency)

[edit]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Freeport
County constituency
for the House of Commons
Electorate175,000
Current constituency
Member of ParliamentSara Gideon (Labor)

Freeport is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the New England Parliament by Sara Gideon of the Labor Party.

Constituency profile

[edit]

Freeport is located in southern Maine, just north of Portland and goes up the coast to central Maine.

Boundaries

[edit]

2017–present:

2021–?: China, Fairfield, Clinton, Waldoboro, Damariscotta, Bristol, Bath, Brunswick, Lisbon, Poland, and Mechanic Falls.

Members of Parliament

[edit]
Election Member Party
2017 Sara Gideon Labour

Elections

[edit]

Elections in the 2020s

[edit]
General election 2020: Freeport
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Sara Gideon 81,254 59.4
Conservative Lance E. Walker 55,642 40.6
Majority 25,612 18.7
Turnout 136,896 78.2
Labour hold Swing

March 1848 Vatolean general election

[edit]
March 1848 Vatolean general election

12 March 1848 November 1848 →

All 12 seats in the Rigsdagen
7 seats needed for a majority
Registered204,240
 
Leader Adam Wilhelm Moltke Johan Christian Drewsen
Party National Liberal Residents Association
Leader since 1845 1846
Leader's seat Zealand Roskilde



The March 1848 Vatolean general election was the first national election in Vatolean history.

Results by constituency

[edit]
Outer Regions
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
National Liberal Johan Nicolai Madvig 49,843 54.7
Residents Association Lauritz Nicolai Hvidt 41,264 45.3
Turnout 50,632
Copenhagen
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Højre Andreas Frederik Krieger 29,508 44.4
Højre Peter Georg Bang 20,184 30.4
National Liberal Frederik Marcus Knuth 16,694 25.1
Turnout
Zealand
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
National Liberal Adam Wilhelm Moltke
Højre Christian Albrecht Bluhme
National Liberal Ditlev Gothard Monrad
National Liberal Henrik Nicolai Clausen
Turnout
Roskilde
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Residents Association Johan Christian Drewsen
Residents Association Anton Frederik Tscherning
National Liberal Carl Christian Hall
Turnout
Schleswig
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
National Liberal Orla Lehmann 71,516 93.5
NOTA 4,992 6.5
Turnout
Jutland
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Wilhelm Sponneck 19,461 42.9
Højre Anders Sandøe Ørsted 12,976 28.6
Residents Association Balthazar Christensen 12,951 28.5
Turnout

1846 Arendelle general election

[edit]
1846 Arendelle general election
← 1827 26 November 1846 Next →

14 of the 15 seats on the Arendelle Council
8 seats needed for a majority
Turnout72.6%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Conservative General Destin Mattias 55.07 6 +2
Liberal Oaken 34.60 6 −3
Independent 10.34 3 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Absolute Monarch (Queen Anna) General Destin Mattias
Conservative

Elections for the Arendelle Legislative Council were held on 26 November 1846. These were the first elections since the closing of the gates in the lead up to the canceled 1830 elections and the coronation of Queen Anna in the October of 1846. The elections were contested by the Conservatives, Liberals, and Independent Kristoff Bjorgman. General Destin Mattias and the Conservative Party were elected largely due to the parties' close relations with the new queen. Elections were in each of Arendelle's 13 constituencies.

History & Elections

[edit]

At the 1827 Arendelle general election the Liberals won a majority of seats on the Arendelle Council with Lord Petterson being elected Prime Minister. Elections in Arendelle typically take place every three years but as part of the closing of the gates, elections were canceled and the 1827 council was dismissed by King Agnarr in addition to an Absolute Monarchy being installed. King Agnarr would be killed in 1840 while at sea with Kai taking over as interim Prime Minister and a care taker government formed. Queen Elsa would be coronated in 1843 and the gates opened after which a short period of a military dictator under Prince Hans of the Southern Isles and the Duke of Weselton would take place. When Anna dies for Elsa "in an act of true love" Hans is deported and Anna revived.

Queen Elsa promises "the flag of Arendelle will always fly" despite the flag literally flying away during the fall of 1846.

In 1846 Queen Elsa hears a voice calling from the North, the Queen would discover the Enchanted Forest, Northuldra peoples, and a small number of Arendelleian troops who had been trapped in the forest since April 1812. After searching for days "into the unknown" Elsa takes her place as the fifth spirt and Princess Anna breaks Runeard's Dam (named after the sister's colonialist grandfather and king of Arendelle until 1812). Queen Elsa would abdicate the throne in the fall of 1846 and Anna would take the throne after which she calls the 1846 elections to regain the support of the people of Arendelle following 16 years of political instability. The council would be reformed with each town having one MP totaling in 14 members in addition to the reigning monarch who serves as the chair and tie breaking vote. The Conservatives would campaign on a platform of minor political reforms with the popular slogan of "do the next right thing". Despite the Conservatives closer relations with the new Queen and traditional monarchy supporters, Arenedelleians closer in line with the former queen and Liberalism largely supported the Liberals with the party outright wining the North Mountains and Roaring River-South of River voting sights despite high levels of support for Kristoff Bjorgman in those regions as well.

See also

[edit]
No. Name Term of office Party Election Monarch

(reign)

Took office Left office Time in office
1 Christian Michelsen

(1857–1925)

11 March 1905 23 October 1907 2 years, 226 days Liberal Party 1906
2 Jørgen Løvland

(1848–1922)

23 October 1907 19 March 1908 148 days Liberal Party
3 Gunnar Knudsen

(1848–1928)

19 March 1908 2 February 1910 1 year, 320 days Liberal Party 1909
4 Wollert Konow

(1845–1924)

2 February 1910 20 February 1912 2 years, 18 days Free-minded Liberal Party
5 Jens Bratlie

(1856–1939)

20 February 1912 31 January 1913 346 days Conservative Party 1912
6 Gunnar Knudsen

(1848–1928)

31 January 1913 21 June 1920 7 years, 142 days Liberal Party 1915

1918

7 Otto Bahr Halvorsen

(1872–1923)

21 June 1920 22 June 1921 1 year, 1 day Conservative Party
8 Otto Albert Blehr

(1847–1927)

22 June 1921 6 March 1923 1 year, 257 days Liberal Party 1921
10 Abraham Berge

(1851–1936)

30 May 1923 25 July 1924 1 year, 56 days Free-minded Liberal Party
11 Johan Ludwig Mowinckel

(1870–1943)

25 July 1924 5 March 1926 1 year, 223 days Liberal Party 1924
13 Christopher Hornsrud

(1859–1960)

28 January 1928 15 February 1928 18 days Labour Party
14 Johan Ludwig Mowinckel

(1870–1943)

15 February 1928 12 May 1931 3 years, 86 days Liberal Party 1930
15 Peder Kolstad

(1878–1932)

12 May 1931 5 March 1932 298 days Agrarian Party
16 Jens Hundseid

(1883–1965)

14 March 1932 3 March 1933 354 days Agrarian Party
18 Johan Nygaardsvold

(1879–1952)

20 March 1935

in exile from 1940

25 June 1945 10 years, 97 days Labour Party 1936
17 Lord Peterssen 20 May 1820 29 July 1843 2 years, 17 days Liberal 1820

1823 1826 (Nation Unity) 1829 1833 1837 1841

9 Kai 29 July 1843 30 November 1846 3 years, 124 days Conservative 1843
12 General Destin Mattias 30 November 1846 Incumbent Conservative 1846


Monarchy of Arendelle

[edit]
Monarch of Arendelle
Incumbent
Queen Anna
since October 1846
Details
StyleHer Majesty
Heir apparentKristoff Bjorgman (?)
First monarchAren (founder of Arendelle)
Formationc.536; 1488 years ago (536)
ResidencesArendelle Castle since circa late 1700s.

The monarchy of Arendelle is a constitutional institution and a historic office of the Kingdom of Arendelle. According to ancient stories the Monarchy of Arendelle started with the founding of Arendelle by the hero Aren circa 500. The current monarch is Queen Anna who ascended to the throne following the abdication of Queen Elsa in 1846 and is at least the 15th monarch of Arendelle.

Note the Frozen world leaves off in the fall of 1846.




Name Portrait Birth Marriages Death Notes
Lord Aren

before 536(?)

before 536 AD

hero and founder of Arendelle

N/A N/A Founder of Arendelle and kingdom's namesake. Existence is question by many including Anna. King before the "last ice age" (Fimbulvetr)
Fimbulvetr (536-545)[j]
Unknown monarchs (?)
Eric of Arendelle[k] c.late 1500s-1600s Great grandfather of King Runeard
Unknown c.early 1600s

N/A

Else of Arendelle[l] c.mid 1600s

N/A

Grandmother of King Runeard
Unknown c.late 1600s

N/A

Unknown c.1700s

N/A

N/A

at least one son

c. 1700s

age unknown

King Runeard

c.1700s–1812

c. 1700s

son of unknown monarch

Queen Rita

at least one son

1812

age unknown

Killed in battle with the Northuldra.
King Agnarr

April 1812–1840

1798

son of King Runeard and Queen Rita

Queen Iunda

two daughters

1840

aged 41–42

Death at sea while searching for answers about Elsa's powers.
Office vacant(?) 1840-1843[m]
Queen Elsa

July 1843–October 1846

21 December 1821

eldest daughter of King Agnarr and Queen Iunda

None

Olaf, Marshmallow, Snowgies

Living

aged 24

Abdicates the trone.
Queen Anna

October 1846–present

21 June 1825

sister of Queen Elsa

Kristoff Bjorgman

(engaged)

Incumbent

aged 21

Ascension to the throne after sister's abdication.

Politics of Vatolean

[edit]
Election Party Total

seats

Elected

Prime Minister

S M G L H C V O D I Others
1775 25 25 Ove Høegh-Guldberg (I)
1779 25
1783 25
1787 25
1791 25 Ernst Heinrich von Schimmelmann (I)
1795 25
1798 25
1802 40 40
1806 40
1810 40 Frederik Moltke (I)
1814 40 Frederik Julius Kaas (I)
1818 40
1822 40
1826 17 23 Otto Joachim Moltke (I)
1830 15 25 Adam Wilhelm Moltke (O)
1834 20 20
1838 Jan. 2 4 16 18
1838 Sep. 9 3 14 14 Anton Frederik Tscherning (L)
1842 1 5 24 10 Adam Wilhelm Moltke (O)
1846 4 4 20 12
1848 14 5 14 7 Anton Frederik Tscherning (L)
1852 11 4 19 13 47 Adam Wilhelm Moltke (O)
1856 13 5 24 4 1
1860 15 4 26 2 0 Christian Albrecht Bluhme (O)
1864 14 4 24 5
1868 4
1872
1875 Anton Frederik Tscherning (V)
1879
1883
1887
1891
1895
1899
1903
1907
1911
1917
1920 51
1924
1926
1930 Thorvald Stauning (S)
1934
1938
1941
1945 75
1949
1953 79
1957
1961
1965
1969
1973
1975
1976
1980
1983
1987 6 0 6
1991 29 1 1 10 10 4 3 8 Poul Nyrup Rasmussen (S)
1994 34 0 1 7 8 1 0 7 Helen Clark (S)
1998 27 0 1 8 5 2 2 8 Poul Nyrup Rasmussen (S)
2002 20 0 1 6 6 31 0 2 13 Anders Fogh Rasmussen (V)
2006 23 3 5 4 2 26 - 7 9
2010 25 4 5 4 2 25 - 8 10
2014 26 7 5 5 1 20 - 6 1 8 Helle Thorning-Schmidt (S)
2017 24 10 2 7 1 16 - 12 1 6
2019 24 11 2 5 0 18 - 11 0
Jun. 2020 19 14 4 3 0 18 - 2 0
Sep. 2020 28 16 4 2 1 15 0 3 1 9
Data from Kmdvalg.dk 2005, 2009, 2013, 2017 and 2021

Polling (September 2020)

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Polling (June 2020)

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Polling (October 2019)

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Polling (June 2019)

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123

Vatolean polling (February 2020)

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2020 New England General Election

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2020 New England General Election was held on Saturday 17 October 2020. The election resulted in a 8 seat majority for the New England Labor Party and the re-election of Prime Minister Bernie Sanders.

The Labor Party, lead by Prime Minister Bernie Sanders, won 65 seats. The Conservative Party lead by Eric Ulrich won 47 seats. The Green Party, lead by Jenica Atwin, won a record 6 seats in the House of Representatives. For the first time a member of the People's Alliance was elected to parliament. 3 Independent member of parliament were elected.

Background

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Parties

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Incumbent not running for re-election

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Timeline

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Opinion polls

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Results

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Summary

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Results by province

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Full results

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Results of the December 2019 general election to the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of New England
Political party Leader Candidates MPs[8] Votes
Total Gained Lost Net Of total
(%)
Total Of total
(%)
Change
(%)
Labor Bernie Sanders 122 65 10 12 Decrease2 53.3 7,358,890 44.6 −0.6
Conservative Eric Ulrich 114 47 9 14 Decrease5 53.3 6,678,749 40.5 −3.3
Greens Jenica Atwin 58 6 5 0 Increase5 38.5 1,643,659 10.0 +2.8
People's Alliance Kris Austin 26 1 1 0 Increase1 0.8 535,187 3.2 +1.4
Independent 10 3 1 0 Increase1 2.5 197,070 1.2 +0.3
Liberal Jennifer McKenzie 13 0.0 67,463 0.4 −0.7
Shooters, Fishers, Farmers 1 0.0 1,457 0.0
Total 344 122 0 100 16,482,475 100 0.0
Registered voters, and turnout 21,350,000 77.2

Seats changing hands

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Seats which changed allegiance

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  1. ^ Frobisher Bay was officially renamed Iqaluit on January 1, 1987.[3]
  2. ^ Lake Harbour was officially renamed Kimmirut on April 1, 1982.[4]
  3. ^ Cape Dorset was officially renamed Kinngait on February 28, 2020.[5]
  4. ^ Broughton Island was officially renamed Qikiqtarjuaq on November 1, 1998.[6]
  5. ^ "Train originates in Farmington then stops at Kingsville, Franklin, Croydon, North Haven, and New Haven"
  6. ^ "Train originates in Southlake then stops at Camden and New Haven"
  7. ^ "Train originates in Monroe then stops at Carrollton, Brookfield, Monmouth, Monmouth Grove, West Salem, and then non stop to Chester"
  8. ^ "Isabella Thompson was elected as a Liberal at the 2018 election but quit the party in 2020 over local road funding"
  9. ^ Includes votes for Aiden Nguyen
  10. ^ "Referred to as the last ice age"
  11. ^ "Great-Great grandfather of King Runneard"
  12. ^ "Grandmother of King Runneard"
  13. ^ "No known monarch or government is known to be in office from the death of Agnarr in 1840 and Corenation of Elsa in 1843."