Canadian federal election - October 19, 2015: Official Results & Analysis Thread (user search)
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  Canadian federal election - October 19, 2015: Official Results & Analysis Thread (search mode)
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Author Topic: Canadian federal election - October 19, 2015: Official Results & Analysis Thread  (Read 88170 times)
Linus Van Pelt
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« on: October 19, 2015, 05:41:02 PM »

The poll closing times are really nonsensical. If the west is earlier in local time to minimize the absolute time between regions, why wouldn't the Atlantic be latest in local time?
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Linus Van Pelt
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« Reply #1 on: March 02, 2016, 11:42:11 PM »

Great work, all!
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Linus Van Pelt
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« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2016, 10:13:45 PM »

Conservative:

99.54% Poll #13 in Peace River-Westlock (out of 216 votes, 1 voted Green )
99.12% Poll #8 in  Peace River-Westlock  (out of 227 votes, 2 voted Liberal)

That area around La Crete - essentially all Mennonite and Cree - has got to be the most polarized in the country.

The dots on the map below represent polls where the Conservative vote is: 99.5%, 98.6%, 98.3%, 98.2%, 97.7%, 95.2%, 91.5%, 3.3%, 0%, 0% (with both of the last two actually 0 votes).

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Linus Van Pelt
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« Reply #3 on: May 12, 2016, 09:03:03 PM »
« Edited: May 12, 2016, 09:05:38 PM by Linus Van Pelt »



Here is the map for Special Voting Rules, Group 1, which groups together:
- Canadian Forces voters away on duty from their ordinary residence: 28,431 (47.5%)
- voters who are incarcerated in prison: 20,673 (34.6%)
- voters who live outside Canada: 10,707 (17.9%). Note that these are cut off from voting after 5 years abroad unless they are diplomats (or UN/NATO officials etc.)

Unfortunately, these categories are not broken down by riding. In theory, the military voters vote at their home address, but it's clear that many actually use an address near the base. The average is about 177 votes per riding, but you often see 500-1000 in ridings with bases. One question I wonder about is to what extent career officers - who might vote differently from enlisted troops - are more likely to use a base address, but I don't know.

As you can see, this vote is mostly Liberal, but with some strange regional patterns. This seems to suggest that expats and prisoners together form a very Liberal category. But basically this is a strange and hard to interpret map.

In the Atlantic, the vote is actually a bit less Liberal than the general electorate. My guess about this would be that the category is more military here, with high enlistment and low crime rates. Gagetown (army) outside Fredericton and Greenwood (air force) in West Nova show up clearly in vote numbers and Conservative voting. The navy bases at St. John's and Halifax also show up in numbers, but the ridings are Liberal; one interesting thing the map seems to suggest overall is that the navy is more Liberal than the other two services.

In Quebec, the vote is strongly Liberal with a few exceptions. Valcartier (army) just northwest of Quebec City shows up hugely in total votes and Conservative % in surrounding ridings, and Bagotville (air force) in the Saguenay can also be seen. There's an army base in eastern Montreal but it looks maybe like a lot of the staff commute from the south shore. The area around Beauce is one of the few areas of the country where the Conservatives win without a military presence.

The Ontario pattern is pretty similar to Quebec, with Conservative+turnout clusters from Borden (army) in Simcoe-Grey, Petawawa (army) in Renfrew-Nipissing-Pembroke, and Trenton (army) and Kingston (air force base + Royal Military College) along the Lake Ontario shore. In Ottawa, meanwhile, turnout is also high in all ridings. It looks maybe like diplomats live closer the city core while National Defence HQ commutes in more from the suburbs? Meanwhile, the Toronto NDP vote holds up reasonably well here - maybe more lefty young adult expats whose last address was in the city?

In the west, meanwhile, the vote is much more Liberal than the general electorate, making for some ridiculous results. The west has higher crime rates, and very disproportionate Aboriginal incarceration. But still, why exactly it should be so Liberal rather than NDP I'm not sure. Aside from a handful of rural Alberta ridings, the only Conservative wins are around Shilo (army) outside Brandon MB, a tie in Moose Jaw (air force), Cold Lake (air force) in Fort-McMurray-Cold Lake, Edmonton (army) drawing on northern Edmonton suburbia, and Comox (air force) on Vancouver Island. Esquimalt (navy) is in a narrowly Liberal riding but probably affects the close result as well as the Conservative win in the neighboring Cowichan riding.
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Linus Van Pelt
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« Reply #4 on: May 13, 2016, 07:36:00 PM »

Prisoners vote by their last home address, not at the prison. And there are no vote clusters around prisons, unlike with military bases.
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