Liberal Leader Philippe Couillard has been re-elected in Roberval.
Geography
The riding of Roberval is the most rural riding of the Saguenay—Lac-Saint-Jean area.
It includes the following municipalites: Albanel, Chambord, Dolbeau-Mistassini, Girardville, Lac-Bouchette, La Doré, Normandin, Notre-Dame-de-Lorette, Péribonka, Roberval, Saint-André-du-Lac-Saint-Jean, Saint-Augustin, Saint-Edmond-les-Plaines, Saint-Eugène-d’Argentenay, Saint-Félicien, Saint-François-de-Sales, Sainte-Hedwidge, Sainte-Jeanne-d’Arc, Saint-Prime, Saint-Stanislas and Saint-Thomas-Didyme.
It also includes the Mashteuiatsh reserve, as well the unorganized territories of Lac-Ashuapmushuan and Rivière-Mistassini and a portion of Passes-Dangeureuses, also an unorganized territory.
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The four candidates from parties serving in the National Assembly at dissolution:
Coalition Avenir Québec: Denise Trudel
Parti Québécois: Thomas Gaudreault
Quebec Liberal Party: Philippe Couillard
Québec Solidaire: Luc-Antoine Cauchon
The incumbent heading into the 2018 election was Philippe Couillard, who was elected as premier in April 2014.
He was first elected in 2003 as a Liberal MNA for Mount Royal and re-elected in Jean-Talon in 2007. Couillard served as minister of health and social services until he resigned in 2008.
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He returned to politics in 2012 and succeeded Jean Charest as Liberal leader in 2013.
Towards the end of the 39-day election campaign, the Liberals gathered steam with polls showing a heated race between François Legault’s Coaltion Avenir Québec and Couillard’s Liberals.
History
The Roberval riding was created in 1930 and named after Jean-François de La Rocque de Roberval, the first lieutenant-general of New France.
Since the 1970s, the riding has flip-flopped between the Liberals and the Parti Québécois. Prior to the 1970s, voters went back and forth between the Liberals and the now-defunct nationalist and conservative-leaning Union National.
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