Quebec tables bill to increase number of ridings to 127 after Supreme Court decision
QUÉBEC — The Quebec government tabled a bill on Thursday to increase the number of ridings in the province to 127 from 125, after the Supreme Court of Canada ruled against its attempt to block a redrawing of the province’s electoral map.
Jean-François Roberge, minister of democratic institutions, said his bill is co-authored by the Liberals, Parti Québécois and Québec solidaire.
“This is the culmination of an important transpartisan collaboration that will lead us to have, I think, a map that truly respects effective representation,” Roberge told reporters at a news conference alongside representatives of the three other parties.
The bill is the government’s latest attempt to prevent Montreal and the Gaspé Peninsula from losing ridings in the redrawn map by the independent electoral boundaries commission. The commission had proposed eliminating one riding in Gaspé and another in Montreal’s east end in favour of two new districts in the growing Laurentians/Lanaudière and Centre-du-Québec regions.


