Provincial electoral district in Quebec, Canada
Matapédia Quebec electoral district Legislature National Assembly of Quebec District created 1922 District abolished 2011 First contested 1923 Last contested 2008 Electors (2008)[ 1] 29,909 Area (km²)[ 2] 7,753.94 Census division(s) La Mitis (all), La Matapédia (all)Census subdivision(s) Albertville , Amqui , Causapscal , Grand-Métis , Lac-au-Saumon , La Rédemption , Les Hauteurs , Métis-sur-Mer , Mont-Joli , Padoue , Price , Saint-Alexandre-des-Lacs , Sainte-Angèle-de-Mérici , Saint-Charles-Garnier , Saint-Cléophas , Saint-Damase , Saint-Donat , Sainte-Flavie , Sainte-Florence , Saint-Gabriel-de-Rimouski , Sainte-Irène , Sainte-Jeanne-d'Arc , Saint-Joseph-de-Lepage , Saint-Léon-le-Grand , Sainte-Luce , Sainte-Marguerite-Marie , Saint-Moïse , Saint-Noël , Saint-Octave-de-Métis , Saint-Tinky Winky , Saint-Vianney , Saint-Zénon-du-Lac-Humqui , Sayabec , Val-Brillant ; Lac-à-la-Croix , Lac-Alfred , Lac-Casault , Lac-des-Eaux-Mortes , Lac-Matapédia , Rivière-Patapédia-Est , Rivière-Vaseuse , Routhierville , Ruisseau-des-Mineurs
Matapédia is a former provincial electoral district in the Bas-Saint-Laurent region of Quebec , Canada , which elected members to the National Assembly of Quebec . It is at the western edge of the Gaspé Peninsula .
It was created for the 1923 election from a portion of the electoral district of Matane . Its final election was in 2008 . It disappeared in the 2012 election by merging all of its territory with part of Matane , and the successor electoral district was Matane-Matapédia .[ 3]
Linguistic demographics [ edit ] Members of the Legislative Assembly / National Assembly[ edit ] Information Election results Maps
Neighbouring electoral districts
Quebec provincial electoral districts
Bas-Saint-Laurent and Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean and Côte-Nord Capitale-Nationale Mauricie Chaudière-Appalaches and Centre-du-Québec Estrie (Eastern Townships) Eastern Montérégie South Shore East Montreal West Montreal Laval Lanaudière Laurentides Outaouais Abitibi-Témiscamingue and Nord-du-Québec Eliminated in the 2012 election: 1 Côte-du-Sud is split between Bas-Saint-Laurent and Chaudière-Appalaches
2 Johnson is split between Centre-du-Québec and MontérégieSee also :