Canadian Federal Election Results in Eastern Ontario - 1968 - 28th General Election

28th General Election

  1. Frontenac-Lennox and Addington
  2. Glengarry-Prescott
  3. Grenville-Carleton
  4. Hastings
  5. Kingston and the Islands
  6. Lanark and Renfrew
  7. Leeds
  8. Ottawa-Carleton
  9. Ottawa Centre
  10. Ottawa East
  11. Ottawa West
  12. Stormont-Dundas

Electoral District Candidates Incumbent
Liberal PC NDP Other
Frontenac—Lennox and Addington Peter C. Connolly
9,953
Douglas Alkenbrack
11,801
John Moss
2,730
Clarence A. Mulligan (Ind. P.C.)
571
Douglas Alkenbrack
Glengarry—Prescott Viateur Éthier
14,970
J.-Lomer Carriere
7,564
Claude Demers
1,606
Viateur Éthier
Grenville—Carleton Gordon Blair
21,250
Jean Wadds
18,843
David Bell
3,887
Richard Albert Bell †
merged district
Jean Wadds
Hastings Robert Temple
10,875
Lee Grills
13,555
Donald G. Burshaw
3,195
Lee Grills
Kingston and the Islands Edgar John Benson
16,234
Bogart W. Trumpour
11,799
Brendan McConnell
4,636
Edgar John Benson
Lanark and Renfrew Murray McBride
13,156
James W. Baskin
12,737
James Ronson
1,861
Joe Greene
(running in Niagara Falls)
Leeds Ross Matheson
13,532
Desmond M. Code 13,536 Clayton C. Graves
2,005
Ross Matheson
Ottawa—Carleton John N. Turner
28,987
Ken Binks
11,665
Harold Wilson
3,115
Paul Tardif †
Ottawa Centre George McIlraith
19,578
Murray A. Heit
11,602
June B. Ralph
2,729
new district
Ottawa East J.-T. Richard
26,170
Rex Le Lacheur
4,168
Ian Macdonald
2,921
J.-T. Richard
Ottawa West Lloyd Francis
23,750
Richard A. Bell
16,392
Ralph Sutherland
5,003
George McIlraith
(running in Ottawa Centre)
Stormont—Dundas Tim Wees
5,409
Lucien Lamoureux
17,014
Lucien Lamoureux

Read more about this topic:  Canadian Federal Election Results In Eastern Ontario, 1968

Famous quotes containing the words general and/or election:

    To have in general but little feeling, seems to be the only security against feeling too much on any particular occasion.
    George Eliot [Mary Ann (or Marian)

    [If not re-elected in 1864] then it will be my duty to so co-operate with the President elect, as to save the Union between the election and the inauguration; as he will have secured his election on such ground that he can not possibly save it afterwards.
    Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865)