Charlotte Centre
New Brunswick electoral district
Defunct provincial electoral district
LegislatureLegislative Assembly of New Brunswick
District created1973
District abolished1994
First contested1974
Last contested1991

Charlotte Centre was a provincial electoral district in New Brunswick. It was created from the multi-member riding of Charlotte in the 1973 electoral redistribution, and was abolished in the 1994 electoral redistribution.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

Assembly Years Member Party
Riding created from Charlotte (1785–1974)
48th  1974–1978     DeCosta Young Progressive Conservative
49th  1978–1982     Sheldon Lee Liberal
50th  1982–1987
51st  1987–1991
52nd  1991–1995
Riding dissolved into Charlotte (1994–2006) and Fundy Isles

Election results

1991 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalSheldon Lee2,19565.64-7.38
Confederation of RegionsConnie M. Stewart51615.43
Progressive ConservativeStanley John Smith47114.08-8.90
New DemocraticJean Stewart1624.84+0.84
Total valid votes 3,344100.0  
Liberal hold Swing -11.40
1987 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalSheldon Lee2,43173.02+25.14
Progressive ConservativeStanley J. Smith76522.98-22.07
New DemocraticGraham Richardson1334.00-3.06
Total valid votes 3,329100.0  
Liberal hold Swing +23.60
1982 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalSheldon A. Lee1,47147.88-5.83
Progressive ConservativeGregory F. Thompson1,38445.05-1.24
New DemocraticWayne Townsend2177.06
Total valid votes 3,072100.0  
Liberal hold Swing -2.30
1978 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalSheldon Lee1,40453.71+7.08
Progressive ConservativeRobert D. "Bob" Lee1,21046.29-3.77
Total valid votes 2,614100.0  
Liberal gain from Progressive Conservative Swing +5.42
1974 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes%
Progressive ConservativeDeCosta W. Young1,21150.06
LiberalSheldon Lee1,12846.63
IndependentWilliam Hooper803.31
Total valid votes 2,419100.0  
The previous multi-member riding of Charlotte went totally Progressive Conservative in the last election, with DeCosta Young being one of the four incumbents.

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