Terrebonne (federal electoral district)

Terrebonne is a federal electoral district in the Canadian province of Quebec. It was represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1867 to 1997, when it was dissolved in an electoral redistribution. It was reconstituted as an electoral district again beginning with the 2015 election.

History
The riding was originally created by the British North America Act of 1867 which preserved existing electoral districts in Lower Canada. It was abolished in 1996 into Repentigny and Terrebonne—Blainville.

It was recreated during the 2012 federal electoral redistribution from parts of Terrebonne—Blainville (51%) and Montcalm (49%), and consists solely of the city of Terrebonne.

Demographics

 * According to the 2021 Canadian census
 * Ethnic groups: 81.2% White, 11.0% Black, 2.5% Arab, 2.2% Latin American, 1.3% Indigenous
 * Languages: 83.8% French, 2.6% English, 2.2% Spanish, 2.1% Haitian Creole, 1.5% Arabic, 1.0% Italian
 * Religions: 68.9% Christian (57.5% Catholic, 1.0% Baptist, 10.4% Other), 4.3% Muslim. 26.0% None
 * Median income: $45,600 (2020)
 * Average income: $53,800 (2020)
 * Average income: $53,800 (2020)

Terrebonne, 1867–1997
Note: popular vote is compared to vote in 1882 general election.

Note: popular vote is compared to vote in 1878 general election.