Okanagan—Similkameen

This article is for the electoral district. For the regional district by this name, see the Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen.
Okanagan—Similkameen
British Columbia electoral district
Defunct federal electoral district
Legislature House of Commons
District created 1976
District abolished 1987
First contested 1979
Last contested 1984

Okanagan—Similkameen was a federal electoral district in British Columbia, Canada, that was represented in the Canadian House of Commons from 1979 to 1988.

The riding was created in 1976 from parts of Fraser Valley East, Kamloops—Cariboo and Okanagan Boundary ridings.

It consisted of:

Members of Parliament

Parliament Years Member Party
Riding created from Fraser Valley East, Kamloops—Cariboo
and Okanagan Boundary
31st  1979–1980     Frederick King Progressive Conservative
32nd  1980–1984
33rd  1984–1988
Riding dissolved into Okanagan Centre and
Okanagan—Similkameen—Merritt

Election results

Canadian federal election, 1984
Party Candidate Votes%∆%
Progressive ConservativeFred King 27,071 52.21 +12.75
New DemocraticPeter J. Merry 15,181 29.28 -9.96
LiberalWilson Rutherford 8,106 15.63 -3.79
Confederation of RegionsSam Davidson 672 1.30
GreenRuss Domer 417 0.80
Social CreditBob Hamersley 402 0.78 -0.44
Total valid votes 51,849100.0  
Progressive Conservative hold Swing +11.36
Canadian federal election, 1980
Party Candidate Votes%∆%
Progressive ConservativeFred King 19,161 39.46 -10.10
New DemocraticDarwin Sigurgeirson 19,058 39.24 +11.61
LiberalDon Moses 9,433 19.42 -2.80
Social CreditBob Hamersley 593 1.22
RhinocerosAndré Kruger 317 0.65
Total valid votes 48,562100.0  
Progressive Conservative hold Swing -10.86
Canadian federal election, 1979
Party Candidate Votes%
Progressive ConservativeFred King 21,008 49.56
New DemocraticDarwin Sigurgeirson 11,715 27.63
LiberalDon Moses 9,421 22.22
No affiliationAlexander V. Barker 249 0.59
Total valid votes 42,393100.0  
This riding was created from parts of Fraser Valley East, Kamloops—Cariboo and Okanagan Boundary, which elected two Progressive Conservatives and one Liberal (Kamloops—Cariboo) in the previous election.

See also

External links

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