Preston-Dartmouth was a provincial electoral district in Nova Scotia, Canada, that elects one member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. The riding was created in 2012 as Dartmouth-Preston, with 100 per cent of the former district of Preston, 10 per cent of the former district of Cole Harbour, 9 per cent of the district of Dartmouth East and 3 per cent of the district of Eastern Shore. A private member's bill in May 2013 changed the name to Preston-Dartmouth.[1] It was redistributed prior to the 2021 election into the re-created Preston district, as well as small parts that went to Colchester-Musquodoboit Valley, Eastern Shore and Cole Harbour.

The district included part of the Westphal area from the former district of Cole Harbour and the Ross Road area from the Eastern Shore district. The western part of the district included the area north of Main Street and east of Caledonia Road, until Geovex Court. The former district of Preston, which took in areas of suburban affluence and rural poverty, was created in 1993 to give black Nova Scotians a better chance of representation in the legislature. Approximately one third of the district's residents were black. It included historically important black communities at North Preston, East Preston and Cherrybrook. Many people in this riding worked in Metro Halifax in the trade and service sectors.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

This riding has elected the following members of the Legislative Assembly:

Legislature Years Member Party
63rd 2017–2021 Keith Colwell Liberal
62nd 2013–2017

Election results

2017 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Keith Colwell 2,572 51.33 -7.06
New Democratic Shelley Fashan 1,113 22.21 -9.67
Progressive Conservative Irvine Carvery 1,105 22.05 +12.33
Green Aaron Alexander 221 4.41
Total valid votes 5,011 99.23
Total rejected ballots 39 0.77 -0.61
Turnout 5,050 44.28 -8.62
Eligible voters 11,404
Liberal hold Swing +1.30
Source: Elections Nova Scotia[2][3]
2013 Nova Scotia general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Keith Colwell 3,326 58.39 +19.55
New Democratic André Cain 1,816 31.88 -6.51
Progressive Conservative Andrew J. Mecke 554 9.73 -11.64
Total valid votes 5,696 98.61
Total rejected ballots 80 1.39
Turnout 5,776 52.90
Eligible voters 10,918
Liberal hold Swing +13.03
2009 provincial election redistributed results[4]
Party Vote %
  Liberal 2,242 38.84
  New Democratic 2,216 38.39
  Progressive Conservative 1,233 21.36
  Green 81 1.40

References

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