MaryAnn Mihychuk takes Kildonan-St. Paul for Liberals

Media | RAW: MaryAnn Mihychuk on Kildonan-St. Paul win

Caption: RAW: MaryAnn Mihychuk celebrates with supporters after winning the Kildonan-St. Paul riding

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Voters in Manitoba's Kildonan-St. Paul riding have elected Liberal MaryAnn Mihychuk as their new member of Parliament, CBC News has declared.

Image | MaryAnn Mihychuk

Caption: MaryAnn Mihychuk, second from left, is surrounded by supporters at her campaign headquarters in Winnipeg on Monday night. (Courtney Rutherford/CBC)

With 194 out of 195 polls reporting, Mihychuk — a former provincial NDP cabinet minister — secured 42.7 per cent of the vote, while Conservative candidate Jim Bell had 39.9 per cent.
They were followed by the NDP's Suzanne Hrynyk with 14.3 per cent of the vote and Steven Stairs of the Green Party with just under two per cent.
"I'm feeling really elated and so proud that the team did it," Mihychuk said at her campaign headquarters Monday night.

Image | Jim Bell at campaign HQ

Caption: Jim Bell speaks to his supporters at his campaign headquarters late Monday night. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

"Kildonan-St. Paul was looking for change, and they could see that I was going to bring it with Justin Trudeau. It's just incredible."
Bell waited until all the poll results came in late Monday night before congratulating Mihychuk on her win.
"MaryAnn, to her credit, has been campaigning for longer; perhaps that paid some dividends. All I know is that we gave it every effort as a group, as a team," Bell said.
"I'm not going to second-guess. I'm just going to give credit where it's due."
Bell, a former president of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, said he hasn't thought about what he'll do next, as all his recent efforts were focused on the election campaign.
"In the next day we will regroup, as they say, and see what might be next," he said. "Just being engaged again with the community is something that just lights the fire within me."
Conservative Joy Smith, who had represented Kildonan-St. Paul since 2004, announced in January that she would not seek re-election.
Her departure opened up a race between Bell, Hrynyk, Mihychuk, Stairs, David Reimer of the Christian Heritage Party and Independent candidate Eduard Walter Hiebert.
"This is a riding that we haven't seen a whole lot of strength for the Liberals for the past two elections, and so it was really a challenge, so we are all so excited," Mihychuk said.
In 2011, Smith was re-elected with 58 per cent of the vote. Rachelle Devine of the NDP came in second place with 30 per cent of the vote, followed by Liberal Victor Andres with eight per cent and Green Party candidate Alon David Weinberg with three per cent. Voter turnout in Kildonan-St. Paul was at 61 per cent in 2011.