The way you've done this, would it be easy to convert it for the 2015 election, or would that necessitate a lot of work?
BLOC QUÉBÉCOIS
28 seats won in national count
23 seats won in regional counts
5 levelling seats to assign
Montréal: 8 (0)
Laval--Rive-Nord: 5 (0)
Montérégie: 5 (1)
Outaouais: 2 (0)
Mauricie: 3 (1)
Quebec City: 2 (1)
Estrie--Bois-Francs: 4 (1)
Lévis--Chaudière--Bas-St-Laurent: 2 (0)
Saguenay--Manicouagan: 2 (1)
You'd have to paste in all the 2015 results over the 2019 ones, which would be arduous but not too arduous.The way you've done this, would it be easy to convert it for the 2015 election, or would that necessitate a lot of work?
I more meant whether all the results are in one place or if you'd have to fill them in one at a time.You'd have to paste in all the 2015 results over the 2019 ones, which would be arduous but not too arduous.
Elections Canada has a full results CSV somewhere, I'm sure.I more meant whether all the results are in one place or if you'd have to fill them in one at a time.
I just wondered, because I remember when I did something on Canadian federal elections and all the results sets were on different provincial pages - because Canada.Elections Canada has a full results CSV somewhere, I'm sure.
That's not something I've ever noticed. elections.ca does look like it was designed in 2004, but it is very centralised - as I think federal politics tends to be.I just wondered, because I remember when I did something on Canadian federal elections and all the results sets were on different provincial pages - because Canada.
I was pretty astonished when I had to add a levelling seat for them in rural Alberta on top of the 12 out of 14 fixed seats they won, yes.The raw strength of Conservatism in Alberta.