The CAQ went into the election as the third party in the legislature, but won a decisive victory with 74 seats, exceeding all published opinion polling. The Liberals won 31 seats, while
Québec solidaire and the Parti Québécois each won 10 seats. This is the second election in a row in which a government has been defeated after only one term. The CAQ formed government for the first time, mainly by dominating its traditional heartlands of
Capitale-Nationale,
Chaudière-Appalaches and
Centre-du-Québec, while winning sweeps or near-sweeps in
Mauricie,
Estrie,
Lanaudière,
Montérégie, the
Laurentides and northern Quebec. Many of their gains came at the expense of the PQ. The CAQ took a number of seats that had been in PQ hands for four decades or more, in some cases by landslide margins. It did, however, win only two seats in
Montreal. The Parti Québécois came up two seats short of
official status in the legislature. Notably, it was completely shut out in Montreal for the first time in decades; indeed, it won only one seat (
Marie-Victorin in Longueuil) in the entire
Greater Montreal area. It was easily the PQ's worst showing in a provincial election in 45 years. For the second election in a row, its leader was unseated in his own riding. According to a postmortem by
The Globe and Mail, the PQ was so decisively beaten that there were already questions about whether it could survive. Echoing this, Christian Bourque of Montreal-based pollster
Léger Marketing told
The Guardian that he believed the PQ was likely finished in its present form, and would have to merge with another sovereigntist party to avoid fading into irrelevance. The election was viewed as the Liberals' worst defeat since the
1976 election. While the party more than held its own in Montreal (where it won 19 out of 27 seats) and
Laval (where it retained all but one seat), it only won seven seats elsewhere. This was the first election in which Québec Solidaire won seats outside Montreal, taking one seat from the PQ and three from the Liberals. The CAQ won 37.4 percent of the popular vote, a smaller vote share than the Liberals' 41 percent in 2014 and the lowest vote share on record for a party winning a majority government. However, due to the nature of the first-past-the-post system, which awards power solely on the basis of seats won, the CAQ's heavy concentration of support in the regions they dominated was enough for a strong majority of 11 seats. Quebec elections have historically seen large disparities between the raw vote and the actual seat count. Following the elections, both Jean-François Lisée and Philippe Couillard resigned.
Vote and seat summaries Summary analysis Synopsis of riding results Comparative analysis for ridings (2018 vs 2014) ==See also==