Results of the 2015 Canadian federal election explained

Election Name:2015 Canadian federal election
Country:Canada
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2011
Next Election:2019
Election Date:19 October 2015
Results Sec:Result overview
Leader1:Justin Trudeau
Party1:Liberal
Last Election1:36
Seats1:184
Percentage1:39.5%
Party2:Conservative
Leader2:Stephen Harper
Last Election2:159
Seats2:99
Percentage2:31.9%
Party3:New Democratic
Leader3:Tom Mulcair
Last Election3:95
Seats3:44
Percentage3:19.7%
Party4:Bloc Québécois
Leader4:Gilles Duceppe
Last Election4:2
Seats4:10
Percentage4:4.7%
Party5:Green
Leader5:Elizabeth May
Last Election5:2
Seats5:1
Percentage5:3.5%
Prime Minister
Before Election:Stephen Harper
Before Party:Conservative
After Election:Justin Trudeau
After Party:Liberal

The 42nd Canadian federal election was held on October 19, 2015. The incumbent Conservative Party of Canada of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, in office since 2006, was defeated by the Liberal Party of Canada under the leadership of Justin Trudeau. The Liberals rebounded from third place in the House of Commons with 36 seats to a strong majority government with 184 of the 338 seats in the expanded Commons. The Liberals picked up 148 seats, easily the biggest numerical increase for a Canadian party since Confederation.

Summary

At 9:41pm EDT, October 19, 2015, CBC News projected that the Liberals had won at least a minority government, and that leader Justin Trudeau would become the next Prime Minister of Canada. Less than an hour later, at 10:36pm EDT, CBC News projected a Liberal majority. The New Democratic Party lost more than half the seats they had held, with Tom Mulcair becoming the first major party leader to concede defeat. The Conservatives dropped down to 99 seats to form the main opposition party, and Stephen Harper resigned as leader of the Conservative Party. The Bloc Québécois regained some ridings they had lost in the previous election, but party leader Giles Duceppe failed to regain the seat he lost back in 2011. Green Party leader Elizabeth May kept her seat.[1]

According to preliminary figures from Elections Canada, more than 68 per cent of eligible voters cast a ballot, or about 17,546,697 registered electors—a seven percentage point increase from the 2011 federal election, when turnout was just more than 61 per cent.[2]

Synopsis of results

Result overview

Summary analysis

PartyVotesSeats
6,930,136 20.6%
5,600,496 7.7%
3,461,262 10.9%
818,652 1.2%
605,864 0.5%
Elections to the 42nd Parliament of Canada – seats won/lost by party, 2011–2015
Party2011 (redistributed)Gain from (loss to)2015
LibConNDPBQGrn
36 88 58 2 184
188 (88) 6 (8) 1 99
109 (58) 8 (6) (9) 44
4 (2) (1) 9 10
1 1
Total 338  - (148) 96 (7) 73 (8) 3 (9)  - 338
Party candidates in 2nd place[3]
Party in 1st place Party in 2nd place Total
Lib Con NDP BQ Grn Ind
1116481184
811899
29113144
8210
11
Total118123841111338
Principal races, according to 1st and 2nd-place results
Parties Seats
192
93
29
16
5
1
1
1
Total338
Seats won, by share of vote going to winning candidate[4]
Party in 1st place >50% 45-49.9% 40-44.9% 35-39.9% <35% Total
87 48 26 13 10 184
42 24 20 8 5 99
3 4 12 14 11 44
2 1 7 10
1 1
Total 133 76 60 36 33 338

Detailed analysis

See main article: Results of the 2015 Canadian federal election by riding.

Turnout

The election was notable for seeing voter turnout rise across all ages and sexes, and especially significant for the rise in younger voters. In particular, there was an increase of 1.2 million voters among those under the age of 35.[5]

Voter turnout by age and sex, %, 2015 vs 2011[6] [7]
Age20152011∆%
Total Male FemaleTotal Male FemaleTotal Male Female
Canada 66.1 64.1 68.0 58.5 57.3 59.6 7.6 4.5 8.4
18 to 24 years 57.1 53.8 60.5 38.8 36.9 40.9 18.3 16.9 19.6
1st time voters 58.3 54.9 61.9 40.5 38.4 42.8 17.7 16.4 19.1
Not 1st time 55.1 52.0 58.3 37.8 36.0 39.8 17.3 16.0 18.5
25 to 34 years 57.4 54.3 60.5 45.1 42.5 47.7 12.3 11.8 12.8
35 to 44 years 61.9 58.7 65.1 54.5 51.5 47.5 7.4 4.2 17.6
45 to 54 years 66.6 63.6 69.6 64.5 62.1 66.9 2.1 1.5 2.7
55 to 64 years 73.7 71.4 76.0 71.5 70.7 72.2 2.3 0.7 3.8
65 to 74 years 78.8 79.0 78.6 75.1 77.4 73.1 3.7 1.6 5.5
75 years and over 67.4 74.1 62.8 60.3 69.5 54.2 7.1 4.6 8.6

Party summaries

Liberals

In the previous election, the Liberals were cut down to 34 seats, the fewest they had ever won in their history. It was the first time since the nation's founding that the Liberals had not been either in government or the Official Opposition. They picked up one additional seat in a by-election and one via a floor-crossing.

While the Liberals had been expected to regain much of what they had lost in 2011, they tallied the second-best performance in their history; the 184 seats was bettered only by the 191 they won in 1949. It was also the most seats that a party had won since the Progressive Conservatives won a record 211 in 1984.

The Liberal victory came mainly on the strength of a solid performance in the eastern part of the country. They took every seat in Atlantic Canada and Toronto, and won all but one seat in Ottawa. Most notably, they won 40 of Quebec's 78 seats, mostly on the strength of taking all but five seats in Montreal. It was the first time since 1980 that the Liberals had won the most seats in Quebec.

After going into the election with only four seats west of Ontario, the Liberals had their best showing in Western Canada in more than two decades. They not only took all but one seat in Winnipeg and all but two seats in Vancouver, but won seats in Alberta for the first time since 2004. Notably, they won two seats in Calgary; they had won only three seats there in their entire history prior to 2015, with their last win dating back to 1968. They were the only party to win seats in every province.

Conservatives

The Conservatives lost 60 seats to become the Official Opposition. They held their own in their heartlands of rural western Canada and central Ontario, and managed a respectable showing in southwestern Ontario and the more rural areas of eastern Ontario. However, they suffered heavy losses in urban southern Ontario, a region which had swung heavily to them in 2011. They lost all of their seats in Toronto itself and all but three in the 905 region. They also lost all of their seats in Winnipeg and Vancouver, as well as Atlantic Canada. It is the first time in decades that there are no centre-right MPs east of Quebec. They did, however, manage to make some gains in francophone areas of Quebec, mostly at the expense of the NDP.

Several members of Harper's cabinet were defeated, including Bernard Valcourt, Leona Aglukkaq, Gail Shea, Chris Alexander, Joe Oliver and Julian Fantino among others.

New Democrats

The NDP, the Official Opposition in the previous parliament, fell to third place with 44 seats, losing more than half of their caucus. For the most part, their support bled over to the Liberals, though they lost a few areas of francophone Quebec to the Conservatives and Bloc.

Bloc Québecois

The Bloc made a modest recovery after being nearly decimated in 2011, rebounding to 10 seats. However, Gilles Duceppe, who had been the longest-serving party leader in Canada at the time of his defeat in 2011, failed to win back his old seat of Laurier—Sainte-Marie. The party also received a smaller share of the popular vote than in the last election. As such, their gains could be attributable to NDP-Liberal vote splitting in francophone ridings more than a surge in popular support.

Contributing factors to party success

The parties had varying degrees of success by region and by socioeconomic factors. An analysis by The Globe and Mail shortly after the election was held revealed significant differences:[8]

Party support arising from certain key factors by region in the Canadian general election (2015), as a proportion of the ridings won
RegionIncome (Median household)Unemployment rateVisible minority population
<$35,810 $35,810$141,720 >$141,720 Low (4%6%) High (9%22%) Low (<2.41%) High (>26.8%)
Atlantic
Quebec
Ontario
Prairies
British ColumbiaN/A
The North

Results by province

Party nameBCABSKMBONQCNBNSPENLYTNTNUTotal
rowspan="2"     LiberalSeats:17 4 1 7 80 40 10 11 4 7 1 1 1 184
Vote:35.2 24.6 23.9 44.6 44.8 35.7 51.6 61.9 58.3 64.5 53.6 48.3 47.2 39.5
rowspan="2"     ConservativeSeats:10 29 10 5 33 12  -  -  -  -  -  -  - 99
Vote:30.0 59.5 48.5 37.3 35.0 16.7 25.3 17.9 19.3 10.3 24.0 18.0 24.8 31.9
rowspan="2"     New Democratic PartySeats:14 1 3 2 8 16  -  -  -  -  -  -  - 44
Vote:25.9 11.6 25.1 13.8 16.6 25.4 18.3 16.4 16.0 21.0 19.5 30.8 26.5 19.7
rowspan="2"     Bloc QuébécoisSeats: -  -  -  -  - 10  -  -  -  -  -  -  - 10
Vote: -  -  -  -  - 19.3  -  -  -  -  -  -  - 4.7
rowspan="2"     GreenSeats:1  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  - 1
Vote:8.2 2.5 2.1 3.2 2.9 2.3 4.6 3.4 6.0 1.1 2.9 2.8 1.5 3.4
    Independent and no affiliationVote:0.1 0.8 0.2 0.6 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.3  - 2.9  -  -  - 0.2
Total seats4234 14 14 12178 10 11 4 7 1 1 1 338

10 closest ridings

Electoral district1st-place candidate2nd-place candidateWon byConfirmed on recount[9]
Elmwood—TransconaMBDaniel BlaikieLawrence Toet61 votes
Desnethé—Missinippi—Churchill RiverSKGeorgina JoliboisLawrence Joseph71 votes
Barrie—Springwater—Oro-MedonteONAlex NuttallBrian Tamblyn86 votes
Edmonton Mill WoodsABAmarjeet SohiTim Uppal92 votes
Regina—LewvanSKErin WeirTrent Fraser132 votes
Hastings—Lennox and AddingtonONMike BossioDaryl Kramp225 votes
Kitchener—ConestogaONHarold AlbrechtTim Louis251 votes
Montmagny—L'Islet—Kamouraska—Rivière-du-LoupQCBernard GénéreuxMarie-Josée Normand272 votes
Kootenay—ColumbiaBCWayne StetskiDavid Wilks282 votes
JonquièreQCKarine TrudelMarc Pettersen339 votes

Significant results among independent and minor party candidates

Those candidates not belonging to a major party, receiving more than 1,000 votes in the election, are listed below:

Riding !! colspan="2"
Candidate !Votes Placed
NL 7,501 2nd
QC 4,229 4th
SK 1,076 4th
BC Lewis Clarke Dahlby 1,014 5th
MB 3,357 4th
BC Rex Brocki 1,368 5th
ON Harold Jonker 1,234 5th
ON Melody Ann Aldred 1,175 5th
MB Jerome Dondo[10] 1,315 5th
ON 6,300 3rd
QC Johnathan Cloutier 1,333 5th
AB 11,652 3rd
ON Katerina Androutsos 1,384 4th
AB James Ford[11] 1,563 5th
ON John Richardson 1,275 5th
ON Stephen Lepone 1,041 4th

Retiring & defeated incumbents

See main article: List of MPs who stood down at the Canadian general election, 2015 and List of MPs who lost their seat in the Canadian general election, 2015.

Notional gains

As a result of the 2012 federal electoral redistribution, thirty new ridings were added and many riding boundaries were changed, so several incumbent MPs who ran chose to do so in new ridings. The following table identifies the subsequent nominees in their old ridings and who they lost to.

Electoral District, with 2011 redistributed resultIncumbent at dissolution and subsequent nomineeNew MP
Alberta Edmonton Mill Woods Mike LakeTim Uppal Amarjeet Sohi
British Columbia Burnaby North—Seymour Kennedy StewartCarol Baird Ellan Terry Beech
 North Island—Powell River John DuncanLaura Smith Rachel Blaney
 Steveston—Richmond East Kerry-Lynne FindlayKenny Chiu Joe Peschisolido
Ontario Bay of Quinte Daryl KrampJodie Jenkins Neil Ellis
 Brampton East Bal GosalNaval Bajaj Raj Grewal
 Brampton West Kyle SeebackNinder Thind Kamal Khera
 Don Valley East Joe DanielMaureen Harquail Yasmin Ratansi
 Hamilton West—Ancaster—Dundas David SweetVincent Samuel Filomena Tassi
 Nepean Pierre PoilievreAndy Wang Chandra Arya
 Oakville North—Burlington Lisa RaittEffie Triantafilopoulos Pam Damoff
 Richmond Hill Costas MenegakisMichael Parsa Majid Jowhari
Quebec Argenteuil—La Petite-Nation Mylène FreemanChantal Crête Stéphane Lauzon
 Marc-Aurèle-Fortin Alain GiguèreMarie-Josée Lemieux Yves Robillard
 Repentigny Jean-François LaroseJohnathan Cloutier Monique Pauzé
Saskatchewan Regina—Lewvan Tom LukiwskiTrent Fraser Erin Weir
 Saskatoon West Kelly BlockRandy Donauer Sheri Benson

Effects of redistribution

As a result of the 2012 federal electoral redistribution, 31 new ridings were added and two ridings were merged. Boundary changes in eleven other ridings had the effect of revising the first-place ranking from what had occurred in 2011.

Net effect of 2012 redistribution
Effect
New ridings31
Merged riding1
No change in boundaries44
Modified boundaries - change in 1st place11
Modified boundaries - no change in standing251
Total338

New and merged seats

The following table identifies what party would have held the redistributed ridings based on 2011 results for the new ridings, and the subsequent MPs who were elected.

PartyElectoral DistrictNew MP
Conservative
AlbertaBow River Martin Shields
Calgary Rocky Ridge Pat Kelly
Calgary Shepard Tom Kmiec
Edmonton Manning Ziad Aboultaif
Edmonton—Wetaskiwin Mike Lake
Peace River—Westlock Arnold Viersen
Sturgeon River—Parkland Rona Ambrose
British ColumbiaCloverdale—Langley City John Aldag
Delta Carla Qualtrough
Mission—Matsqui—Fraser Canyon Jati Sidhu
Vancouver Granville Jody Wilson-Raybould
OntarioAurora—Oak Ridges—Richmond Hill Leona Alleslev
Barrie—Springwater—Oro-Medonte Alex Nuttall
Brampton Centre Ramesh Sangha
Brampton South Sonia Sidhu
Carleton Pierre Poilievre
Don Valley North Geng Tan
Flamborough—Glanbrook David Sweet
Hastings—Lennox and Addington Mike Bossio
King—Vaughan Deb Schulte
Kitchener South—Hespeler Marwan Tabbara
Milton Lisa Raitt
Mississauga Centre Omar Alghabra
NDP
British ColumbiaBurnaby South Kennedy Stewart
Nanaimo—Ladysmith Sheila Malcolmson
OntarioUniversity—Rosedale Chrystia Freeland
QuebecLa Prairie Jean-Claude Poissant
Mirabel Simon Marcil
Thérèse-De Blainville Ramez Ayoub
LiberalOntarioScarborough—Rouge Park Gary Anandasangaree
Markham—Thornhill John McCallum

In Alberta, Vegreville—Wainwright and Westlock—St. Paul were merged to form Lakeland.

Seats won/lost by party (new and merged seats)
Party2011 (redistributed)Gain from (loss to)2015
LibConNDPBQGrn
2 12 3 17
24 (12) 12
6 (3) (1) 2
 - 1 1
 -  -
Total 32  - (15) 12  - 4  -  - (1)  - 32

Reclassified seats

Reclassified ridings (where redistribution adjusted 1st place ranking)
Province2011Redist.RidingNew MP
British ColumbiaBurnaby North—Seymour Terry Beech
Port Moody—Coquitlam Fin Donnelly
South Okanagan—West Kootenay Richard Cannings
SaskatchewanRegina—Lewvan Erin Weir
Saskatoon West Sheri Benson
ManitobaWinnipeg North Kevin Lamoureux
OntarioBrampton East Raj Grewal
Don Valley East Yasmin Ratansi
QuebecAhuntsic-Cartierville Mélanie Joly
Gaspésie—Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine Diane Lebouthillier
Newfoundland and LabradorAvalon Ken McDonald
Seats won/lost by party (reclassified seats)
Party2011 (redistributed)Gain from (loss to)2015
LibConNDPBQGrn
2 2 2 1 7
4 (2) (2)  -
4 (2) 2 4
1 (1)  -
 -  -
Total 11  - (5) 4  - 2 (2) 1  -  - 11

Ridings with unchanged boundaries

There were 44 ridings whose boundaries were not changed as a result of the redistribution.[12] Their election results were as follows:

PartyElectoral DistrictNew MP
 ConservativeManitobaCharleswood—St. James—Assiniboia—Headingley Doug Eyolfson
Newfoundland and LabradorLabrador Yvonne Jones
Nova ScotiaWest Nova Colin Fraser
OntarioBruce—Grey—Owen Sound Larry Miller
Dufferin—Caledon David Tilson
Eglinton—Lawrence Marco Mendicino
Huron—Bruce Ben Lobb
Leeds—Grenville—Thousand Islands and Rideau Lakes Gord Brown
Niagara Falls Rob Nicholson
Oakville John Oliver
Parry Sound-Muskoka Tony Clement
Perth Wellington John Nater
(federal electoral district)|Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke Cheryl Gallant
Sarnia—Lambton Marilyn Gladu
Stormont—Dundas—South Glengarry Guy Lauzon
Wellington—Halton Hills Michael Chong
Prince Edward IslandEgmont Bobby Morrissey
TerritoriesNunavut Hunter Tootoo
Yukon Larry Bagnell
 NDPBritish ColumbiaVancouver East Jenny Kwan
Victoria Murray Rankin
ManitobaWinnipeg Centre Robert-Falcon Ouellette
OntarioBeaches—East York Nathaniel Erskine-Smith
Davenport Julie Dzerowicz
Parkdale—High Park Arif Virani
Toronto—Danforth Julie Dabrusin
York South—Weston Ahmed Hussen
QuebecDrummond François Choquette
Laurentides—Labelle David Graham
Montmagny—L'Islet—Kamouraska—Rivière-du-Loup Bernard Généreux
Pierrefonds—Dollard Frank Baylis
Portneuf—Jacques-Cartier Joël Godin
Rimouski-Neigette—Témiscouata—Les Basques Guy Caron
Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot Brigitte Sansoucy
Saint-Jean Saint-Jean
TerritoriesNorthwest Territories Michael McLeod
 LiberalNova ScotiaKings—Hants Scott Brison
Sydney—Victoria Mark Eyking
OntarioGuelph Lloyd Longfield
Humber River—Black Creek Judy Sgro
Prince Edward IslandCardigan Lawrence MacAulay
Charlottetown Sean Casey
Malpeque Wayne Easter
 Bloc QuébécoisQuebecBécancour—Nicolet—Saurel Louis Plamondon
Seats won/lost by party (ridings with unchanged boundaries)
Party2011 (redistributed)Gain from (loss to)2015
LibConNDPBQGrn
7 8 10 25
19 (8) 2 13
17 (10) (2) 5
1 1
 -  -
Total 44  - (18) 8 (2) 12  -  -  -  - 44

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Canada Election 2015 Live Results CBC. CBC.ca.
  2. Web site: Voter turnout spikes after long, unpredictable campaign. October 20, 2015. cbc.ca.
  3. Web site: Daniel Schwartz. Going deeper into Canada's 2015 federal election results. CBC News. October 21, 2015.
  4. Web site: blogs.abc.net.au. Antony Green. Canada 2015 - Would Preferential Voting Have Made a Difference?. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. October 21, 2015. Antony Green.
  5. News: Clark. Campbell. June 15, 2016. After 'a seismic shift' in voting, it's time to fill in the political trenches. The Globe and Mail.
  6. Web site: Voter Turnout by Age Group. . 2016. Elections Canada.
  7. Web site: Voter turnout by sex and age. . 2016. Elections Canada.
  8. News: Eric Andrew-Gee. How Canadians voted. The Globe and Mail. A8A9. October 21, 2015.
  9. Web site: Summary table of judicial recounts. . 2015. elections.ca.
  10. President of the CHP
  11. Had placed 2nd in the previous two elections in the former riding of Edmonton—Sherwood Park
  12. Web site: List of unchanged federal electoral districts. . elections.ca. April 23, 2022.