Federal Election
Elections Canada to launch review following issues with special ballots
4 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 4:08 PM CDTOTTAWA - Elections Canada is launching a probe into problems with special ballots in the last federal election.
"We really have to look at the controls in place to make sure that they are sufficient" and make improvements where possible, chief electoral officer Stéphane Perrault told reporters at a news conference on Parliament Hill on Monday.
Plans for the review were outlined Monday in the agency's report on the 45th general election held on April 28. The report promises a "comprehensive review" that will examine training, control mechanisms and processes.
It cites three cases where hundreds of special ballots were handled improperly and left out of the official count. It also points to one riding where the outcome was decided by a single vote and where some special ballots had incorrect postal codes.
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No evidence federal election was affected by foreign interference, commissioner says
2 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 25, 2025OTTAWA - Canada's elections commissioner said Wednesday she has no evidence to suggest the federal election result in April was affected by foreign interference, disinformation or voter intimidation — even though the volume of complaints about the campaign shot way up.
In a preliminary report, Commissioner Caroline Simard said her office received more than 16,000 complaints about the spring campaign that ended on April 28 — seven times the number of complaints received in the 2019 and 2021 elections.
And while Simard's office said some of those numbers are due to "amplification" — multiple complaints about the same issue — the number of complaints about foreign interference, artificial intelligence, disinformation and voter intimidation was lower than her office had expected.
"So far, based on our initial observations and the information we have, there is no evidence to suggest that the election outcome was affected in any way," Simard said in a news release.
Bloc Québécois files legal challenge of Terrebonne riding results after one-vote loss
2 minute read Friday, May. 23, 2025TERREBONNE - The Bloc Québécois says it has filed a Superior Court challenge to overturn the election results in the federal riding of Terrebonne after losing by one vote.
In a news release, the party says there is doubt about who won the riding in the April 28 federal election because a mail-in vote from a Bloc supporter was returned to the sender.
Elections Canada has admitted that a misprint on an envelope used to mail a special ballot from Terrebonne led to one Bloc voter's ballot being returned to her.
Liberal candidate Tatiana Auguste initially won the riding, but it flipped to Bloc candidate Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné after the votes went through a validation process.
Conservatives hold onto Windsor riding by four votes after recount
1 minute read Preview Friday, May. 23, 2025Recount confirms narrow Liberal victory in Milton East—Halton Hills South
3 minute read Preview Friday, May. 16, 2025Nunavut election result not validated as ballot box held up in cargo by blizzard
1 minute read Thursday, May. 15, 2025OTTAWA - The federal election result in Nunavut still has not been validated by Elections Canada, because one final ballot box has been delayed by a blizzard.
NDP incumbent Lori Idlout won the unofficial result by 77 votes over Liberal candidate Kilikvak Kabloona.
Elections Canada has a validation process to confirm the unofficial count completed on election night, but the final box from the community of Naujaat has not made it to Iqaluit to be tallied.
Returning officer Jean-Claude Nguyen confirmed to The Canadian Press the box is stuck at the airline cargo facility in Rankin Inlet.
Bloc Québécois to challenge Terrebonne election result in court
3 minute read Thursday, May. 15, 2025OTTAWA - Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet said Thursday the party plans to launch a legal challenge after losing the federal riding of Terrebonne by a single vote.
Blanchet said the party wants a court order to run the vote again because a mail-in vote from a Bloc supporter was returned to sender, which would have brought his party into a tie with the Liberals.
Elections Canada admitted this week that a misprint on an envelope used to mail a special ballot from Terrebonne led to one Bloc voter's mail-in ballot being returned to her. The misprint contained an error in the last three digits of the postal code for where the ballot should have been sent.
Despite the error, Elections Canada said Wednesday the result of the judicial recount in the riding was final. However, Blanchet said the party will contest the result in Quebec's Superior Court.
Bloc member who lost by 1 vote considers ‘all options’ after report of ballot problem
4 minute read Tuesday, May. 13, 2025MONTREAL - The Bloc Québécois candidate for the Montreal-area riding of Terrebonne says she's considering her options after a judicial recount that saw her lose by a single vote.
“Following a judicial recount that caused a vote reversal as spectacular as unexpected, I owe it to myself to evaluate all the options before us,” Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné wrote on Facebook on Monday, adding, “I’ll keep you updated on the next steps.”
Sinclair-Desgagné’s statement comes as Elections Canada investigates a possible error involving an uncounted mail-in ballot from a Bloc voter in the riding. Voter Emmanuelle Bossé told Montreal media that she mailed in her ballot in early April using an addressed envelope provided by Elections Canada, but it was returned to her as undeliverable. She told the outlets that she was voting for the Bloc Québécois.
Elections Canada confirmed in an email that an error had occurred, adding that it was "still working to gather the facts" about what happened. "We can confirm that there appears to be an error with the return address printed on this elector’s return envelope," the agency wrote late Monday. "Specifically, part of the postal code was wrong."
Recount sees Liberals take Quebec riding of Terrebonne by single vote
3 minute read Monday, May. 12, 2025TORONTO - The Liberals inched another seat closer to a majority government on Saturday, after a judicial recount left their candidate as the winner in the Quebec riding of Terrebonne, by a margin of just one vote.
An official with Elections Canada confirmed to The Canadian Press that Liberal Tatiana Auguste will finish ahead of incumbent Bloc Québécois candidate Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné.
It brings the Liberals to 170 seats in the House of Commons, two shy of the 172 needed for a majority government. The Bloc seat count falls to 22.
Auguste was initially projected to win the riding by 35 votes after the April 28 election, but on May 1, following the required postelection validation process, Sinclair-Desgagné, who was first elected in 2021, moved ahead by 44 votes.
Nenshi says Alberta premier’s efforts backfired on the federal Conservative party
5 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 1, 2025Some Conservative MPs voice support for Poilievre as party stays silent on next moves
3 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 30, 2025OTTAWA - Some Conservative MPs are expressing support for party leader Pierre Poilievre after he lost both the federal election and his own seat on Monday.
In his concession speech early Tuesday morning, Poilievre indicated he would stay on as leader. The Conservative party did not respond when asked Wednesday whether he has officially decided to stay.
"My view is he's not going anywhere," said Kory Teneycke, Ontario Premier Doug Ford's former campaign manager and a former director of communications for former prime minister Stephen Harper.
Teneycke — who made headlines during the election when he told media that Poilievre's team had committed "campaign malpractice" — said the Conservative campaign pivoted and improved as time went on.
Longest Ballot group declares victory in Poilievre’s former riding amid criticism
6 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 30, 2025OTTAWA - A group trying to make a case for electoral reform by creating very long ballots is declaring victory in this week's election — even as critics accuse it of indulging in stunts that undermine democracy.
"It's been a success," said Mark Moutter, one of dozens of protest candidates who ran in the Ottawa riding of Carleton.
"I've never seen people looking more optimistically at electoral reform, ever."
The Longest Ballot Committee started targeting ridings in 2021 by nominating multiple people — some of them living in other provinces — in order to ensure extremely large ballots.
Jonathan Pedneault resigns as Green Party co-leader after party took only one seat
4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 30, 2025OTTAWA - Jonathan Pedneault has resigned as co-leader of the Green Party after acknowledging the "disappointing" outcome for the party in Monday's election.
In a statement posted online Wednesday morning, Pedneault wrote that while he was proud of the party's platform and the values it brought to the campaign, he took responsibility for the result — which saw him finish fifth in his own riding as the party lost incumbent MP Mike Morrice and decreased its share of the popular vote.
"Twice now, I have failed to convince my fellow citizens to send me to Ottawa," Pedneault posted to X.
"I failed to secure the re-election of my colleague Mike Morrice, along with many other competent and good-hearted individuals who placed their trust in us."
‘A little bummed out’: MP-elect Corey Hogan hoped for more Liberals in Calgary
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 29, 2025With no leader or party status, NDP could hold balance of power with Liberal minority
3 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 29, 2025OTTAWA - After a brutal election night Monday, the NDP finds itself without a leader or official party status — but with the prospect of holding the balance of power with a minority Liberal government.
There is a “paradox” in the party’s situation, said Karl Bélanger, former NDP strategist and president of Traxxion Strategies.
“Even though they have had their worst electoral result in history … they keep the balance of power and with that, they can potentially negotiate some gains with the Liberal party," he said.
The Canadian Press decision desk is projecting Prime Minister Mark Carney will lead a minority Liberal government. The Liberals have been elected in 169 ridings, three short of the 172 needed for a majority.
Elections Canada says more than 19.5M voters cast a ballot in federal election
2 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 29, 2025OTTAWA - Elections Canada says more than 68 per cent of eligible voters cast a ballot in the federal election — more than 19.5 million people.
While this election was widely expected to see increased turnout, it did not surpass the record set in March 1958, when 79.4 per cent of eligible Canadians voted.
But the nearly 68.7 per cent turnout was the best since the 1993 federal election, which saw 69.6 per cent of eligible voters cast a ballot.
Elections Canada says early estimates indicate 11 million people voted at their polling station or in their long-term care facility on election day.
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