Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Prior to the by-election, Toronto—St. Paul's was considered a safe Liberal seat in Midtown, Toronto. [11] It had been held by the Liberals since the 1993 federal election. [12] The Government of Canada announced measures to protect the by-election from foreign interference. [13]
The 2023 Toronto mayoral by-election was held on Monday, June 26, 2023, to elect the 66th mayor of Toronto to serve the remainder of the 2022–2026 city council term following the resignation of Mayor John Tory. The election was won by Olivia Chow, a former city councillor and member of Parliament (MP).
The Liberal Party of Canada has a minority government during this Parliament, supported by the New Democratic Party in a (2022 to 2024) confidence-and-supply agreement. [1] The Conservative Party of Canada forms the Official Opposition. [2] Eleven by-elections have been held during the 44th Parliament.
TORONTO (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal party has suffered a major upset in a special election for a Toronto district it has held for three decades, raising doubts ...
The 2025 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election is an ongoing election being held from February 26 to March 9, 2025. It is currently being held by members of the Liberal Party of Canada to elect a successor to Justin Trudeau following his announcement on January 6, 2025, of his intention to resign as party leader and as prime minister of Canada as soon as his successor is elected.
The NDP candidate, Andrea Vásquez Jiménez, [16] previously ran for the seat in the 2019 election. People's Party of Canada leader Maxime Bernier said he intended to run in either the Toronto Centre or York Centre by-election. [17] Bernier decided he would run in York Centre when the by-elections were announced. [18]
This page shows results of Canadian federal elections in the central, earlier-development areas of Toronto—in particular, Old Toronto (what was the city of Toronto prior to the 1998 amalgamation), the former Borough of York, most of the former City of East York, and the southern, older portions of the former City of North York, in particular those south of Highway 401 and west of Leslie Street.
Rachel Chernos Lin is a Canadian politician. She is currently a Toronto City Councillor and previously was the chair of the Toronto District School Board (TDSB). [1] On 4 November 2024, she won a by-election to replace the late Jaye Robinson on Toronto City Council. [2]