2025 Canadian federal election in the territories

2025 Canadian federal election in the territories


All 3 territorial seats in the House of Commons
Registered82,237[1]
Turnout46,994 (57.15%)[1]
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Mark Carney Jagmeet Singh Pierre Poilievre
Party Liberal New Democratic Conservative
Leader since March 9, 2025 October 1, 2017 September 10, 2022
Last election 2 seats, 35.48% 1 seat, 30.32% 0 seats, 20.43%
Seats before 2 1 0
Seats won 2 1 0
Seat change 0 0 0
Popular vote 23,741 6,367 16,241
Percentage 50.52 13.55 34.56
Swing 15.04pp 16.77pp 14.13pp

Prime Minister before election

Mark Carney
Liberal

Prime Minister after election

Mark Carney
Liberal

In the 2025 Canadian federal election, there was 1 member of Parliament in each of Canada's 3 territories elected to the House of Commons, making up 0.9% of all members of the House.

Results

None of the seats changed hands. The Liberal Party won the seats of Northwest Territories and Yukon, increasing their overall vote share to 50.52%. While the New Democratic Party won the seat of Nunavut, with their total vote share decreasing to 13.55% of the vote. The Conservative Party got the second most votes between the 3 territories, with 34.56%, but didn't win any of the seats. The Greens received 1.37%, and didn't run a candidate in Nunavut.

Territorial summary seat results in the 2025 Canadian federal election[1]
Party Votes Vote % Vote +/- Seats Seat +/-
Liberal 23,741
50.52%
15.04pp
2 / 3 (67%)
0
New Democratic 6,367
13.55%
16.77pp
1 / 3 (33%)
0
Conservative 16,241
34.56%
14.13pp
0 / 3 (0%)
0
Green 645
1.37%
1.52pp
0 / 3 (0%)
0
Total 46,994
100%
3 / 3 (100%)

Yukon

2025 Canadian federal election: Yukon
** Preliminary results — Not yet official **
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Brendan Hanley 12,019 53.05 +19.70
Conservative Ryan Leef 8,724 38.51 +12.25
New Democratic Katherine McCallum 1,439 6.35 –16.09
Green Gabrielle Dupont 474 2.09 –2.27
Total valid votes/expense limit 22,636 99.45
Total rejected ballots 125 0.55
Turnout 22,761 73.9
Eligible voters 30,764
Liberal hold Swing +3.73
Source: Elections Canada[2][3]

By Region[a]

Region Lib Con NDP Green Total
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes Turnout
Klondike 409 45.4 373 41.4 89 9.9 29 3.2 900 57.6%
Kluane 303 46.2 286 43.6 53 8.1 14 2.1 656 73.1%
Mayo-Tatchun 251 47.8 206 39.2 53 10.1 17 3.2 525 51.5%
Southern Lakes 448 46.8 404 42.2 66 6.9 40 4.2 958 77.9%
Vuntut Gwitchin 47 58.0 19 23.5 12 14.8 3 3.7 81 48.2%
Watson Lake-Ross River-Faro 313 41.1 395 51.9 43 5.7 10 1.3 761 53.9%
Whitehorse 7,011 53.3 5,039 38.3 843 6.4 265 2.0 13,160 53.3%
Special votes 3,227 57.7 1,997 35.7 275 4.9 96 1.7 5,595

Northwest Territories

2025 Canadian federal election: Northwest Territories
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Rebecca Alty 8,855 53.51 +15.29
Conservative Kimberly Fairman 5,513 33.31 +18.90
New Democratic Kelvin Kotchilea 2,011 12.15 –20.19
Green Rainbow Eyes 170 1.03 –1.30
Total valid votes/expense limit 16,549
Total rejected ballots 199
Turnout 16,748 54.72
Eligible voters 30,097
Liberal hold Swing –1.61
Source: CBC[4], Elections Canada[5][6]

By Region

Region Lib Con NDP Green Total
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes Turnout
Dehcho 329 50.5 206 31.6 104 16.0 12 1.8 651 72.6%
Inuvik 830 59.5 393 28.2 150 10.8 21 1.5 1,394 32.7%
North Slave 4,541 53.3 2,848 33.5 1,051 12.3 72 0.8 8,512 47.3%
Sahtu 290 49.2 179 30.4 110 18.7 10 1.7 589 39.6%
South Slave 1,414 49.4 1,112 38.8 308 10.8 29 1.0 2,863 53.2%
Special votes 1,451 57.1 775 30.5 288 11.3 26 1.0 2,540

Nunavut

2025 Canadian federal election: Nunavut
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
New Democratic Lori Idlout 2,853 37.26 –10.41
Liberal Kilikvak Kabloona 2,812 36.72 +0.86
Conservative James T. Arreak 1,992 26.02 +9.55
Total valid votes/expense limit 7,657
Total rejected ballots 90
Turnout 7,747 36.24
Eligible voters 21,376
New Democratic hold Swing −6.09
Source: CBC[7], Elections Canada[8]

By Region

Region NDP Lib Con Total
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes Turnout
Kitikmeot 416 37.5 348 31.4 346 31.2 1,110 28.2%
Kivalliq 379 26.3 620 43.1 440 30.6 1,439 26.6%
Qikiqtaaluk 1,912 42.9 1,590 35.7 951 21.4 4,453 37.7%
Special votes 146 22.3 254 38.8 255 38.9 655

Comparison with national results

Results by party
Party Popular vote % Seats in caucus
T Natl. diff.
Liberal 50.5 43.7 +6.8
2 / 169 (1%)
Conservative 34.6 41.3 -6.7
0 / 144 (0%)
New Democratic 13.6 6.3 +7.3
1 / 7 (14%)
Green 1.4 1.2 +0.2
0 / 1 (0%)
  Total
3 / 343 (0.9%)

Student vote results

Student votes are mock elections that run parallel to actual elections, in which students not of voting age participate. They are administered by Student Vote Canada. These are for educational purposes and do not count towards the results.[9]

Summary of the 2025 Canadian Student Vote in the territories
Party Leader Seats Popular vote
Elected % Δ Votes % Δ (pp)
Liberal Mark Carney 2 66.67 2 1,564 40.81 13.23
New Democratic Jagmeet Singh 1 33.33 2 824 21.50 13.07
Conservative Pierre Poilievre 0 0 0 1,059 27.64 9.15
Green Elizabeth May & Jonathan Pedneault 0 0 0 385 10.05 0.84
Total 3 100.00 0 3,832 100.00
Source: Student Vote Canada[10]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Yukon is not officially divided in regions. For the purposes of this table, the Territorial Assembly ridings are used as regions, except for the ones in the Whitehorse area which have been combined.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut". Elections Canada. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
  2. ^ "Voter information service". Elections Canada. Retrieved April 19, 2025.
  3. ^ "Election Night Results - Electoral Districts". Elections Canada. 29 April 2025. Retrieved 29 April 2025.
  4. ^ "Canada Votes 2025". CBC. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
  5. ^ "Voter information service". Elections Canada. Retrieved April 19, 2025.
  6. ^ "Election Night Results - Electoral Districts". Elections Canada. 29 April 2025. Retrieved 29 April 2025.
  7. ^ "Canada Votes 2025". CBC. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
  8. ^ "Election Night Results - Electoral Districts". Elections Canada. 29 April 2025. Retrieved 29 April 2025.
  9. ^ https://studentvote.ca/canada/
  10. ^ "Student Vote Canada 2025 — Results". Retrieved April 29, 2025.