Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 20, 2021 · The 44th federal election took place on September 20, 2021. Elections Canada's preliminary estimates indicate that 17,209,000 Canadians cast a ballot. This translates into a voter turnout rate of about 62.5%. Exact voter turnout numbers will be published in the Official Voting Results report. To serve Canadians, Elections Canada opened 501 ...

    • Photo Gallery

      The signing of the writs of the 2019 election; Elections...

  2. Oct 24, 2020 · Voters across British Columbia headed to the polls on Saturday to take part in the province’s 42nd general election. Global News had live, real-time results for all 87 ridings once the polls ...

    • Amy Judd
  3. The actual turnout figure is now estimated to be about 64.1%. See the CBC News article about this updated information. Return to Top. Information on Canadian federal election results from 1867-2021, with party seats, percent of vote, number of candidates, and voter turnout for each election.

    Election Party
    Elected Members
    Number Of Candidates
    Percentage Of Popular Vote
    Liberal
    160
    338
    32.6 %
    Conservative
    119
    337
    33.7 %
    Bloc Québécois
    32
    78
    7.6 %
    New Democratic Party
    25
    338
    17.8 %
  4. For election day and advance polls, results are reported for each ballot box. Once all the votes in a ballot box have been counted, the totals are entered into Elections Canada's results aggregation and reporting system and are released in near real time. Special ballots, by contrast, are counted in waves.

  5. Oct 25, 2020 · Voters had until the polls close today to return the mail-in ballots. There are nearly 3.5 million registered voters in British Columbia. ... Canada October 24, 2020. ... Election results as of ...

  6. Sep 17, 2021 · Watch, listen and read full coverage of Canada's election on Monday, Sept. 20, 2021. Canadians are heading to the polls and CBC News will have full coverage of the federal election on all ...

  7. People also ask

  8. * The 1925 election marked the first time in Canadian history neither the Conservatives nor Liberals won a majority of seats. Liberal prime minister Mackenzie King refused to resign on the grounds that his party had been mostly supported by the new, third faction in parliament, the Progressives, who had been first elected in 1921, and that when counted together, Progressives and Liberals ...