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2025 Canadian federal election in Alberta

In the 2025 Canadian federal election, 37 members of Parliament were elected to the House of Commons from the province of Alberta making up 10.8% of all members.

2022 electoral redistribution

The 2025 Canadian federal election was the first election to utilize the electoral districts established following the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution. The House of Commons increased from 338 seats to 343 seats, with Alberta gaining 3 seats in an increase from 34 to 37. This ensures that the average population per constituency in Alberta is 115,206 (according to the 2021 Canadian census), which is 7,358 more people per electoral district than the national average.

Timeline

Predictions

Summary

Results

Summary

The Conservative Party won a significant majority of seats and votes, taking 34 ridings, and winning 63.5% of the popular vote. The Liberal Party came in a distant second, with 2 seats, receiving 27.9% of the popular vote. The NDP fell to a distant third. They received 6.3% of the popular vote, and lost half their seats, securing 1.

The People's Party still won no seats, and saw their support collapse to 0.9% of the vote. The Green party won no seats and their popular vote fell to just 0.4%.

Unlike the 2021 Canadian federal election, the Alberta-based Maverick Party did not contest the 2025 federal election due to them being deregistered by Elections Canada on February 28, 2025.

The Centrist Party, Canadian Future Party, the Christian Heritage Party, the Communist Party, the Libertarian Party, the Marxist-Leninist Party, the United Party of Canada and the Rhino Party, all ran at least one candidate in Alberta in this election and got a combined 0.6% of the vote.

Comparison with national results

Student vote results

The student vote is a Mock election that runs 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.

Source: Student Vote Canada

See also

Notes

References